‘Mona in Monaco’: new electronic music festival for Monaco

A new electronic music festival is coming to Monaco, with the first edition of Mona in Wonderland set to take place at the Chapiteau de l’Espace Fontvieille on Saturday 30th May.

Organised by AEG Presents France, the event runs from 6pm to midnight and promises an immersive production built around an electronic music lineup in the setting of Fontvieille’s iconic big top venue.

The first confirmed acts include Miss Monique and Worakls, with further names still to be announced.

Tickets are on sale now via Shotgun, with standard entry from €45.50 and VIP packages from €111.50. The platform also allows ticket holders to resell their tickets securely through the app if plans change.

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Princess Charlene-backed Saint Dévote Tournament set for most international edition yet

The Stade Louis II will swap football for rugby on the 20th and 21st March, when Monaco hosts the 14th edition of the Saint Dévote Tournament, one of the largest under 12s international rugby competitions in the world.

Now in its 14th edition, the event is officially backed by both World Rugby and Rugby Europe. The format is seven on each side, with players all under 12-years-old, and matches run across both days from 9:30am.

This year’s edition is the most international to date. Twenty four teams representing 23 nations have confirmed their participants, with teams travelling from South Africa, Argentina, England, Scotland, Wales, France, Italy, Spain, Georgia, Greece, Japan, India, Singapore, Zimbabwe, Mauritius, Ecuador, the United States, Belgium, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Andorra, the United Arab Emirates, and Monaco itself.

The Saint Dévote Rugby Tournament in 2025, photo credit: FMR

The tournament is organised by the Fédération Monégasque de Rugby, presided over by Princess Charlene, in partnership with the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation.

Beyond the competition, there are several weekend activities which are free of charge. Children aged two to seven can take part in the introductory rugby sessions for a first experience of the sport, while dedicated workshops for children and young adults with disabilities will run in collaboration with local schools. Additionally, a fan zone with inflatable games will be open throughout the day.

Doors open at 9:30am on Friday 20th and Saturday 21st March.

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Main photo credit: FMR

Discount tickets and teaser video released for landmark Monaco and the Automobile exhibition

The Grimaldi Forum Monaco has opened pre-sale ticketing and released a teaser video for Monaco and the Automobile, from 1893 to the Present Day, the most ambitious automotive exhibition ever staged in the Principality.

Discounted tickets are available now ahead of the exhibition’s opening on 1st July, with the teaser offering a first look at a show six years in the making — originally planned for summer 2020 before the pandemic forced its postponement. The exhibition runs until 6th September in the Espace Ravel.

What visitors can expect

Spread across 4,000 square metres, the exhibition brings together around 50 landmark vehicles, including more than 20 cars that have claimed victory at the Monaco Grand Prix or the Rallye Monte-Carlo. Alongside the racing machinery, visitors will find vehicles from the Princely Family’s personal collection, concours d’élégance entries, and previously unseen archive material from the Automobile Club de Monaco, which has opened its records to the Grimaldi Forum for the occasion.

Curator Rodolphe Rapetti — the specialist behind The Art of the Automobile — Masterpieces from the Ralph Lauren Collection, which drew more than 150,000 visitors to Paris in 2011 — has designed the exhibition to present the automobile as both sporting machine and work of art, with interactive and immersive elements throughout.

Tickets and practicalities

Pre-sale tickets are available at grimaldiforum.com until 30th June. Tickets are valid for any day during the run with no timed entry restriction — visitors may arrive from 10am at any time. Entry is free for under-18s, with complimentary tickets issued at the door. The venue will close exceptionally on Saturday 22nd August.

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Photo source: B.R.M. P-578 – 1962 – Courtesy of Revs Institute, Naples, Florida © Peter Harholdt / Revs Institute – Entry in the 1962 Monaco Grand Prix – Driver: Graham Hill

Nuclear revival and renewables surge in France’s €60bn energy reset

France has unveiled its third multiyear energy plan, setting out a bold vision to move the country away from fossil fuels and expand electricity production over the next decade.

Prince Minister Sébastien Lecornu presented the Programmation Pluriannuelle de l’Énergie (PPE 3) on 12th February in the Jura region, framing it as a matter of national survival. “For the first time, our climate interests align with our geopolitical interests,” he said, “and with those of consumers and their electricity bills.”

Breaking free from fossil fuels

France currently spends around €60 billion a year importing oil and gas. The plan aims to flip the energy mix: where fossil fuels account for 60 per cent of final consumption today, the goal is for 60 per cent to come from low-carbon sources by 2030, through a broad shift to electricity across homes, factories and data centres.

However, one obstacle, Christian Buchel of the Union Française de l’Électricité warned about, is that electricity is currently taxed two to three times more heavily than imported fossil fuels, making the switch harder for households and businesses.

Nuclear power also sits at the heart of the plan. France’s existing fleet produces more electricity than any other country in Europe, but many reactors are ageing, and output dropped under to 300 TWh in 2002 following a series of technical problems. It has since recovered to around 360 TWh, and the plan sets a target of 380-420 TWh by 2035.

To secure the long-term future of nuclear power, the government is committing to six brand new reactors, with an option for eight more. The programme is also expected to be a major engine of job creation, with the nuclear supply chain alone forecast to hire 100,000 people over the next decade.

Renewables: ending the family feud

Offshore wind is to grow from barely 1GW today to 15GW by 2035, with solar reaching 55-80 GW over the same period. Lecornu highlighted the need to stop treating nuclear and renewables as rivals. “The real divide is not between nuclear and renewables. It’s between what is low-carbon and what is fossil fuel.”

Meanwhile, the event was held at a hydroelectric dam, a deliberate nod to a separate but related piece of legislation: the Bolo-Battistel law, which aims to unlock over €5 billion in long-stalled hydropower investment.

The law, which had passed the National Assembly but still needed Senate approval, would add 2.5 GW of additional capacity from existing sites. Much of that investment would go into STEP facilities – pumped-storage stations that work like giant batteries, pumping water uphill when electricity is abundant and releasing it to generate power when demand peaks. During those peak periods, the new capacity would be enough to supply 750,000 homes

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Main photo credit: Chris LeBoutillier

Jardin du Chemin des Sculptures set for major transformation

In the heart of Fontvieille, Jardin du Chemin des Sculptures, is set to undergo significant transformation, with redevelopment work starting this month.

Since 2021, waterproofing works have already been carried out to address ageing infrastructure beneath the garden. Now, with the structural issues solved, a greener future is on the books for the Fontvieille garden, and visitors will start to see and experience the changes on ground level.

The Department of Urban Planning has commissioned landscape architects Grand & Associates to redesign the space. The plan is to shift the garden’s usage from just a transitional walkway into a more inviting place to spend time, with more planting, increased shade and areas better suited to everyday use.

Projected image of the garden after the works

Work will be delivered in three phases to allow continuous usage of the garden and to reduce disruption. The first half of the garden is due to be completed by the end of 2026, with the remaining areas developed in stages throughout 2027 and 2028.

This new plan focuses strongly on greenery. Planting will be chosen to suit local climate and to help address rising temperatures, providing shade, cooling and biodiversity. The project also aims to use responsibly-sourced materials and environmentally conscious design principles.

On-site panels will be also placed to provide updates and explain the stages throughout the redevelopment.

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Main photo credit: Grant & Associates

Two lucky Monaco students could have the opportunity of a lifetime in the Arctic

Two students from Monaco are set to join an Arctic expedition this summer, following the launch of the 16th edition of the Students on Ice  programme. 

The Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation officially opened the 2026 competition on 11th February at the Rainier III High School auditorium, with students from all three of the Principality’s secondary schools in attendance.

Run by the foundation since 2008, the programme sends two students each year to the Canadian Arctic, where they join an international expedition alongside scientists, educators and Indigenous communities. To date, thirty students have already taken part.

Now, this year’s expedition is scheduled to run from 19th July to 3rd of August. Geoff Green, founder of the Students on Ice Foundation, addressing the students by video, highlighted the importance of “supporting an inspiring young people” to protect the polar regions.

During the official presentation at the Rainier III High School auditorium. Photo credit: Fondation Prince Albert II de Monaco

The Foundation’s Scientific Director, Dr Philippe Mondielli, also highlighted the organisation’s broader Polar Initiative, which connects scientific research with diplomatic efforts on climate. He mentioned two projects, the Tara Polar Station, a drifting research base studying the Arctic Ocean, and Ice Memory, a global archive of ice cores stored in Antarctica.

Students who attended also had the chance to hear from last year’s winners, Alexandrine Noghès and Carolina Massey, who recounted their encounters with Inuit communities and elaborated on the scientific work carried out aboard the expedition ship.

Applications for the 2026 competition are open until March 2nd. Candidates who are interested to apply must submit a personal essay setting out their own ideas for tackling environmental challenges. In return, the students will be named ambassadors for environmental protection

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Main photo credit: Fondation Prince Albert II de Monaco