Is this the end of Made in Europe?
From glass-makers to paper producers, European
industries face a struggle to survive. What if they don’t make it?
BY CHARLIE
COOPER AND GIORGIO LEALI
JANUARY 15,
2023 7:27 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/end-made-in-europe-manufacturing-industry-struggle/
LA
CHAPELLE-SAINT-MESMIN, France — The white-hot furnaces of Duralex have been
burning near the banks of the River Loire, near Orléans, France since the year
the Second World War ended.
But this
winter, not a soul is to be found along the silent production lines of the firm’s
glass factory in La Chapelle-Saint-Mesmin — and not a single piece of glass is
being produced.
The furnace
itself is in “hibernation” mode until April — because the gas required to keep
it going at full blast was simply too expensive. When operated at these lower
temperatures, it can’t produce anything. But if it were to be turned off
entirely, molten glass would solidify inside it and the equipment would be
destroyed.
"We
had to make a difficult decision,” said José-Luis Llacuna, president of La Maison
Française du Verre, the group which owns the Duralex and Pyrex brands, sitting
in his office next to the factory. “It has technical and human risks, but makes
us save energy.”
Even if you
don’t realize it, you’ve probably held a Duralex product — an unsung triumph of
European manufacturing. Their sturdy glass tumblers can be found in every
French school canteen and are exported all over the world. You can buy them at
the U.K.’s John Lewis department stores and even at the MoMA in New York.
Llacuna
says the factory's future in Europe is safe, but its struggle this winter is
symbolic of a deeper crisis affecting Europe’s centuries-old manufacturing
base, as high energy prices and high politics collide.
The cost of
energy — driven to record levels in 2022 by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and
its shut-off of vital gas pipelines — has become too much for many
manufacturing firms to remain competitive if they stay in Europe. At the same
time, a vast package of American subsidies for green industry has shocked and
angered EU officials, who see the U.S. — a supposed ally — tempting businesses
to relocate across the Atlantic.
The energy
crisis is particularly acute for sectors like glass, chemicals, metals,
fertilizer, pulp and paper, ceramics and cement, which require the most energy
to fuel their industrial production — and between them employ 8 million people.
But facing ever-growing economic competition from both China and now an increasingly
protectionist United States, European leaders openly warn of a contagion of
“deindustrialization” affecting all manufacturing across the continent.
Preventing
such a dire outcome — and the social and political fallout — has shot to the
top of the EU’s agenda in 2023.
In a new
year email to staff, seen by POLITICO, the European Internal Market
Commissioner Thierry Breton singled out efforts to boost Europe’s global
competitiveness as “a top priority.”
“High
energy prices in Europe will continue to affect our fellow citizens, but also
entire industrial supply chains and [small and medium-sized businesses],”
Breton wrote. “At the same time, China, the U.S. and other countries are trying
— not without success — to attract our industrial capacities.
“Without a
strong manufacturing base,” Breton’s email states plainly, “Europe’s security
of supply, export ability and job creation is at risk.”
Existential crisis
As of
December, European manufacturing — and in particular the continent’s industrial
powerhouse Germany — had weathered the worst of the winter energy crunch,
cutting gas consumption by around 15 percent without a corresponding drop in
overall output.
But with
gas prices — despite recent falls — still around six times higher than the
average price of the previous 10 years, and more than four times higher than in
competitor countries like the U.S., many still fear that larger firms will
simply relocate operations outside Europe while smaller businesses could fold
entirely.
Deepening
the gloom, the long-cherished vision of Europe as the driving force of a green
industrial revolution has been thrown into serious doubt by Joe Biden’s $369
billion Inflation Reduction Act. With its huge subsidies for green technologies
and "Buy American" clauses, European leaders fear the package will
lure more and more of their companies across the Atlantic.
“Given the
actions of the U.S. and China, we see the real danger of deindustrialization
and disinvestment,” a senior European Commission official said.
Losing
manufacturing capacity means losing jobs and that — said Luc Triangle, general
secretary of the IndustriALL European Trade Union, which represents
manufacturing workers — has “political consequences.”
“We are not
exaggerating when we say that European industry — starting with the
energy-intensive industries on the frontline — is facing an existential
crisis,” Triangle said. The same “existential” threat applies to the 8 million
workers in the energy-intensive sector, IndustriALL has warned.
In its
annual labor market review, published last month, the European Commission said
that employment rates in the EU remained strong despite the war, with
unemployment falling to 6 percent in July. But it also warned that continuing
high energy costs pose a “major risk” to jobs in the EU, particularly in
energy-intensive manufacturing sectors.
“We don’t
see it in the data yet … but it is a concern for the future, maybe as soon as
this year,” said the economics minister of an EU country.
Though
fairly small in scale so far, the impact on jobs is already being seen. In
December, the European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working
Conditions (Eurofound) published a list of job losses — including 441 lay-offs
at an aluminum oxide producer in Tulcea, Romania in June; 300 at a plant in
Žiar nad Hronom in Slovakia by the end 2022; and 350 at a ceramic tiles
manufacturer in Poland. The organization said the energy crisis’s impact on
employment in the bloc was likely “only just beginning.”
Triangle
warned that, like in the former manufacturing towns of northern England that
went on to back Brexit, accelerated industrial decline in central and eastern
Europe could fuel a voter backlash against the EU that might yet become an
enduring legacy of the crisis.
“There are
political consequences,” Triangle said. “Which parties are going to win,
thriving on the dissatisfaction and disappointment? The parties that have an
anti-European agenda, or an extremist agenda.”
Government
officials are already “worried,” according to the minister quoted above.
Warnings
from businesses have grown louder — as have calls for coordinated, EU-level
action to rescue Europe’s manufacturing base. France is now demanding a
comprehensive new EU-wide "made in Europe" strategy.
In October,
the decision of BASF — the German chemicals giant, based in Ludwigshafen since
the mid-19th century — to permanently downsize its operations in Europe sent
shockwaves through European manufacturing, Triangle said.
The wider
impact beyond energy-intensive sectors was highlighted in November when
Volkswagen warned that Europe was no longer “cost-competitive in many areas, in
particular when it comes to the costs of electricity and gas" — a shot
across the bows from an automotive sector that is the jewel in Europe’s
manufacturing crown, employing 13 million across the continent.
At their
final summit of 2022 in December, EU leaders insisted they had heard the call.
The meeting produced an instruction to the European Commission to rapidly draw
up proposals “with a view to mobilizing all relevant national and EU tools” to
address the dual energy and competitiveness crises hitting European industry.
The issue is due to dominate an EU leaders’ summit scheduled for February 9-10.
But, amid
disagreements between countries over the way forward, which path the bloc will
take remains unclear.
Relaxing
the EU’s strict state aid rules is a major focus among officials and EU financial
support for manufacturing sectors is also under consideration.
In the
short-term, governments may have to look at ways that existing funds — the Next
Generation EU COVID recovery package and RePowerEU fund to wean the bloc off
Russian fossil fuels — might “cater for the manufacturing investments needed,”
the senior Commission official said.
So far, the
biggest responses have been largely at national level. Germany — the bloc’s
biggest economic power and by far its largest manufacturing center — has
allocated €200 billion on a support package for businesses and households and
will limit the price that industrial consumers pay for gas and electricity.
France has announced a new bill to boost reshoring of green industries.
In a recent
op-ed for the FT, German Finance Minister Christian Lindner expressed
confidence that “Europe and Germany can weather this crisis without a collapse
in industrial production.”
But others
fear that without major intervention at the EU level, those countries without
the fiscal firepower of Germany will be left behind. “Principles should be agreed
at European level to maintain the level-playing field,” said the economics
minister.
The debate
is likely to rage throughout winter and into the spring.
At Duralex
in France, April will bring some respite, with a new, more affordable energy
contract that will allow the furnace to be fired up again and glass to be
produced. Company president Llacuna is confident that the firm can make it
through the energy crisis and continue operating. “Made in France” is an
“emotional brand” for the company, he said, which it will not relinquish
lightly.
But for
many others across the continent, the “Made in Europe” brand has never been in
more doubt.
“If the EU
doesn’t step up its industrial policy,” one EU diplomat said, “our industry is
bleeding to death.”
Barbara
Moens, Paola Tamma and Josh Posaner contributed reporting.
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