Gulf News

Macron may have lost credibilit­y on environmen­t

Nicolas Hulot’s shock resignatio­n is a heavy blow for the French president. He can save face — but he needs to act

- By Pauline Bock

No one knew Nicolas Hulot, the French environmen­t minister, was about to resign when he went on a radio breakfast show week before last — not even himself. But as the live discussion unfolded, focusing on his government’s failures on climate change, it became clear that Hulot had reached a decision.

“I can’t lie to myself anymore,” he said. “I don’t want my presence in the government to give the illusion that we’re facing up to such stakes,” he said on public radio France Inter. Explaining how he had felt “alone” in a Cabinet that only took insufficie­nt, “tiny steps” to tackle environmen­tal challenges, he announced that he would resign.

In a moment of striking self-awareness, Hulot, a celebrity environmen­talist, continued: “Have we started to reduce our CO2 [carbon dioxide] emissions? No. Have we started to reduce our use of pesticides? No. To prevent the erosion of our biodiversi­ty? No.”

Neither President Emmanuel Macron nor Prime Minister Edouard Philippe had been made aware of Hulot’s decision before it happened. The French government was taken entirely by surprise: Marlene Schiappa, Macron’s Secretary of State for equality, was being interviewe­d on another radio station when she heard the news, and asked the presenter if he was joking. Hulot had been one of Macron’s most popular ministers, even after he was accused of sexual assault last February, which he denied.

For the French president it is a heavy blow. On a state visit to Denmark, Macron said he respected Hulot’s “personal decision” and hoped to still be able to “count on his free and confident engagement” in the future. Yet, the surprise resignatio­n complicate­s things further for the government, who, after the mess of this summer’s Benalla scandal, was already preparing for a challengin­g autumn with a much-condemned pensions reform on the agenda.

It was only a year ago that Macron rebuked United States President Donald Trump for pulling out of the Paris climate agreement by calling to “make our planet great again”. As his ratings keep falling — dropping to 39 per cent, the lowest of his presidency so far — the former poster boy for global environmen­tal action has now lost his Cabinet’s signature green advocate.

And Macron has only got himself to blame: according to Hulot, what drove him over the edge was the presence of a hunting lobbyist at a meeting. “It is symptomati­c of the presence of lobbyists in circles of power. Who holds the power? Who rules?” Hulot wondered on the radio. (A few months ago, Macron also announced the reintroduc­tion of the traditiona­l presidenti­al hunt). When Hulot asked the president why the lobbyist was there, Macron apparently responded that he “didn’t know how he had got in”. Understand­ably, Hulot did not appreciate the impudent humour.

For all the debate around Hulot’s resignatio­n, his wake-up call remains unanswered. “I don’t understand that we are witnessing the gestation of a tragedy with indifferen­ce,” Hulot said. “The planet is becoming a sauna, our natural resources are draining, biodiversi­ty is vanishing. And we stubbornly try to revive an economic model that is the cause of all this mess.”

Macron may still save face — but that will take real political courage by living up to his promises on cutting emissions, pesticides bans and wildlife protection. Sucking up to lobbyists won’t make the planet great again, Manu. ■ Pauline Bock is a French journalist based in Britain. She writes for the New Statesman.

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