Macron takes swipe at Trump with ‘plug, baby, plug’ comment at AI summit – as it happened | Europe


Macron takes a swipe at Trump with ‘plug, baby, plug’ comment on energy

Macron says that France is uniquely positioned to work with American and Asian partners to manufacture chips in Europe and to service data centers in France with low carbon energy as it produces “more than what we use.”

I have a good friend in the other part of the ocean saying ‘drill, baby, drill’. Here there is no need to drill.

It’s ‘plug, baby, plug’. Electricity is available, you can plug [it in], it’s ready.

He also says that France has lots of talent as it trains 40,000 data specialists a year, and this number will go up to 100,000 a year.

French president Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech on the first day of the artificial intelligence (AI) Action Summit at the Grand Palais in Paris.
French president Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech on the first day of the artificial intelligence (AI) Action Summit at the Grand Palais in Paris. Photograph: Benoît Tessier/Reuters
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Key events

Closing summary

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

… and on that note, it’s a wrap from me, Jakub Krupa.

Here are the three things to take away from today’s Europe Live blog:

  • French president Emmanuel Macron has promised to cut the red tape and streamline regulatory processes to lure AI and technology companies to Europe, saying France was uniquely positioned to offer the best of European talent, low-carbon energy, and access to the European single market (18:12, 18:24, 18:28, 18:38). Expect many of these issues to be picked up again on Tuesday, when he leads Day 2 of the summit with global leaders, including US vice-president JD Vance.

  • The Swedish prosecutor leading on the investigation into the Örebro shooting has confirmed this morning the identity of the perpetrator, reported as Rickard Andersson, a former student at Campus Risbergska. He was previously described by the Swedish media as a 35-year-old unemployed recluse with psychological problems (11:19). Most of this victims had an immigrant background, police have said (15:05), and a national minute of silence is planned for Tuesday (14:33).

  • EU and national leaders have protested against seemingly imminent US plans to impose tariffs on aluminium and steel imports, with the bloc calling them “unlawful and economically counterproductive” (9:48, 9:54, 9:58, 13:00).

And that’s all from me, Jakub Krupa, for today.

See you again tomorrow, but until then… enjoy this montage:

Macron posts montage of deepfakes of himself to promote Paris AI summit – video

If you have any tips, comments or suggestions, email me at jakub.krupa@theguardian.com.

I am also on Bluesky at @jakubkrupa.bsky.social and on X at @jakubkrupa.

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Europe, France back in the AI race, Macron declares, as he calls for ‘more Europe’

French president Emmanuel Macron speaks during the artificial intelligence Action Summit at the Grand Palais in Paris. Photograph: Michel Euler/AP

Finally, Macron turns to adoption and acceleration of the technology, as he promises that France will move fast with its proposals in this area.

He declares Europe is (thanks to France obviously) “back in the race” with the US and China with the pledges of €109bn of investment, but calls for “more Europe” and a more coordinated European approach to AI.

It’s a wake up call for your European strategy. Tomorrow [European Commission] president Van der Leyen will announce the European AI strategy, and it will be a very important occasion.

This strategy will be a unique opportunity for Europe to accelerate, to simplify our regulations, to deepen the single market and to invest as well in computing capacities. We need more Europe, and we have to provide a bigger domestic market to all the startups when they start as Europeans.

He also calls for a more streamlined approach to “permitting, authorisation, clinical trials” to help with timing of investments.

“We will have more private investment, … more public investment, … new strategies, but most of the time we are too slow,” he says as he promises to follow “the Notre Dame de Paris strategy” with action for more permissive regulation.

“We [want to] show the rest of the world that when we commit to a clear timeline we can deliver. You decide, you streamline all the procedures, somebody is in charge, and you deliver,” he says.

“Long live the AI, long live the Republic, long live France,” he concludes the speech.

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Updated at 

‘Buy European’ to help industry and ecosystem grow, Macron says

Macron also urges Europeans to “buy European” to support French and European companies.

Here is what he said:

Having more and more cooperation between our large corporat[ion]s and this innovation is very important, and this is why I do urge European players to buy European.

Not because we don’t want to buy American or Asian, I want to reassure you.

But guess what? When you are in the US and China or India, when you have a very good solution made at home, you prefer this one to the other one. And this is a good reflex. Having this ecosystem is very important.

President Emmanuel Macron gestures as he delivers a speech on the first day of the artificial intelligence (AI) Action Summit at the Grand Palais in Paris. Photograph: Benoît Tessier/Reuters
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Macron takes a swipe at Trump with ‘plug, baby, plug’ comment on energy

Macron says that France is uniquely positioned to work with American and Asian partners to manufacture chips in Europe and to service data centers in France with low carbon energy as it produces “more than what we use.”

I have a good friend in the other part of the ocean saying ‘drill, baby, drill’. Here there is no need to drill.

It’s ‘plug, baby, plug’. Electricity is available, you can plug [it in], it’s ready.

He also says that France has lots of talent as it trains 40,000 data specialists a year, and this number will go up to 100,000 a year.

French president Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech on the first day of the artificial intelligence (AI) Action Summit at the Grand Palais in Paris. Photograph: Benoît Tessier/Reuters
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AI will allow to ‘go faster, to innovate, to disrupt,’ Macron says

French president Emmanuel Macron gestures as he delivers a speech on the first day of the artificial intelligence (AI) Action Summit at the Grand Palais in Paris, France. Photograph: Benoît Tessier/Reuters

Speaking at the end of Day 1, Macron says he wants to make a case for investment in AI in France and Europe.

He says the summit focuses on using the AI as an “enabler for humanity to go faster, to innovate and to disrupt in health care, energy, mobility, public services.”

He also says the summit is a sign of belief “in this revolution and our capacity to work” together, with the US, China, India and the rest of the world.

He says that many topics from Day 1, including on regulation, will be picked up at the leaders’ summit on Tuesday.

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Macron speaks at AI Action Summit

…and there he is!

French president Emmanuel Macron is now addressing the audience at the end of Day 1 of the AI Action Summit in Paris.

You can follow on video, but I will also bring you all the lines here.

France’s Macron makes closing remarks at first day of AI summit in France – watch live

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AI scam targets senior Italian business people

Angela Giuffrida

Rome correspondent

Designer Giorgio Armani appears at the end of his Haute Couture Spring/Summer 2025 collection show for Giorgio Armani Prive in Paris last month. Photograph: Sarah Meyssonnier/Reuters

Some of Italy’s best-known business leaders, including the fashion designer Giorgio Armani and the Prada chair, Patrizio Bertelli, have been targeted by an artificial intelligence-based scam that involved the mimicking of the defence minister’s voice in telephone calls claiming to seek help to free Italian journalists kidnapped in the Middle East.

Prosecutors in Milan have received four legal complaints, including from Massimo Moratti, the former owner of Inter Milan, and a member of the Beretta family, the world’s oldest producer of firearms. The defence minister, Guido Crosetto, on Monday said he would submit a legal complaint after his voice was cloned and used in at least one of the calls.

At least one of the targets is known to have fallen for the scam and was duped into making two transfers totalling €1m to an account in Hong Kong after falsely believing they would be reimbursed by the Bank of Italy.

Full story:

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If you’re wondering where Emmanuel Macron is given he was due to start his speech at 5.30pm: well, it turns out he’s busy tweeting about his meetings with investors on the sidelines of the Paris summit.

“Investors love France! It is no coincidence that we are Europe’s leading destination for foreign investment, also in AI. The key: jobs and growth. Let’s keep going,” he says.

Les investisseurs aiment la France !

Ce n’est pas le fruit du hasard si nous sommes la première destination d’Europe pour les investissements étrangers, cela aussi en matière d’IA. À la clé : des emplois et de la croissance. On continue. pic.twitter.com/UnofXRSglM

— Emmanuel Macron (@EmmanuelMacron) February 10, 2025

So as we wait, let’s bring you a very relevant AI story from Italy…

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France’s Macron to speak at AI Action Summit in Paris soon

French President Emmanuel Macron reacts during a meeting with Chinese vice premier Zhang Guoqing (not pictured) at Élysée Palace in Paris. Photograph: Mohammed Badra/Reuters

Back to Paris and the AI Action summit, French president Emmanuel Macron is expected to speak at some point within the next hour, at the conclusion of Day 1 debates and before he hosts global leaders tomorrow.

Earlier today, he met with Chinese vice premier Zhang Guoqing.

We will bring you the latest here.

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Suspected Nice church attacker says he has ‘no recollection’ of fatal stabbings

Kim Willsher

Kim Willsher

Paris correspondent

A picture of Brahim al-Aouissaoui, who is suspected by French police and Tunisian security officials of carrying out the attack in Nice. Photograph: Al-Aouissaoui Family/Reuters

A Tunisian man has gone on trial in France accused of fatally stabbing three people in a terrorist attack at a church in Nice.

Brahim Aouissaoui, 25, told the special court in Paris he had no recollection of the events of October 2020, when he allegedly almost decapitated a 60-year-old woman, stabbed another worshipper 24 times and slit the throat of a church worker with a kitchen knife – killing all three.

It took seven police officers to arrest Aouissaoui, who was shot several times. Afterwards, officers said he was carrying a copy of the Qur’an, three knives and two mobile phones.

The trial continues until 26 February.

Full story:

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Kosovo faces uncertainty as ruling party fails to secure election majority

A Kosovar citizen vote inside a polling station in a school in the capital Pristina, Kosovo. Photograph: Matteo Placucci/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shutterstock

The governing party of the prime minister, Albin Kurti, is on track to secure the most seats in Kosovo’s parliament but will lack the numbers for a majority, the election commission has said.

Sunday’s vote pitted Kurti’s campaign to stamp out the influence of Serbia, more than 15 years after Kosovo declared independence, against the opposition’s vow to boost the economy in one of the poorest corners of Europe.

With 93% of votes counted and no party with a clear majority in the 120-seat parliament, analysts warned that Kosovo could be facing prolonged crisis, possibly ending with another election.

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People cross the UN buffer zone at Ledra Palace crossing point in divided capital Nicosia, Cyprus. Photograph: Petros Karadjias/AP

The rival leaders of ethnically divided Cyprus said they’re ready to take part in a UN-led gathering next month that could pave the way to a resumption of formal talks after an eight-year hiatus to resolve one of the world’s most intractable disputes, AP reports.

Cyprus has been split along ethnic lines for more than a half century. In 1974, Turkey invaded the island in the immediate wake of an Greek junta-backed coup mounted by supporters of union with Greece.

Numerous UN-sponsored rounds of peace talks ended in failure, the most recent being in 2017. After the collapse of those talks, Turkey and the Turkish Cypriots opted out of reunifying Cyprus as a federation composed of Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot zones — a framework that all previous negotiations had operated under.

Turkish Cypriots leader Ersin Tatar said that the meeting next month would take place on 17-18 March, but Cypriot government spokesperson Constantinos Letymbiotis said that the United Nations will confirm the exact dates in due course.

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Most Örebro shooting victims had immigrant backgrounds, police says

Miranda Bryant

Miranda Bryant

Nordic correspondent

Candles being lit in Malmö last Friday to honour the victims of the Örebro campus shooting. Photograph: Johan Nilsson/Reuters

Most of the people killed by a gunman in the Swedish city of Örebro last week had an immigrant background, police have said, after the prime minister paid tribute to the victims as “people who wanted to do something good, who wanted to contribute to a better society”.

Among those understood to have been killed in Sweden’s deadliest mass shooting, which took place at an adult education centre on Tuesday, were two Syrian men, both refugees, an Eritrean woman, an Iranian woman and a female teacher from Kurdistan.

Niclas Hallgren, the deputy regional police chief for Bergslagen, told SVT: “Most of the victims in the school shooting had a foreign background. Ethnicity is a circumstance that the police have taken into account since early in the investigation when assessing a possible motive.”

He added: “It is too early to say that there is a specific reason behind the act.”

Full report:

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Sweden to commemorate Örebro victims with minute of silence on Tuesday

The Royal Palace in Stockholm fly flags at half mast last week. Photograph: Jonas Ekströmer/TT/REX/Shutterstock

Sweden will commemorate the victims of the Örebro mass shooting with a national minute of silence at midday on Tuesday.

Earlier during the day, flags will be flown at half mast.

Swedish prime minister Ulf Kristersson said he wanted “to honour the victims who never came home to their loved ones.”

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Fears over AI’s environmental, inequality impact dominate Paris summit

Dan Milmo

Dan Milmo

Global technology editor, in Paris

Special envoy Anne Bouverot addresses the audience during the opening ceremony of an Artificial Intelligence Action Summit in Paris. Photograph: Michel Euler/AP

The impact of artificial intelligence on the environment and inequality has dominated the opening exchanges of a global summit in Paris attended by political leaders, tech executives and experts.

Emmanuel Macron’s AI envoy, Anne Bouverot, opened the two-day gathering at the Grand Palais in the heart of the French capital with a speech referring to the environmental impact of AI, which requires vast amounts of energy and resource to develop and operate.

“We know that AI can help mitigate climate change, but we also know that its current trajectory is unsustainable,” Bouverot said. Sustainable development of the technology would be on the agenda, she added.

Full report:

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Romanian president to resign after cancelled election

Romania’s president Klaus Werner Iohannis pictured at an event in Bucharest in 2023. Photograph: Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Reuters

Romanian president Klaus Iohannis said he would resign following pressure for him to leave the post after a court last year cancelled the country’s presidential election.

When annulling the elections, Romania’s top court said Iohannis, whose second and last term expired in December last year, should stay on until his replacement is elected, after it voided the presidential ballot on suspicion of Russian interference.

Today’s decision follows a move by opposition parties to try to force his impeachment in parliament, although Romanian media noted that they did not have the majority required to pass their motion.

“In order to spare Romania and the Romanian citizens from crisis… I resign from the office of president of Romania,” Iohannis said, adding that he would officially stand down on Wednesday, AFP reported.

He called the motion to impeach him “unfounded” and “damaging” to Romania’s reputation, and practically irrelevant given he was set to step down within months anyway.

The Romanian parliament will meet to discuss next steps on Tuesday, the country’s national press agency Agerpres reported.

The re-run of the presidential election is expected to take place in May.

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