PARIS: France will support research on
low-carbon emission cars with €400m ($547m) in funding over four years,
President Nicolas Sarkozy said in a speech at the Paris auto show on
Thursday.
Sarkozy also said he would seek changes to EU rules on
state aid to allow member countries to support carmakers in their efforts to
produce more eco-friendly vehicles, arguing the US government was offering state
aid to its automakers.
"The US Treasury is preparing to grant $25m in
long-term loans at unbeatable rates to US carmakers for them to renovate their
plants that are more than 20 years old," Sarkozy said.
"I don't want
us (Europeans) to be living in a framework that doesn't allow us to help our own
carmakers undertake a major technological shift," he said.
"That is
why I will propose to the European Commission and to our European partners a
revision of the common framework on state aid ... so that it can be harmonized
with the goals we are pursuing in the context of the climate-energy
package."
Sarkozy said France would launch a plan to support research
and development on vehicles with low carbon emissions. He said massive
investments were required to make such vehicles widely available and to improve
their performance.
"In total, we will mobilize €400m euros of
public finances over the next four years, exclusively for research and
development on non-carbon vehicles," he said.
Sarkozy was talking
against a backdrop of economic doom and gloom in the European car market, with
sales plummeting and auto makers cutting their output in a sign turmoil on
financial markets was ruining consumers' appetite for major
purchases.
European carmakers' association ACEA said passenger car
sales in the region fell by 15 percent in August. Analysts expected further
significant falls in the fourth quarter.