A year on, Europe less fearful of U.S. green subsidies push
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[August 18, 2023]
By Jan Strupczewski
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -When the United States launched its massive green
subsidies push a year ago, many in Europe feared it would be a fresh
blow to their regional economy grappling with the knock-on effects of
war in Ukraine and lingering aftershocks of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Yet while critics argue the European Union has yet to offer a coherent
counter-plan to Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), Brussels
appears to have done just enough to ease the most pressing concern that
European companies would leave in search of dollar subsidies.
This week marks the first anniversary of the Biden administration's IRA
legislation which offers $369 billion in tax breaks over 10 years for
the production of electric vehicles, batteries, hydrogen or solar panels
in the United States.
The EU initially welcomed the climate-friendly shift by Biden, but
became worried Europe's best clean tech companies would up sticks to
secure U.S. tax breaks, draining Europe of know-how, investment, new
technologies and future jobs.
So far there is little evidence of that happening.
"There was a general anxiety that after the pandemic and the start of
the war in Ukraine, a fear that the IRA would be a final blow to the EU
economy," said Niclas Poitiers, an economist at the Bruegel think tank
in Brussels.
"The importance of the IRA for investment decisions was somewhat
overstated," he said, adding there was no data yet on whether there was
any massive diversion of investment away from the EU and into the United
States as a result of the IRA.
"There probably was some, there is some anecdotal evidence, but not
massive."
Key to allaying the IRA's attraction for European firms was an EU
decision in March to relax its state aid rules to allow every national
government to match the subsidies a European company would get in the
United States.
And already, those subsidies are flowing: German conglomerate
Thyssenkrupp will invest around 3 billion euros ($3.27 billion) in a
proposed green steel plant in Duisburg, Germany, including over 2
billion euros in state subsidies given EU approval in late July.
STRAINED BUDGETS
Officials also point out that the EU was supportive of green industries
much earlier than the United States and that 37% of its massive
post-pandemic recovery fund of 800 billion euros is earmarked for
climate friendly investment.
"Much of the 'reaction' to IRA was already in place before President
Biden launched (his) own climate package," a policy brief for the
European Parliament requested by the economic committee said.
To create longer-term, stable conditions for investment for companies
involved with electric vehicles, batteries, hydrogen, solar panels, heat
pumps or wind turbines, the EU is still working on a Net Zero Industry
Act and the Critical Raw Materials Act that built on the Chips Act from
2022.
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Solar panels are seen atop a hops
plantation in the Bavarian Holledau region in Au, Germany, June 19,
2023. REUTERS/Louisa Off/File Photo
Many EU officials were disappointed the European Commission dropped
plans in June to propose a European Sovereignty Fund, the size of
which has never been specified, that was to finance Europe's
transition to a green economy.
But the plan faced resistance from national capitals reluctant to
pump more money into EU coffers just as their budgets were strained
by rising energy costs, migration challenges and support for Ukraine
against Russian invasion.
The parliament paper said the option finally chosen - which includes
using funds from an already-agreed pandemic recovery fund - was not
ideal because those disbursements will end in 2026. But it noted the
U.S. model also had uncertainty built in because a change of
administration could end IRA subsidies.
However, the EU response is not without its critics.
The complexity of EU financing through the recovery fund means it is
available only to bigger companies, leaving smaller firms struggling
to benefit.
The EU approach also focuses on investment to build production and
research capacity, helping at the start, whereas the U.S. tax break
system means it pushes down running costs of production for the next
10 years.
Loosening the EU's state aid framework, while solving the problem of
quick support that would match U.S. levels, means large, rich
economies like Germany, France or Itay can afford to subsidise
corporate investments, while relatively poorer EU members cannot -
creating a rift in the EU's single market, one of the bloc's most
prized achievements.
The European Commission did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
It also remains the case that Europe is, for the near future at the
very least, dependent on China for clean tech components ranging
from solar panels to the elements required for EV batteries.
Now the race is on to pass the Critical Raw Materials and Net Zero
Industry acts through the EU's multi-layer legislative pipeline
before the European Parliament dissolves itself in April 2024 ahead
of new elections to the assembly.
If that race is lost, those laws would have to be passed on to the
new parliament and probably not be agreed on until 2025.
($1 = 0.9184 euros)
(Reporting by Jan Strupczewski; editing by Mark John and Susan
Fenton)
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