i3, une unité mixte de recherche CNRS (UMR 9217)
fr

Institut Interdisciplinaire de l'Innovation

Loading Events
  • This event has passed.
Europe’s energy crisis and US protectionism – Reindustrialization in jeopardy?
Posted on 23 June 2023

couverture d'un livre sur la crise énergétique en Europe édité par la Fabrique de l'Industrie

Based on interviews with industrialists from all the sectors concerned, this work corroborates the initial findings published in April: rising energy prices and the introduction of a border carbon adjustment mechanism (MACF) are threatening almost 6% of French industrial employment.

Following on from the Working Paper "Industrial jobs threatened by the energy crisis, the MACF and the IRA: an estimate" published in April 2023 in collaboration with Oliver Wyman, this Note provides additional analysis and refines the results for estimating the volume of industrial jobs threatened by three factors: persistently high energy prices, the forthcoming introduction of the MACF (and the associated abolition of free CO2 emission allowances) and the introduction of attractive business incentives in the USA under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).

These estimates are based on simple assumptions: electricity and gas prices would double from their 2019 levels, and the MACF would be introduced immediately, with a price per tonne of CO2 of 100 euros. A series of interviews with representatives of the main industrial sectors concerned completes the work, and sheds light on numerous feedbacks from the field.

This Note shows that the sustained rise in energy prices is by far the biggest threat to our industry. Compared to a reference year (2019), a doubling of electricity and gas prices puts up to 116,000 industrial jobs at risk in France. This is four times more than the parallel impact of the disappearance of free quotas following the introduction of the MACF (almost 28,000 additional jobs threatened). For its part, the IRA makes these two threats even more tangible for a few high-carbon sectors, but is not likely to add any further risk. This initial result is largely confirmed by our interviews with industrial sectors.

This work also makes it possible to identify the respective scale of the risks currently weighing on the various French industrial sectors, which everyone agrees play an indispensable role in restoring economic sovereignty, and which are undoubtedly greatly weakened. More specifically, this study reveals that metallurgy is currently the most affected industry in France. A doubling of electricity and gas prices, coupled with the immediate introduction of the MACF, would threaten almost 27% of jobs in this sector (i.e. 18,000 jobs). This is by far the most acute exposure of all the industrial sectors studied, followed by the paper and cardboard industry (20% of jobs threatened) and the chemical industry (15% of jobs threatened).

Read more on  la Fabrique de l'Industrie