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News ID: 95357
Publish Date : 12 October 2021 - 21:41

Macron Unveils New Blueprint for France’s Independence

PARIS (Reuters) -- France wants to be a leader in green hydrogen by 2030 and build low-carbon planes and small nuclear reactors as part of a 30 billion euro ($35 billion) investment plan, President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday.
Macron said the road map, dubbed “France 2030”, would ensure France decarbonizes its industry and brings innovation and production in key areas, from cars and biomedicine to semi-conductors, closer to home by the end of the decade.
The long-term plan, outlined six months before the presidential election, was swiftly criticized by the opposition as electoral campaigning, but Macron said those targets were key to ensure France’s rank in the world.
Pointing to a shortage of face masks when the COVID-19 pandemic first erupted, Macron said the crisis had exposed real vulnerabilities and the crucial need for France to have innovation and industrial production at home.
“We must rebuild the framework for productive independence for France and Europe,” he said, adding that innovation would be key amid global competition for leadership and access to raw materials. “The winner takes all,” he added.
Setting out some of the plan’s targets, Macron said France would by 2030 build a low-carbon plane, a small modular reactor as well as two megafactories for the production of green hydrogen. It would also produce large numbers of electric vehicles.
“We must wage the battle of innovation and industrialization at the same time,” Macron said as he outlined the plan to a group of entrepreneurs, adding: “We need a country that produces more.”
Macron said the plan will give a key role to small, agile start-ups in building France’s industrial future alongside well-established corporate giants.
Other 2030 objectives include investing in semi-conductors and beefing up innovation in the French health sector, including biomedicine.
The plan was harshly criticized by the opposition and environmental groups.
“A few months from the end of his mandate, the outgoing president commits French money to restore his electoral image with promises which only bind his successor,” far-right leader Marine Le Pen said on Twitter.
“It’s ‘whatever the cost, I want to be re-elected!’,” she said.
Matthieu Orphelin, a lawmaker who left Macron’s party two years ago said this was Macron’s “first campaign speech for 2022”, while environmental group Greenpeace called it “a festival of false solutions and wishful thinking”.
“All these false solutions follow the same logic: constantly postpone the real (energy) transition and continue to produce as if the planet’s resources were unlimited,” said Greenpeace France director Jean-François Julliard.