Revealed: France’s massive ‘Made in Europe’
strategy
The EU is reeling as it debates how to respond to a
recent U.S. subsidy push.
BY PAOLA
TAMMA AND SAMUEL STOLTON
JANUARY 13,
2023 1:51 PM CET
The French
government has pitched a complete overhaul of the European Union’s approach to
boosting its industry, offering a sweeping “Made in Europe” strategy to counter
a flood of U.S. subsidies, according to documents seen by POLITICO.
In a letter
dated January 9, the French government calls on the EU to accelerate production
targets, weaken state aid rules, establish an emergency sovereignty fund and
mobilize trade defense instruments — all in reaction to a recent U.S. bill, the
Inflation Reduction Act, which included $369 billion in climate-friendly
subsidies.
The move
follows a pledge earlier this month from French President Emmanuel Macron, in
which he jockeyed for the bloc to make progress on a "Made in Europe"
strategy. The campaign has become a point of friction within the EU — while
numerous countries support France's endeavor in theory, there is little
agreement over exactly how to accomplish it.
Production
targets
In the
letter, from France’s general secretariat for European affairs, the French say
the EU should design new production targets “for reducing our dependencies”
across sensitive sectors.
“Very
concretely, the Union should set itself production targets to be achieved by
2030,” based on the model of the bloc’s draft Chips Act, the letter says.
The Chips
Act is part of the EU's broader effort to ensure Europe doesn't have to rely on
countries like China for the technology that powers modern technology. The bloc
is also rapidly reconsidering how it sources its energy in the wake of Russia's
war in Ukraine.
The letter
says the EU must embark on “reforms to simplify and accelerate the procedures
for granting permits for the installation of new production sites” as well as a
complete energy market reform, which could aid in companies' production and
investment decisions.
State Aid
The
European Commission is also currently in the process of revising its emergency
state aid rules, which have gone through a series of iterations since the start
of the pandemic and the war in Ukraine.
Traditionally,
the EU has been reluctant to offer state aid in all but the most extreme
circumstances. But in its letter, France says the EU should embark on “targeted
support – via subsidies or tax credits – based on criteria defined upstream, in
a limited number of sectors.”
“These
mechanisms could take the form of tax advantages (tax credits) or direct
subsidies targeted at the strategic sectors,” the letter states.
Those
sectors — the French say — could include photovoltaics, batteries, hydrogen and
critical materials. The letter also suggests only ending the relaxation of
these state aid rules in 2030. They are currently due to expire at the end of
this year.
It adds
that certain small and medium enterprises should be exempted from state aid
limits, particularly if they are involved as partners in the EU’s Important
Projects of Common European Interest (IPCEI) program. And it argues that aid
notification thresholds for environmental or decarbonization projects should be
increased to €20 million per company and per project.
Commission
President von der Leyen is due on February 1 to offer EU countries her thoughts
on responding to the U.S. efforts | John Thys/AFP via Getty images
The Commission’s
antitrust enforcers are due to circulate their latest draft of the bloc’s
emergency state aid rules to EU nations on Friday.
Sovereignty
Fund
France also
suggests the establishment of an emergency fund, supported by money from the
EU’s post-pandemic recovery pot, as well as from REPowerEU — the bloc’s
financing framework for diversifying investments away from Russian fossil
fuels.
The letter
recommends reallocating €365 billion “not yet disbursed as a priority to
sectors that are strategic for European industry” and adds that of the €221
billion in loans that remain to be allocated, EU countries “should be able to
give priority to strategic European industrial sectors.”
The
emergency sovereignty fund should be operational before the end of 2023, the
letter says.
The French
are cautious, however, to ensure that a new influx of state aid doesn't
fracture the EU's vaunted single market. The fear is that loosening state aid
rules could offer an advantage to deeper-pocketed countries within the EU. To
counteract this, the letter suggests a repeat of SURE, a common debt instrument
used at the onset of the pandemic that offered countries favorable loans.
Trade
defense
In order to
preserve the fairness of competition rules internationally, France’s letter
concludes by saying that “the EU's trade strategy should be more articulated
around the defense of the European single market.” To this end the Commission
should make use of trade defense instruments as outlined in World Trade
Organization rules, the letter notes.
Commission
President von der Leyen is due on February 1 to offer EU countries her thoughts
on responding to the U.S. efforts. Her messaging will come just ahead of an EU
leaders’ summit scheduled for February 9-10 in which the issue is due to take
center stage.
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