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Posts by Nils Redeker

Wow - beyond the change discussed in the first thread, it seems like the Commission is proposing a major change for subsidising electricity for industry: indirect emission cost (Strompreiskompensation) & CISAF electricity price relief (Industriestrompreis) could be used jointly for up to 50%! (1/3)

6 days ago 6 4 1 0

Subsidies on full throttle?
The EU Commission is about to change state aid rules yet again, given the energy crisis. One interesting component: electricity prices for energy-intensive industries can be subsidised even more.

This impacts subsidies like Germany's "Industriestrompreis": (1/5)

1 week ago 13 6 1 1
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In its package to tackle higher energy prices, the German government today doubled down on efforts to further weaken EU decarbonisation rules for cars.

Slowing the exit from oil is a curious way to respond to an oil shock.

1 week ago 60 18 2 5

Young, innovative firms often struggle to grow in Europe, and access to finance is a key issue. Now the EU is setting up a €5bn public-private fund: The Scaleup Europe Fund.

In my new policy brief, I discuss whether this is a good idea and how the fund should be designed.

Main takeaways 👇

1 week ago 34 15 1 1
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Made in Europe – Rettungsanker für die Industrie? EU to go - der Podcast für Europapolitik · Episode

Neue Podcastfolge! Mit @ph-jaeg.bsky.social habe ich über den EU Industrial Accelerator Act gesprochen und ob Made in Europe-Klauseln die europäische Industrie retten können. Hier reinhören: open.spotify.com/episode/4znY...

1 week ago 7 4 0 1
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Kommunalwahlen, Endergebnisse: Frankreich ist mehrheitlich mitte-rechts in der Fläche, links in den Großstädten, und es gab Trostpreise für die Ränder und Renaissance.

Die wichtigsten Ergebnisse und ihre Folgen: 🧵

www.lemonde.fr/les-decodeur...

4 weeks ago 30 14 1 1
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Europas Migrationspolitik: Abschotten oder Anwerben?

Am 24. März ab 8:30 sprechen @marcusengler.bsky.social und ich zum Widerspruch zwischen härteren Grenzen und akutem Fachkräftemangel @delorsberlin.bsky.social

Q Club, Friedrichstraße 181 (Hinterhof), 10117 Berlin

1 month ago 9 4 1 0
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Thank you @president.europarl.europa.eu for being at @hertieschool.bsky.social @delorsberlin.bsky.social today to discuss the future of Europe with our students! 🇪🇺

1 month ago 19 4 0 0
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The enthusiasm, curiosity & honesty of the next generation is exactly what Europe needs right now.

Inspiring to speak with these young people in Berlin about how to strengthen democracy, fight disinformation, bring Europe closer, and create opportunities for them to study, work & build careers 🇪🇺🇩🇪

1 month ago 79 17 1 2

Agree. The question of whether all the sectors currently in the IAA actually deserve additional spending is one we should have in the coming weeks.

1 month ago 3 0 0 0

Right, but I think this only applies to public procurement. For other support schemes, the rule is FTA partners only.

So US-produced vehicles could qualify in procurement but be excluded from purchase bonuses or other subsidies - correct?

1 month ago 0 0 1 0

Thanks for the pointer on AI in public procurement - good point. Don’t know enough about the sector to judge whether that would work.

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

Faster permitting is always welcome but also probably not the main bottleneck for most high-tech manufacturing I assume.

And I don't think the IAA would have been the right place to announce new EU support schemes. That requires fresh money, which will only be decided in the next MFF.

1 month ago 1 0 1 0

But in many of these cases, what you really need are classic supply-side tools to support infant industries.

Could be wrong on quantum chips - curious if anyone has high-tech sectors in mind where IAA like measures help.

1 month ago 3 0 1 0

So the kind of local content requirements the IAA puts forward don’t really fit as tools to support them.

Completely agree that we need a much stronger focus on high-tech, frontier sectors.

1 month ago 1 0 2 0
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I think the same applies to @shahinvallee.bsky.social point on quantum chips. These are neither bought by governments at scale, nor is their deployment - or that of downstream products containing them - currently subsidised.

1 month ago 2 0 1 0

Agree in principle, but I’m not sure the IAA has the right instruments for many high-tech sectors.

Its main levers are local content requirements in both public procurement and demand-side subsidies for deployment.

But governments don’t buy many robots and they rarely subsidise their deployment.

1 month ago 2 0 1 0

Agree on the sectoral scope - nothing on future technologies is a blow.

On this one - I think it is politically smarter to start with a broad list and then narrow it down via delegated acts. Much harder to ask member states to hand over the discretion to build a positive list to the Commission.

1 month ago 0 0 0 0

A good thread by @nilsredeker.bsky.social but I disagree with his optimistic assessment of the @ec.europa.eu IAA. A quick thread :

1 month ago 26 10 2 1
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New piece on Chinese tech investment in Europe — fittingly out the day the Commission publishes the Industrial Accelerator Act, kicking off months of legislative wrangling.

A look at the data and recent cases shows Europe has learned to block Chinese takeovers of tech & semiconductor assets.

1/

1 month ago 56 29 1 3

Great thread.

What astonishes me is that these Buy European clauses are supposedly covered by the EU's legal powers.

1 month ago 38 4 3 0

🧵
Trump wanting to cut all trade ties with Spain over use of US military bases is getting attention and some say Merz should've piped up more strongly.

For now, it's mostly rhetorical pressure ('waffle'), so the damage is limited. If it becomes any more concrete, the EU must decisively rebuke.

1 month ago 19 4 1 2

I would argue that it is politically much smarter to start with a broad list and narrow it down vial delegated act that to try to do it the other way round.

1 month ago 0 0 1 0
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Industrial Accelerator Act Industrial Accelerator Act Regulation

Here's a link to the proposal: single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/publications...

1 month ago 15 0 0 0

And I would - for the love of God - urge negotiators to finally drop the idea that Europe should not all but welcome cheap Chinese solar panels, which pose little risk and make decarbonisation far cheaper.

Thankfully, we can now all look forward to several months of negotiations to figure this out.

1 month ago 29 1 1 0
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Similarly, the price tolerance for Union-content and low-carbon criteria is tight: 25% for public procurement, 25% for clean tech schemes, and 30% for other sectors.

That matters because Chinese technologies are often ~40% cheaper - making these thresholds a key battleground in negotiations.

1 month ago 19 1 2 0

Done right, this could be a first big step toward Draghi’s vision of a unified EU industrial policy.

That said, not everything is settled. In practice, much will depend on how far the Commission is willing to trim the list of eligible partners - for example if they pose a risk of CHN transhipments.

1 month ago 25 0 1 0

So overall, it’s good that this proposal is finally (!) out and I would argue that it does provide a solid basis for negotiations.

Crucially, it also stays close enough to Germany’s red lines for Berlin to play a constructive role in the talks

1 month ago 22 0 1 0

This is actually quite smart. Many of the EU’s major trading partners - like Canada, Japan, South Korea - already run their own versions of local content rules.

The IAA could now become a tool to negotiate reciprocal openings among trusted partners.

1 month ago 39 3 2 1

So, the baseline would be that all 76 FTA partners qualify. Countries without an EU trade deal - like the US or China - would be excluded.

Crucially, however, the Commission could narrow the list further via delegated acts, for example, if partners keep their subsidy schemes closed to EU content.

1 month ago 28 1 2 0