Macron wants France to be Europe's top clean car producer

French car plants are only just starting to rev up production after the coronavirus lockdown, which hit the auto sector badly,

French President Emmanuel Macron, wearing a protective mask, visits a factory of manufacturer Valeo in Etaples,  France May 26, 2020.
Reuters

French President Emmanuel Macron, wearing a protective mask, visits a factory of manufacturer Valeo in Etaples,  France May 26, 2020.

President Emmanuel Macron announced an $8.8 billion plan on Tuesday to make France the top producer of clean vehicles in Europe and urged French carmakers to make vehicles in their own country.

French car plants are only just starting to rev up production after the coronavirus lockdown, which hit the auto sector badly, and Macron wants to accelerate the transition to electric cars to help revive the industry.

"We need a motivational goal: make France Europe's top producer of clean vehicles by bringing output (up) to more than one million electric and hybrid cars per year over the next five years," Macron told a news conference.

To achieve that goal, he said France would increase the state bonus for consumers buying electric cars to $7,689 from $6,590.

But to help dealerships sell the 400,000 vehicles left unsold because of the lockdown, Macron said people buying a traditional car would also receive a $3,294 bonus under a scheme that would apply to three-quarters of households.

"Our fellow citizens need to buy more vehicles, and in particular clean ones. Not in two, five or 10 years - now," Macron said following a visit to a Valeo car parts factory in northern France.

No car model currently produced in France should be manufactured abroad, he said.

AFP

File Photo: An employee wearing a protective mask a, walks along the assembly line that produces both the electric vehicle Renault Zoe and the hybrid vehicle Nissan Micra, at Flins-sur-Seine, France on May 06, 2020.

Renault, which produces its Zoe electric model in France, had pledged to make a future Renault-Nissan electric engine in France and not in Asia, as initially envisaged, he said.

The government will not sign off on a planned 5 billion euro state loan for Renault until management and unions conclude talks over the carmaker's French workforce and plants in France, Macron said.

France was Europe's top producer of electric and hybrid cars in 2019, with almost 240,000 vehicles, but IHS data show it is set to be overtaken this year by Germany.

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