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Posted on Thursday, April 26, 2012 10:07 AM
A CONSUMER group has called for a stop to the roll-out of the new “Linky” electricity meters, saying there has been a “campaign of dis-information” surrounding them.
UFC-Que Choisir has contradicted statements from ERDF, the body in charge of electricity infrastructure, that the roll-out will benefit customers and will be free to them.
It has applied to the Conseil d’Etat for the roll-out to be halted.
The group’s main complaints are that:
- A decision to generalise the installation of Linky meters was made even though trials were not conclusive as to effectiveness. |
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Posted on Thursday, April 26, 2012 10:04 AM
CHEQUES could be on their way out in France as they cost too much to process - and one in two could vanish as soon as 2017. The proposal, contained in a Comité Consultatif du Secteur Financier (part of the Banque de France) report into methods of payment, comes as countries such as Germany and Belgium have all but cancelled cheques from their lives. In France cheque usage has fallen 4% in the past 10 years but 11% of people say they would be upset if they were withdrawn altogether. The report said 18.3% of payments were still made by cheque and added the high cost of each transaction - between €0.50 and €1 for each one - was largely covered by the shop or the bank, which led to increased costs elsewhere. The CCSF said the average cheque payment was €555 and the 3.1 billion cheques used each year cost €2.4bn. Payment by credit or debit card, bank transfer or direct debit is suggested as an alternative as they are much cheaper. However, consumers' group UFC Que Choisir say the costs have been over-estimated as much of the work in handling cheques has been automated. The national audit body Cour des Comptes said in 2010 the cost of a cheque transaction was between €0.15 and €0.40. The CCSF said the usage of cheques and cash was a burden for the banks as it did not allow them to invest in new methods of payment - methods which were being introduced by rivals to cut costs and undercut traditional banks' rates. The heavy need for cash meant that banks spent €2.6bn on cash machines and the CCSF wants more investment in electronic non-contact payments using swipe cards, mobile phones or NFC technology and internet banking.
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Posted on Monday, April 23, 2012 5:06 PM
FRENCH people are easing back on alcohol consumption, with a study showing only 45% of customers in bars, cafés and restaurants order alcohol.
This is a reduction since the last study, in 2008, which showed 46.7% would order alcoholic drinks. It is backed by the finding that only 14% of people said they had alcohol each day - with the majority of them being over-60s. Daily drinking is very rare among women or young people.
The over-45s were the largest group drinking alcohol in bars and cafés. |
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Posted on Monday, April 23, 2012 5:03 PM
RESIDENTIAL taxes for the coming year are being kept roughly in line with the past year as mayors and departmental councils have reined back increases in the taxe d'habitation and taxe foncière.
The Association des Maires de France told Le Figaro that "across the board, mayors have chosen not to raise taxes" in 2012 and the Assemblée des Départements de France had the same message.
However, that does not mean impôts locaux |
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Posted on Friday, February 17, 2012 1:19 PM
FRANCE is out of the cold snap which has seen sub-zero temperatures across the country over the last two weeks.
Most of the country apart from the north and north west is still on a low-level (yellow) alert from Météo France, meaning you should take care if doing activities at risk from bad weather, however there are no departments now rated at the second-to-highest orange alert.
Temperatures are predicted to remain above zero, apart from in the Alps, but they also dipped into minus figures this morning on the plateaus of the Massif Central and in parts of the Vosges, Franche-Comté and Midi-Pyrénées. |
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Posted on Friday, February 17, 2012 1:18 PM
A RISE in the standard rate of VAT has moved a step further with its adoption by the National Assembly MPs.
The measure, which would mean a rise from 19.6% to 21.2%, from October 1, still has to go to the Senate, along with the rest of the Corrective Finance Law for 2012. This is supposed to be rubber stamped by March 9, when MPs and senators take a break as electoral campaigns get under way.
The government is determined to push the measure through – despite an embarrassing setback when the assembly’s finance committee initially struck it out of the draft law due to poor attendance by government MPs. |
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Posted on Friday, February 17, 2012 1:17 PM
A LAW aiming to make sure everyone has access to broadband has been passed by the Senate.
Its measures would mainly benefit people living away from densely populated urban areas.
The bill has been put forward by a centrist senator, Hervé Maurey, and a UMP Party one, Philippe Leroy – however it is contested by most of Mr Leroy’s colleagues on the right, and is also unpopular with telecoms companies.
It aims to create new regulations for the deployment of broadband, superfast fibre-optic broadband and also 3G mobile telephony. |
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Posted on Monday, January 23, 2012 4:03 PM
BURGLARIES are significantly up (though crime in general is slightly down) new Interior Ministry figures show.
There were 3,533,256 crimes last year, a drop of 0.34%, said Interior Minister Claude Guéant – however burglaries were up 16%.
Mr Guéant blamed the rise in break-ins on a “new phenomenon that is very hard to combat, which is raids by people from central and eastern Europe who go from one country to another very rapidly”.
He added the good overall figures – which represent the ninth successive drop – are directly comparable to previous years’ because the same way of presenting the figures has been used since 1972. |
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Posted on Thursday, November 10, 2011 7:46 PM
SUMMER might seem some way off, but airlines are already gearing up for the peak season with a number of new France-UK routes announced.
Jet2 has opened a new base at Glasgow International Airport and is preparing to launch a Nice-Glasgow route from March 2011. New links from Brive (Dordogne Valley) to Manchester, and from Toulouse to Newcastle, will open in May. Another new addition to the schedule is a link from Chambéry to East Midlands airport, which will run through the winter until the end of March. |
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Posted on Thursday, November 10, 2011 7:44 PM
READY-to-use sim cards bought on Ryanair planes could cut the cost of taking a mobile phone abroad.
The airline has teamed up with the telecoms company Maxroam to offer cheap calls to travellers. The sim enable travellers to receive calls and text for free, and to send texts for nine cents, calls for 29c per minute and 99c for one megabyte of data.
Maxroam cards will also be available to buy via Ryanair's website and will work in 43 countries in Europe. Passengers will be able to buy €20 cards for just €10. |
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