Agreement on EU power market reform imminent, Scholz and Macron say, shrugging off nuclear dispute
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France and Germany could soon agree on a reform of the EU electricity market, French president Emmanuel Macron and German chancellor Olaf Scholz have said after their meeting in the northern German port city of Hamburg. A solution in the debate between Paris and Berlin on maintaining competitiveness in Europe while transforming the industry towards climate neutral procedures could still be achieved in October, the French president said at a press conference following the informal two-day meeting between government members of both countries in Scholz鈥檚 hometown. 鈥淥f course, we have two very different models at the national level,鈥 Macron said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e discussed this profoundly and in an encouraging fashion and agreed our teams want to work together in the next weeks to arrive at a necessary agreement by the end of the month.鈥 The priority would be 鈥to have a Europe with one coherent strategy,鈥 Macron said, adding that this would currently be needed with respect to the U.S., 鈥渨hich is less dependent and has lower prices.鈥
Chancellor Scholz said Germany and France agreed on climate action targets, even if they pursued different approaches to achieve them. The fact that France bets on nuclear power and Germany instead aims for 100 percent renewables and a massively expanded power grid 鈥渋s no reason for antagonism but simply represents two different decisions,鈥 Scholz argued. He added he was 鈥渃onfident鈥 that a solution for the EU power market reform could be found quickly. 鈥淎nd this is most likely if Germany and France develop it together.鈥 The chancellor added that both countries had drafted a strategy to reduce bureaucracy in the European Union that will allow policy decisions to take effect faster and more comprehensively.
Germany and France must focus on 鈥渟imple stuff鈥 on the way to climate neutrality by 2050: leaving gas and coal, establishing greater energy efficiency, renewable power sources and nuclear energy. 鈥淓veryone says that,鈥 the French president argued, adding that a strategy that excludes one of these elements could not succeed. 鈥淚t would be a historic mistake to think in the short term here and decide for either renewables or nuclear power. This would not work.鈥 Bringing emissions down in the most cost-efficient manner and simultaneously creating 鈥渁 free market for low-CO2聽electricity production鈥 should now be the focus, Macron said, adding that the two leaders agreed that 鈥渨e don鈥檛 want subsidies for energy-intensive production.鈥
The statements by the two government leaders came one day after another joint press conference in Hamburg, in which both Macron and Scholz underlined the need for greater industry cooperation and hailed aircraft manufacturer Airbus as a role model for future projects between the two countries amid the EU's efforts to move towards climate neutrality.