Friday, 9 March 2018

French President Emmanuel Macron arrives in India on 4-day visit

New Delhi: Maritime security and counter-terrorism will be high on the agenda among a number of other bilateral issues when French President Emmanuel Macron comes on a four-day visit to India starting Friday during the course of which he will also co-chair the founding conference of the International Solar Alliance. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Macron will hold a bilateral summit in New Delhi on Saturday that will aim at further deepening the strategic partnership that the two countries share. Following the meeting a number of agreements across multiple sectors are expected to be signed. Briefing the media in New Delhi on Friday K Nagaraj Naidu Joint Secretary (Europe West) in the Ministry of External Affairs said that though civil nuclear space and defence cooperation have been the tripod of the India-France partnership in recent years we have seen greater convergence in new areas particularly maritime security counter-terrorism and renewable energy . File image of French president Emmanuel Macron. AP Maritime security in the Indian Ocean region is a very important area where we are working together with France Naidu said. He said that there has been increasing convergence http://www.myvidster.com/profile/kkmytata in this area and we hope to take it forward . According to French sources in New Delhi though France is not against the recently revived quad of India the US Japan and Australia that seeks to work for peace and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific region Paris would rather like to work with New Delhi bilaterally in the Indian Ocean region given that there are around two million French citizens in its territories in the region. Counter-terrorism is an area where we already have a dialogue Naidu said in his briefing. The fight against terrorism and the security challenges the two countries face form an important aspect of the strategic partnership and these are expected to come up in Saturday s discussions. Naidu also said that the two countries have a very rich economic partnership with around 1 000 French companies operating in India and having invested close to 7 billion. We have a number of French R&D institutions in India working in very high tech areas he said. This is an engagement that is going to grow in the coming years. Stating that bilateral trade stands close to 11 billion he said: It is a very evenly balanced engagement. We don t have any major areas of concern when it comes to trade. We don t have any conflict (of interest). During the presidential visit an India-France CEOs Forum will also be held which will be attended by around 40 CEOs each from both sides. According to Naidu the French Development Agency (ADF) has made substantial investments in India particularly in the Kochi Nagpur and Bengaluru metro rail systems. At the same time you will see that France is increasingly with this country in a number of areas particularly the renewable energy sector. This will see a far much more expansion in the coming days he said. Stating that India and France share a deep engagement in the area of space for over 50 years now he said: We would now like to take this to a new level. Hopefully you will get to see that at the end of this visit. He said that overall the bilateral engagement is very good across all sectors whether it be political economic cultural sphere or people-to-people exchanges. We have a very large Indian community in France and in French territories. In France itself people of Indian community number a little over 1 00 000 Naidu said. He also said that there are five parliamentarians of Indian origin in France and four of them participated in the PIO parliamentarians conference held last January in New Delhi. On Sunday Modi and Macron will co-chair the founding conference of the India-initiated International Solar Alliance (ISA) which was launched by Modi and then French President Francois Hollande during the Paris climate summit in 2015. The ISA is conceived as a coalition of solar resource-rich countries to address their special energy needs and provide a platform to collaborate on dealing with the identified gaps through a common agreed approach. It is open to all 121 prospective member countries falling between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn. The interim secretariat of the ISA was inaugurated by Modi and Hollande in Gurugram on January 25 2016. According to Naidu till Thursday 60 countries have signed the framework agreement of the ISA and 30 have submitted the instruments of ratification. Sunday s conference will be attended by 23 of those who have submitted the instruments of ratification and 24 of those who have signed the framework agreement. During the course of his stay in India Macron will also visit Agra and Varanasi and have a town hall interaction with students in New Delhi. During his visit to Varanasi he will inaugurate a 75 MW solar plant built by Engie Solar at Mirzapur.
By Kanwal Sibal President Emmanuel Macron s visit to India is important in multiple contexts. He is a strong-willed and assertive leader with an ambitious reform agenda for France as well as for the European Union. Today with Brexit and the weakening of the once towering leadership of Angela Merkel Macron has positioned himself as the most credible interlocutor in Europe. This makes his visit that much more important. In the international context India and France can benefit from a shared understanding of the challenges that the world is facing today with the global uncertainties produced by Trump s disruptive foreign policy and the lurch towards dictatorship in China that can only make the handling of its geopolitical ambitions more difficult. India and France are working together to implement the Paris Agreement on Climate Change which Trump has repudiated. On green energy the International Solar Alliance will be set in motion jointly by PM Narendra Modi and Macron on March 11. At Davos Macron with Trump s policies in mind issued a call to all and everyone of us to push back against protectionist and nationalist forces. Macron values the WTO. We have common ground with him both on protectionism and WTO s importance which we should consolidate during his visit. If China succeeds in changing the power balance with the US in the western Pacific US weakness will become Europe s too because the Transatlantic alliance will feel the impact. The Eurasian component of China s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) also affects France because the 16 1initiative incorporating East European and Balkan countries will eventually be at EU s cost. The BRI s maritime dimension is of particular concern to New Delhi as China is building bridge heads around India but France has to be concerned too because of its equities in the Indian Ocean. Macron s visit should lead to a bolstering of India-France maritime cooperation in the Indian Ocean with more synergy between the two navies in the Gulf area where France has a base (in Abu Dhabi) and better mutual understanding of the implications of a Chinese base in Gwadar. France could also participate in connectivity projects such as the Asia-Africa Growth Corridor which would extend to Africa s eastern shore board where France has a territorial presence. At the bilateral level our relations with France have been stable and productive. The spectrum of these relations is wider than with our other major western partners as beyond defence trade investment education and culture we have had long standing cooperation in sensitive areas such as nuclear and space. France has historically shown more understanding of our strategic programmes than others. It was the first western country with which we established a Strategic Partnership and the first with which we initiated a Strategic Dialogue after our 1998 nuclear tests when France refused to impose bilateral any sanctions on us. It has valued the independence of our foreign policy. It has not intruded itself into our relations with our neighbours and ceased arming Pakistan years ago. Leaders from no other country have been honoured as many times as chief guest at our R-Day celebrations. Our understanding and cooperation on terrorism issues has grown. All this has been trust-building. Notwithstanding all this longer term strategic considerations do not sufficiently shape our policies towards France. Lack of political instruction bureaucratic decision making limited media academic and think-tank exposure to each other competition from other countries linguistic cultural business and people to people bias in favour of the English-speaking world are some reasons. Macron s visit should hopefully serve to inject greater fizz in what is intrinsically a champagne quality relationship.
ALSO READ French President Macron to arrive on March 9 for four-day visit to India French Prez Emmanuel Macron to visit India in Dec to discuss bilateral ties Emmanuel Macron meets Xi Jinping as China France seal business deals Play by EU rules post Brexit for single market access: Macron says in UK Macron s India visit: Pact to be signed to accept professional degrees span.p-content div id = div-gpt line-height:0;font-size:0 Narendra Modi Prime Minister of the world s fastest-growing economy and Emmanuel Macron President of the world s most aggressive climate change saviour have a rendezvous starting from March 9 in New Delhi. They truly represent the strongest redeemers of the world s most formidable challenges of today - climate change terrorism and inequality. And no one knows more than these two leaders that combating these three enemies would require tremendous political will and resources. That is because confronting them is not an exercise of three separate encounters on three fronts. They are interlinked and complex clusters. Climate change is aggravating inequality that drives terrorism -- creating a vicious spiral of storms. ALSO READ: Macron s India visit: Pact to be signed to accept professional degrees The good news is that the two leaders are compatible and likeminded. Macron is a great listener and keen to learn from elders like Modi. And Modi is a staunch believer that young leaders like Macron would be tomorrow s stewards to steer the world in the right direction in the milieu of a political quagmire. Modi is innovative and Macron is inventive. That combination of attributes of these two leaders is giving shape to one of the path-breaking projects that has emerged from Modi s brave innovative initiative -- the International Solar Alliance (ISA) . With 1 000 GW of solar installations targeted globally by 2030 with proposed funds of 1 trillion the basic concept of the alliance is to pool together international collaboration for research technology best practices and standards on solar energy including improving solar cell efficiency material research and policies. ISA entered into force on December 6 2017 after 15 countries ratified it. ISA heralds a new era of partnerships and collective actions to combat the effects of climate change reduce dependence on fossil fuels and reduce air pollution. ALSO READ: French President Macron to arrive on March 9 for four-day visit to India The region between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn -- to which the ISA is confined -- is really the sunshine belt around the Earth. The countries in this belt receive the most solar energy among the 196 countries in the world. Modi has scored over a strategic and diplomatic tactic of China s President Xi Jinping who has almost concurrently flagged the OBOR - One Belt One Road initiative. The ISA a real belt of 121 countries stands out in comparison with the OBOR initiative (now renamed Belt and Road Initiative or BRI) on two counts. Firstly the BRI is aimed at enhancing connectivity for a quantum jump in trade mainly between China and 68 other countries without specific acknowledgement of the environmental impact of such a jump. The ISA aims at sustainable development of the 121 countries in the tropical belt. Then the BRI is viewed by many as a project led by one country with its hidden interests. The ISA is a bilateral initiative of India and France that has now transformed into an inter-governmental treaty with voting mandates leveraging the principles of the United Nations. Clearly it is a wider and honest effort towards sustainable development. Nature indeed plays a great balancer. Rich countries mainly outside the belt of the Tropics are replete with finance and weapon power whereas ISA countries are endowed with bright sunlight. The economic revolution in the oil-rich countries in the 1970s is likely to be repeated in the sun-rich countries -- this time without any climate change impact. In fact ISA would be the correction factor to the climatic damage done by OPEC countries. Any country in the world even outside the tropical belt can join the ISA except that those lying outside the Tropics would not have voting rights. Thus France and recently joined Australia would not be voting. It is great experiment of a real multi-lateral treaty resulting from bilateral ingenuity. The timing of the official launch of the initiative cannot be better. The prices of electricity from solar energy are reaching parity with the electricity produced by fossil fuels. The latest report from the International Energy Agency (IEA) shows that the global investment in renewable energy over the last three years is more than that in fossil fuels. The employment generated in the renewable energy sector is more than in that of fossil fuels. Some experts say that increasing and intensifying trade wars and anti-dumping appeals on solar panels around the world are signs that trade in solar panels is pole-vaulting . Clearly the Modi-Macron mega moment has arrived. The impending risk however is that unrelated political debates and military deals are likely to overshadow this aspiring global initiative. Numbers like three additional Scorpene submarines and 36 Rafale fighters are likely to take over particularly in India s argumentative and democratic media. Yet another risk is the usual pitfalls of inter-governmental process well-known in the United Nations arena. Each of the 121 countries has one vote but also a stand-alone opinion. That may delay the decisions on joint research on solar cell efficiencies and storage technologies as well as allotment of funding for various projects. It is important to recognise that there are a number of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that ISA can achieve. Its contribution to energy for all and climate change and eradicating poverty would be significant. The key to success however is linking ISA to the common man at the bottom of the pyramid. What is more relevant for India is not to push ISA to meet its own pledges at the Paris climate agreement or its own renewable energy targets of 175 GW but to anchor its efforts to mainstream solar and wind energy into all strata of society. Emphasis on using solar power not only in the building sector but also in sectors that are socially important like agriculture health SMEs IT industry and university campuses should be the key. It is important that ISA not only targets the funding and gigawatt targets but takes the targets to rural areas through solar vaccine coolers solar vegetable cold storages solar schools and solar colleges. India and France should also set up an example by encouraging solar cell and panel manufacturing in the Tropical Belt countries and supporting the fair and just practices in trade in products related to solar energy. It will not be an exaggeration to state that ISA if it works smoothly and shows promise can be a well deserving candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize. (Rajendra Shende is Chairman TERRE Policy Centre a former UNEP Director and IIT Alumnus. The views expressed are personal. He can be contacted at shende.rajendra@gmail.com)
Paris: Nowhere is fashion a bigger business than in France and President Emmanuel Macron intends to keep it that way. Designers from France s Jean Paul Gaultier to Lebanon s Elie Saab descended on the Elysee Palace for dinner on Monday as Macron sought to further boost one of the country s most profitable sectors with an appeal to brands from far and wide. File image of Emmanuel Macron. AP The gala coinciding with Paris Fashion Week was the latest effort by 40-year-old Macron who came to power last May to try and lure entrepreneurs with a pro-business agenda weeks after a summit with business executives at Versailles. I want to say the same to those who create: choose France Macron said addressing guests such as Christian Louboutin famed for his stiletto shoes Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour and Alexander McQueen designer Sarah Burton. My deepest wish is that creators whether they come from India Japan Africa the United States or China will consider coming to (create) in our country and that we get everything in order to make that work easy for them he said. Macron s wife Brigitte also present wore one of her favoured French brands Louis Vuitton. Paris catwalk shows and France s broader fashion industry are already huge motors for growth and jobs at a time when the government is trying to bring down a stubbornly high unemployment rate of nearly 9 percent. One study by the French Fashion Institute IFM puts the sector ahead of autos and aerospace put together by annual sales which hover at 150 billion euros ( 184.8 billion) when including areas like jewels watches cosmetics and perfumes. Yet some designers said public cheerleading was welcome even if Paris-based luxury conglomerates like LVMH and Kering owner of Saint Laurent have already helped put France squarely on the map.
PARIS On the penultimate night of fashion month amid the final paroxysms of designers attempting to define how women want to look today there was a show of a different kind.Emmanuel Macron president of France and his wife Brigitte hosted a dinner at the Élysée Palace in honor of the industry s creatives. It was the fashion equivalent of the pre-Davos C.E.O. summit that Mr. Macron engineered at Versailles in January. News began to leak out early in the week. Continue reading the main story
NEW DELHI: French President Emmanuel Macron will pay a four-day visit to India from March 9 during which he would discuss the economic political and strategic ties between the two countries a statement by the Ministry of External Affairs said today. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will hold delegation-level talks with the French president on March 10. The leaders will co-chair the Founding Conference of the International Solar Alliance (ISA) a day later . The initiative to form the ISA for harnessing solar energy was taken by Modi and Macron s predecessor François Hollande it said. The French president s spouse Brigitte Marie-Claude Macron will also accompany him. The last visit of the French president to India was in January 2016 when Macron was the chief guest at the Republic Day celebrations that year. Modi last visited France in June 2017 immediately after Macron was elected to office. India-France strategic partnership established in 1998 is one of the most important and comprehensive bilateral engagements and is marked by intense and frequent high-level exchanges and deep political understanding. We have enhanced and ongoing cooperation in the defence maritime space security and energy-related sectors and are increasingly working together on all issues of concern including terrorism climate change sustainable growth and development infrastructure smart urbanisation S&T cooperation and youth exchanges. The visit of President Macron is aimed at strengthening the economic political and strategic dimension of our bilateral engagement the statement by the MEA said. The bilateral trade between India and France for the period April 2016 to March 2017 reached USD 10.95 billion. France is the 9th largest foreign investor in India with a cumulative investment of USD 6.09 billion from April 2000 to October 2017. Close to 1 000 French companies are present in India and about 120 Indian companies have invested in excess of Euro 1 billion in France and employ close to 7 000 people. The India-France CEO s Forum will also take place during Macron s visit to India the statement said. The visit is also aimed at forging not only strong manufacturing and technology partnerships but also greater people-to-people contacts especially through greater exchanges of students and researchers it added.
Emmanuel Macron is to push through sweeping reforms to France s vast state rail system and cut rail workers special employment rights tackling one of France s riskiest political issues. Any question of overhauling the SNCF state railway company has always proved controversial with the train network grinding to a virtual halt for weeks when trade unions opposed changes to rail staff s benefits in 1995. But the French prime minister Édouard Philippe said that the government would quickly push through changes by special executive decree without a vote in parliament if necessary. Trade unions are discussing possible strikes on 12 March and will join bigger public sector strikes on 22 March. Unlike Britain where rail services were privatised in the 1990s the SNCF remains state-run and is seen as a national treasure. But although the train network has been rated among the best in Europe in terms of speed quality and price urban commuters and regional passengers increasingly complain of overcrowding inefficiency delays and problems. The main issue for Macron is that the French state rail operator is struggling under debts of 46.6bn ( 41bn) bigger than those of a small country such as Iceland or Croatia but still in line with the large debt of rail networks in places such as Britain where the track operator Network Rail is facing its own financial woes. The prime minister said France s rail situation was alarming and untenable. Whether or not they take the train the French are paying more and more for a public service that works less and less well. Facebook Twitter Pinterest The prime minister Édouard Philippe announcing reform plans for the SNCF on Monday. Photograph: Eric Feferberg/AFP/Getty Images Unions had expressed fears of privatisation after an advisory report 10 days ago suggested turning SNCF into an autonomous company backed by public funds. Philippe insisted on Monday that privatisation was not on the cards. He said the SNCF would remain state-owned: it was part of French people s heritage and will stay that way . However he was firm on cutting rail workers special employment status. Many French rail workers have jobs for life and in some cases the right to retire in their 50s a decade earlier than other public workers. Under government plans these historical privileges would not be applied to new rail staff. Philippe said France s national railway company had to become more efficient before local and national passenger services open up to competition in coming years under European Union rules. But trade unions raged at the possible use of executive orders to force through changes as used for Macron s labour reforms last year. Jean-Claude Mailly the head of the Force Ouvrière union warned that using decrees would pour oil on the fire . The government said the reform process would begin with a parliamentary debate in mid-March but in the event of wide opposition the assembly would not have a final vote. The prime minister has said he would not close small local train lines said to cost almost 2bn for only 2% of national passengers. This issue could now fall to regional authorities to decide. Topics France Rail transport Rail industry Emmanuel Macron Europe Unions news Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share via Email Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Google Share on WhatsApp Share on Messenger Reuse this content
By: Reuters | Paris | Published: February 24 2018 9:23 pm A woman reacts as she speaks with French President Emmanuel Macron and French Agriculture Minister Stephane Travert (partially hidden) as they visit the 55th International Agriculture Fair (Salon de l Agriculture) in Paris France February 24 2018. (Source: REUTERS) Top News BJP managed to convince people we are a Muslim party: Sonia Gandhi AP SSC hall tickets 2018 released exam in March 15Padmaavat in PakistanFrance s Emmanuel Macron was booed by angry farmers on Saturday during his first visit as president to the country s main agricultural fair amid rising discontent over producer prices European Union trade talks and Chinese land purchases. Macron was greeted by jeering farmers and activists soon after his arrival at the southern Paris showground before stopping to talk policy with a group of hecklers. Elected last May France s centrist president has promised 5 billion euros ( 6.2 billion) in agricultural investment as well as minimum farm prices to prevent producers selling at a loss. But farmers and their FNSEA lobby group remain concerned about issues ranging from trade talks with the South American Mercosur bloc to a land-buying spree by Chinese investors. In a country with a profound attachment to its pastoral roots the Salon de l Agriculture is a mandatory rite of passage for political leaders who tend either to relish the event as former president Jacques Chirac visibly did or endure http://nc.gov.ua/communication/forum/?PAGE_NAME=profile_view&UID=34570 it. Nicolas Sarkozy during his presidential farm show debut a decade ago let rip with an expletive-laden insult against a man in the crowd who had declined to shake his hand. His words were caught on video and haunted him for the rest of his term. Macron responded differently to provocation on Saturday scrapping his itinerary to engage several of his hecklers in a lengthy and detailed exchange on trade policy social charges and food standards in front of TV cameras. The budget for the EU s Common Agricultural Policy should not be cut by more than Britain s contribution as it exits the 28-member bloc he also said. Thibault Guybert a cereal farmer from the Paris region who had joined in the booing said the president would be judged on his actions and bigger protests should not be ruled out. We wanted to jostle President Macron a bit to make our displeasure known and let him know we re not just going to leave it there Guybert said on BFM TV. We ll have to be very clear with him and find out whether he wants to keep French agriculture or not. For all the latest World News download Indian Express App More Top News Telangana SSC exam 2018 hall tickets released download at bse.telangana.gov.in Euthanasia judgement: With verdict SC focuses on dignity rights No Comments.

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