France plans to save car industry by going green
Topics: From the Wires, News
Arnaud Montebourg, minister for industrial recovery, gestures during a press conference in Paris, Wednesday, July 25, 2012. The French government has unveiled a plan to prop up the struggling auto industry, which is threatening to eliminate thousands of jobs. Wednesday's plan focuses on making France a center for production of environmentally friendly cars. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere, Pool) (Credit: AP)PARIS (AP) — Green technology is the answer to the declining fortunes of France’s auto industry, according to a new government plan to turn the sector around.
The strategy for France’s carmakers was unveiled Wednesday by the Ministry for Industrial Recovery — a government department created by President Francois Hollande to put his plan to “re-industrialize” France into action.
Across Europe, lots and factories are filling up with unsold cars. Industry executives estimate factories have the capacity to build 20 percent more cars than they are able to sell. Sweden’s Vovlo and Germany’s Daimler both reported this week that their profits dropped in the second quarter.
Frances’ PSA Peugeot Citroen, which reported a loss for the first half Wednesday, two weeks ago unveiled plans to eliminate 8,000 jobs and shut a major factory in France.
The government said the decline of France’s auto industry has been particularly marked: The country produced just 2.2 billion cars last year, as compared to 2005′s 3.5 billion. It employs 800,000 people — 30 percent fewer people than it did 10 years ago.
“France isn’t abandoning its automotive industry,” Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said Wednesday after a Cabinet meeting on the plan.
Hollande’s government hopes France can carve out a space for its auto industry by driving hard into environmentally friendly cars — a sector the country’s automakers are already prominent in. The plan includes a variety of measures aimed at rewarding companies that invest in green technology and drivers who buy environmentally-friendly cars.
The main part the government’s plan is to increase the rebates French consumers receive for buying an electric or hybrid car — no matter who makes it. The government estimates that it expects to pay out around €500 million ($600 million) in such rebates next year.
Several hundred millions of euros of incentives will also be introduced for carmakers and their suppliers, especially small companies, that invest in green technology or create new jobs. Industrial Recovery Minister Arnaud Montebourg announced. Much of the money for those incentives comes from funds already budgeted that are being redeployed.
Employment Minister Michel Sapin, who was also at the plan’s launch, said it put the government “on the offensive.” He said that France would have to anticipate changes in the automobile sector in order to succeed.




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