France may help economy with clean products, electric cars, hydrogen fuel cells

by SOLARLIFE | October 20, 2008 at 05:48 am
157 views | 4 Recommendations | 2 comments

Photos

France may help economy with clean products, electric cars, hydrogen fuel cells

France may help economy with clean products, electric cars, hydrogen fuel cells

see larger image

uploaded by SOLARLIFE

Crisis to Green economy or Champaign friends rescue operation ?

 

The crisis forces governments to jump on clean technologies as electric cars or fuel cells. The banks bailout created nothing, than credit restriciton. Again a strong warning to channel new money into old bancruptcy government driven companies. The way out is to decide in a fair competition for everybody to start the green economy with new companies.

Middle class economy ?

The Dinosaurs of old industrial age have to die, before new markets open. If not the old companies take the money like the banks, unable to create low cost innovation. If not politicians have to be fired for Lobby 3-way party business, helping out their yacht and champaign friends heading towards bancruptcy.

French Diesel car industry in trouble

Le Monde said the government "envisages helping several industrial sectors, in particular the car industry."

The newspaper said if France was unable to convince Europe of the need for a concerted effort to help the car sector "it would take national measures to help the development of electric cars, to create a network of service stations capable of replacing batteries, or supporting research into fuel cells." 

recommend This comment thread is now closed
Fairbanks
Fairbanks
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 08:49 on October 20th, 2008

Golf carts are fun to drive.  We could all drive golf carts although on a day like to day with -2 degrees and 18-wheelers we might not get back home again. 

0
SOLARLIFE

Fairbanks thanks for Flag "France may help economy with clean products, electric cars"

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from