The Pak Banker

Biden's climate plan stokes tension with EU allies

- WASHINGTON

Certain provisions in US President Joe Biden's landmark climate action plan, the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), have provoked strong responses from the European Union, which fears it could hurt its industry.

With the IRA set to be one of the main topics discussed during French President Emmanuel Macron's state visit to Washington this week, AFP answers some key questions about the spat.

The IRA, a behemoth piece of legislatio­n that largely focuses on climate and social spending, provides more than $430 billion in US investment­s.

Of that sum, $370 billion will go toward reducing greenhouse gas emissions 40 percent by 2030, making it the largest-ever US program to combat climate change.

Some of the investment­s are in the form of tax cuts for companies that invest in clean energy, but there are also significan­t subsidies for electric vehicles, batteries and renewable energy projectsif they are manufactur­ed in the United States.

One is a $7,500 subsidy for households buying US-made electric vehicles, while another gives benefits to manufactur­ers of wind turbines and solar panels who use US steel. The IRA has caused a stir at EU headquarte­rs in Brussels as well as in other European capitals, which see the various subsidies as "discrimina­tory," in particular against the bloc's auto manufactur­ers.

"This is unacceptab­le for the EU. As it stands, this text is extremely protection­ist, to the detriment of European exports" said Czech industry minister Jozef Sikela, whose country currently holds the rotating EU presidency.

He did, however, stress the "goodwill on both sides" after a meeting of EU ministers with US Trade Ambassador Katherine Tai.

In early November, EU Internal Market Commission­er Thierry Breton threatened to "go before the WTO" and consider "retaliator­y measures" if the United States did not reverse its subsidies.

"In some cases, the subsidies that the Biden administra­tion offers are four to 10 times the maximum amount authorized by the European Commission," said French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, who called on the Commission to create "European preferenti­al measures or to accelerate the use of reciprocit­y instrument­s."

According to a French official briefing reporters ahead of Macron's state visit, the hot button issue will be on the table.

"We fully understand the US desire to be more independen­t," said the official Monday, "but the problems come from the fact that in Europe we do not have this type of discrimina­tory instrument, we respect the rules of the WTO in this area."

The official said that France wanted "Europe too, not just the United States, to emerge stronger" from the period of multiple crises that the continent is going through.

Even if Biden wanted to walk back certain measures, or to broaden the number of beneficiar­ies, his legislativ­e options are quite limited.

Any action will be more complicate­d when his Democratic Party loses their House of Representa­tives majority in January, after their loss in the November midterms.

It's also not clear that Biden is even thinking about touching a key plank of his presidenti­al legacy, which he salvaged only after protracted negotiatio­ns in the Senate.

Biden's initial proposal, the Build Back Better Act, was even more ambitious, providing $1.7 trillion dollars of investment. That plan cleared the House at the end of 2021 but was blocked in the Senate.

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Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, said that the UAE-Bahrain ties are long-standing and underpinne­d by great hopes and promising opportunit­ies.
ABU DHABI Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, said that the UAE-Bahrain ties are long-standing and underpinne­d by great hopes and promising opportunit­ies.

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