Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin unveiled a "national pact for the
environment" on Wednesday, offering French households and firms 10
billion euros of cheap loans to finance energy saving projects. Villepin
said the money would be available from January, 2007 and drawn from
tax-free savings accounts at banks. He also promised measures to
encourage the use of low-emission fuels and said coal would be taxed.
"This pact will draw together all the players. Citizens, companies,
local organisations, the state. It will allow everyone to play a role in
protecting the environment," Villepin said during a regular monthly news
conference.
Villepin also announced the creation of new nature parks, including two
windswept archipelagos near Antarctica, which are French territories and
home to large penguin colonies.
The prime minister s ecology drive comes just seven months before
presidential elections and underlines how mainstream parties are eager
not to let the Greens party have a monopoly on environmental issues.
His announcement also comes at a time when his own approval ratings are
rising in the opinion polls, reaching 32 percent in September from 26
percent in June, fuelling speculation that he has not abandoned his
presidential ambitions.
Villepin s pact included pledges to increase the number of petrol
stations around France offering low-emission, ethanol-based E85 fuel at
its pumps as part of a move to ease Frances dependency on fossil fuels.
Some 100 million euros would be given for further research into the
development of hybrid motors.
The 10 billion euros for energy-saving programmes will come from
so-called Codevi accounts, which pay 2.75 percent a year interest and
are currently capped at 4,600 euros per person.
To raise the extra funds, Villepin said this ceiling would be lifted to
6,000 euros from Jan. 1.
"The aim is to mobilise the savings of French people to help the
environment," Villepin said.
(
Planet Ark, 05/10/2006)