Les "News" (Cette rubrique est animée par Suzie RUDLING, Professeur d'Anglais, Riadh OURABAH, Professeur d'Hydraulique, et les étudiants)


Fév 2014 : Royaume-Uni - Inondations  catastrophiques
Comment Londres est protégé ?
Hiver le plus humide au Royaume-Uni depuis 1767 a amené une catastrophe au sud et au sud-ouest en particulier. Consultez ce lien de la BBC ( reportages vidéo et audio) .Cliquez pour voir comment fonctionne la barrière de la tamise? 

15 OCT 11: INONDATION THAILANDE
PHOTOS DES INONDATIONS EN THAILANDE

"Vivre et résister en Palestine Rurale" au Lycée de Rodilhan

Coférence-Débat avec un agriculteur palestinien le 06 /04/2011

Fukushima: Voici un document concernant l'eau potable à Tokyo suite aux fuites radioactives

Take a look at this video about the white water centre which has been built on a flat flood plain for the London Olympics in August 2012.
For more information , visit the Olympics go on sale on March 15th 2011 - why not go and enjoy the atmosphere.

Rappelez-vous la catastrophe écologique, en Hongrie, suite à un accident industriel
Quelques détails de cette catastrophe
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12109717
Not such a happy new year for Australia..... this video is all about the floods in Rockhampton , Queensland

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3930199780455728313#
Every day, thousands of children die due to lack of water and poor sanitation. Billions of people do not have access to safe water. Environmental change threatens to make this situation worse but a more immediate danger is emerging. Control of the world's water is falling into the hands of the rich and water may soon take the place of oil as the world's most tradeable - and coveted - commodity - not a basic human right (indeed, the US argued this at the UN). In a future when market forces set the price of a glass of water, will many more people be left too poor to drink?


BAFTA award-winning film-maker Brian Woods' compelling and affecting film tells the intimate and revealing story of the dramatic impact of the battle for water ownership on the lives of four disparate groups of people across the developing world and in the heart of the planet's richest nation: families in Bolivia, India, Tanzania and the USA. And beyond the individual human cost of access to water, the film looks at the present and future battle for its ownership and how those living in water-rich countries hold the survival of the planet in their (currently) well-washed hands.