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Ben Sulayem to stand unopposed as FIA election goes ahead
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US trade gap shrinks to narrowest since 2020 after tariff hikes
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NATO chief says a joint plan to end Ukraine war would 'test' Putin
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British cycling great Hoy recovers from 'worst' crash
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German growth forecasts slashed, Merz under pressure
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Emotional Nobel laureate Machado describes reuniting with her children
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Bulgarian government resigns after mass protests: PM
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Thyssenkrupp pauses steel production at two sites citing Asian pressure
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Swiss yodelling joins world cultural heritage list
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Stocks diverge as AI fears cloud US rate cut
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Israel says Hamas 'will be disarmed' after group proposes weapons freeze
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ECB proposes simplifying rules for banks
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Toll in deadly Indonesia floods near 1,000, frustrations grow
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Myanmar junta air strike on hospital kills 31, aid workers say
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General strike hits planes, trains and services in Portugal
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Vietnam's capital chokes through week of toxic smog
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Stocks mixed as US rate cut offset by Fed outlook, Oracle earnings
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Mexico approves punishing vape sales with jail time
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US, Japan hold joint air exercise after China-Russia patrols
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Ex-Man Utd star Lingard scores on tearful farewell to South Korea
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Hay fifty on debut helps New Zealand to 73-run lead against West Indies
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Debut fifty for Hay takes New Zealand to 200-5 in West Indies Test
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Sweet 16 as Thunder demolish Suns to reach NBA Cup semis
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Austria set to vote on headscarf ban in schools
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Asian traders cheer US rate cut but gains tempered by outlook
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Racing towards great white sharks in Australia
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Fighting rages at Cambodia-Thailand border ahead of expected Trump call
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Venezuelan opposition leader emerges from hiding after winning Nobel
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Eddie Jones given Japan vote of confidence for 2027 World Cup
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Kennedy's health movement turns on Trump administration over pesticides
France concerned by US climate bill but doesn't want 'war'
France's foreign minister voiced alarm Friday over a massive US climate spending package, saying it risked unfair competition, but said Europe did not want a green trade war.
Parts of President Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act, which will pump $370 billion into green energy, "from our point of view impact the level playing field between the US and European actors," Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna said at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.
Her remarks echo German and French economic ministers who this week at a meeting in Berlin called for a strong response from the European Union against state support for US green businesses.
But asked if the tensions could fuel another trade rift along the lines of the long Boeing vs. Airbus showdown, Colonna said, "We are certainly not looking for any war."
She acknowledged that the European Union had also long sought bolder action by the United States on climate change and welcomed the historic decision to take action.
"We will not complain that you are doing that speed-up that was needed," she said.
But she called for discussion on whether the US investment would affect "the economic alignment of our two entities that is absolutely needed, I think, for our common prosperity down the road, especially in the current context of the war in Ukraine."
Colonna said that France valued a strong relationship with the United States. Tensions have eased since earlier in the Biden administration when France was furious that Australia dropped a major French submarine deal to buy US-made nuclear models.
"France will be a troublesome ally as it always speaks its mind," she said.
"But it is an ally that is able and willing, with a full-spectrum, combat-proven military and a strategic culture which has always led us to shoulder our responsibilities."
F.Müller--BTB