Isabelle Autissier reacted on Europe 1 to the announcement made by Elisabeth Borne on the same antenna to increase more than 800 million euros the budget of his ministry. For the sailor, the climate issue is "at colossal scales".

INTERVIEW

More than 800 million euros. This is the increase in the budget of the Ministry of ecological transition announced this Friday morning on Europe 1 at the microphone of Sonia Mabrouk by Minister Elisabeth Borne. But does France make enough for the climate while Germany will, she, inject 100 billion euros over 10 years? "This is obviously not enough," judge Isabelle Autissier, navigator, president of the WWF France Friday noon on Europe 1.

"We must change scale"

"We're not going to spit on it, so much the better if there's an increase in the budget, it would be dramatic if it went down," she adds. "But we have to change scale because the climate issue, like that of biodiversity, arises on colossal scales.We are talking about the plan of Germany, we have to see how it goes, but the order of magnitude is it counts in tens, even hundreds of billions, "she adds before summarizing:" It is really the whole of the economy and the public effort that must bear on these reorganizations ".

The "good economic calculation" of Berlin

Beside the German announcement, that of Elisabeth Borne seems to pale in the eyes of the president of WWF France. According to her, it is a lack of political will "that is reflected in the budgets" of the French state. Conversely , the 100 billion that Berlin will inject for its ecological transition appears as "a good economic calculation": "This money will be used to work researchers, young people, perhaps to create new businesses based on clean energy , or public transport ... This will translate for the Germans by an increase in their well-being, "says Isabelle Autissier at the microphone of Europe 1.

>> READ ALSO - "I'm going to work for the ecological transition": these young people who refuse to work in companies not enough eco-friendly

A huge investment that will allow Germany to take a step "towards the future", and "the public finances are used only for that", advance the navigator.