French president Emmanuel Macron unveiled a €30 billion plan to create the "high tech champions of the future” on Tuesday. Dubbed "France 2030," the aim is to invest the funds over five years in sectors such as robotics, semiconductors, electric cars, and nuclear and renewable energy sources. “I want us to look ahead and see our weaknesses and strengths. We need the country to produce more,” Macron said. The main focus will be on "decarbonizing" French industry, building small reactors, and becoming leaders in green hydrogen, he added. Europe is hedging its bets on clean hydrogen to reach climate neutrality. Will it work? The plan will include €8 billion being spent on renewables, nuclear and hydrogen. But €4 billion will be spent on transport and mobility, with a target to produce 2 million electric and hybrid vehicles and the first low emission aircraft. Meanwhile, €6 billion will be put towards robotics, €1.5 billion will be allocated for projects such as virtual reality, while another €1.5 billion will be earmarked for food and agriculture. A further €5 billion will be ring-fenced for industrial startups and €2 billion will be for training for sectors that are booming. Macron’s plan to boost industry comes six months before France’s presidential election and as he tries to secure votes in the industrial heartlands. The president said he wants to create "a virtuous cycle — innovate, produce, export — to finance our social model". "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 it all," he added. France is the Euro area’s second-largest economy but industry has been in decline for decades. "We are a creative country, it’s in our DNA," Macron said. "But alongside that, we have real weaknesses. We have under-invested in education, training, and higher education" and "we have a quality of labor to allocate that isn’t at the right level". The new €30 billion plan comes on top of a €100 billion recovery plan announced last year to help France weather the coronavirus pandemic. A large part of that went to promoting greener energy policies. Macron’s opponents have already criticised the new plan. "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. — Euronews
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