Saudi Press

Saudi Arabia and the world
Monday, Mar 09, 2026

Berlin warms to France’s ‘Buy European’ plans as global trade rules erode

Berlin warms to France’s ‘Buy European’ plans as global trade rules erode

Germany fears losing industrial champions because of unfair competition from state-backed US and Chinese rivals.

Threatened by a new U.S. subsidy package that could hammer EU industry, Germany is rowing back on its long-standing objections to schemes like France's "Buy European Act" that would set provisions on buying goods locally.

Berlin's increasing sympathy for the French approach is a stark sign that Germany fears the traditional trade order is melting, as Washington follows China's lead with massive state support for industry. As one of the EU's more commercially liberal nations, Germany has generally opposed French proposals for interventionist industrial strategy, reckoning such measures would break free-trade taboos.

The calculus is now changing, however, ahead of a gathering of EU trade ministers in Brussels on Friday and a meeting between German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne in Berlin.

America's Inflation Reduction Act, which grants $369 billion worth of subsidies and tax breaks to U.S. green businesses, will be high on the agenda of both meetings. EU countries fear that the U.S. law will suck investment out of Europe, and are fuming about discriminatory provisions that encourage consumers to "Buy American" when it comes to purchasing an electric vehicle.

With the time for peace talks with the U.S. running out amid little hope of an agreement, German officials are now open talking about not only funneling billions of state subsidies into key green technologies like batteries, wind power or hydrogen, but also creating controversial requirements that would, at least to a certain extent, privilege European production.

German Economy Minister Robert Habeck said Thursday that the EU needed a "strong answer" to the U.S. law, telling German daily Handelsblatt that this would involve faster approvals of state aid decisions by the European Commission, more subsidies and also "procurement of local products."

The latter point is crucial, as it edges toward a "Buy European Act" that French President Emmanuel Macron has been calling for, which would give preferences to the use of European components in crucial industries, similar to those the U.S. law offers to American products. However, it's likely to antagonize other trading partners as they would be disadvantaged.

While such local content provisions might help the EU to avoid an exodus of key industries and ensure that the bloc stays in the race to produce next-generation green technologies, including electric vehicles, they are seen as a sacrilege in the international trading system.


German Economy Minister Robert Habeck and Chancellor Olf Scholz, pictured November 23 2022

"The question of local content is very tricky, because it’s by definition very much against the core of World Trade Organization (WTO) rules, which is no discrimination against foreign companies," said Elvire Fabry, a senior research fellow at the Institut Jacques Delors.

Fabry warned that the EU "risks crossing the Rubicon" and losing its credibility as a custodian of global trading rules, on which the EU depends much more than the U.S. because of its high share of foreign trade.

Speaking at an economics summit in Berlin on Wednesday, Habeck accepted that the EU's actions should remain in line with multilateral trading rules "if possible," but also warned that, faced with unfair trading practices by the U.S. and China, it was not enough to just "criticize and complain."

Habeck said that local content requirements had long been "unfamiliar" to the EU, but stressed that Europe had already taken such a path in the field of microchip production.

He suggested that such a measure might qualify for an exemption under global trading rules as long as the EU can prove that it's not about creating "national" advantages but instead about "the strategic need for sovereignty, also in the area of energy policy."

Newsletter

Related Articles

Saudi Press
0:00
0:00
Close
Saudi Crown Prince Holds Strategic Calls With Spanish and Ukrainian Leaders Amid Regional Tensions
Kuwait’s Jazeera Airways Shifts Operations to Saudi Arabia Amid Regional Airspace Disruptions
Saudi Arabian Grand Prix: Why Jeddah’s Night Race Has Become One of Formula One’s Most Distinctive Events
F1 Leadership Addresses Bahrain and Saudi Arabia Races as Middle East Conflict Raises Safety Concerns
Zelenskyy Offers Saudi Crown Prince Assistance to Counter Iranian Drone Threat
Seventh U.S. Service Member Dies from Injuries After Iranian Strike in Saudi Arabia
Civilian Infrastructure Increasingly Hit as Iran Conflict Expands and Saudi Arabia Reports First Fatalities
Saudi Arabia Warns Iran to Halt Attacks and Signals Potential Retaliation
US Embassy in Riyadh Issues Security Alert Urging Americans to Shelter in Place Amid Regional Attacks
Projectile Strike on Saudi Residential Building Kills Two as Regional Conflict Expands
Saudi Arabia Warns Iran While Expanding Diplomatic Efforts to Contain Widening Middle East War
Iran’s President Rejects U.S. Surrender Demand as Drone and Missile Strikes Hit Gulf States
Saudi Arabia Intercepts Drone Swarm Targeting Strategic Shaybah Oil Field
Pakistan Faces Growing Pressure to Balance Ties With Iran and Saudi Arabia as Regional War Intensifies
Middle East Conflict Tests Mohammed bin Salman’s Vision to Transform Saudi Arabia Into a Global Hub
Proposed U.S.–Saudi Nuclear Deal Could Ease Traditional Nonproliferation Requirements
Iran Claims Strike on U.S.-Linked Oil Tanker Near Saudi Waters as Maritime Tensions Escalate
Saudi Arabia Says Air Defences Destroyed 23 Drones and Three Missiles Amid Escalating Regional Conflict
Saudi Arabia Warns Iran Against ‘Miscalculation’ After Missile and Drone Attacks Across Gulf
Iranian Missiles Intercepted Across Gulf as Air Defences Activate in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE and Bahrain
U.S. Justice Department Pursues Criminal Cases Against Cuban Officials in New Legal Push
Abrupt Cancellation of U.S. Army Exercise Sparks Speculation Over Possible Middle East Deployment
Saudi Arabia Led OPEC Output Surge Ahead of Iran Strikes, Survey Finds
Cristiano Ronaldo Travels to Spain for Hamstring Treatment After Injury in Saudi Pro League Match
Saudi Aramco Reroutes Oil to Red Sea as Strait of Hormuz Disruptions Hit Gulf Exports
Saudi Arabia Presses Ahead With Economic Diversification Despite Fiscal and External Deficits
Middle East Conflict Puts Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Formula One Races at Risk
Iran Targets Israeli Diplomatic Site in Bahrain and US Air Base in Qatar as Regional Conflict Expands
Saudi Arabia Intercepts Three Ballistic Missiles Targeting Prince Sultan Air Base
Iran Launches Fresh Missile and Drone Attacks Across Middle East as Regional War Intensifies
Saudi Arabia Opens Direct Communication Channel With Iran in Bid to Prevent Wider Regional War
Saudi Arabia Maintains Strong Fiscal Position Despite Global Uncertainty, Finance Ministry Says
Saudi Arabia Considers Response After Iranian Drone Strike Hits Major Northern Oil Refinery
Saudi Carrier Flynas Plans Limited Flight Resumption to Dubai Amid Regional Tensions
Saudi Arabia and UAE Pledge Close Coordination to Secure Oil Supplies for Japan
Middle East Conflict Casts Doubt Over Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Formula One Races
Iran Rejects Claims of Attacks on Türkiye, Azerbaijan, Saudi Arabia and Oman
Saudi Arabia Condemns Iranian Strikes Targeting Türkiye and Azerbaijan
Saudi Pro League Orders Clubs to Continue Matches Despite Escalating Regional Conflict
U.S. Embassy in Riyadh Issues Emergency Security Alert After Drone Strike and Escalating Regional Threats
Saudi Arabia Scrambles to Redirect Oil Exports as Gulf Storage Nears Capacity
Iran Expresses Gratitude to Saudi Arabia for Closing Airspace During Escalating Conflict
Saudi Arabia Fears Iranian Strikes Could Target Senior Leaders as Regional War Escalates
Iran Says Its Strikes Target Only U.S. Military Assets and Denies Attacking Saudi Arabia
Drone Strike Hits U.S. Embassy in Riyadh as Middle East Conflict Escalates
Tom Brady’s Saudi Flag Football Event May Shift to U.S. as Middle East Conflict Disrupts Plans
Iran War Strikes Saudi Arabia at a Critical Moment for Its Economic Transformation
Saudi Cabinet Declares Kingdom Will Take All Necessary Measures to Defend National Security
United States Urges Citizens to Leave Fourteen Middle Eastern Countries as Iran War Escalates
Saudi Aramco’s Ras Tanura Refinery Targeted Again in Second Drone Attack Within Two Days
×