the revival of the compromised French photovoltaic sector

Rewrite the provided article:

DECRYPTION – The abandonment of the takeover of Photowatt by Carbon is a new snub for the government’s ambitions.

France’s vast reindustrialization program is collapsing in entire sections as the days go by. This Thursday, the takeover of Photowatt, the last French producer of photovoltaic panels by Carbon, a start-up dedicated to being the new flagship of French solar power, fell through. The Photowatt unions, based in Bourgoin-Jallieu (Isère), issued a negative (advisory) opinion on this takeover project on Wednesday, considering it too fragile.

However, France has never installed so many solar panels on its territory. The only problem is that they are mainly made in China, a country which holds 80% of the world market. In the name of national sovereignty and reindustrialization, the government — essentially under the leadership of former Minister of the Economy Bruno Le Maire — has made the return of the production of these panels to France a great symbol. A vast program just a stone’s throw from making pschitt.

Since the 2010s, Chinese competition has stifled the European photovoltaic industry. With slashed prices, it has conquered…

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into a high-quality, completely original piece for my website.

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Be entirely reimagined and rewritten, with no sentences or phrasing resembling

DECRYPTION – The abandonment of the takeover of Photowatt by Carbon is a new snub for the government’s ambitions.

France’s vast reindustrialization program is collapsing in entire sections as the days go by. This Thursday, the takeover of Photowatt, the last French producer of photovoltaic panels by Carbon, a start-up dedicated to being the new flagship of French solar power, fell through. The Photowatt unions, based in Bourgoin-Jallieu (Isère), issued a negative (advisory) opinion on this takeover project on Wednesday, considering it too fragile.

However, France has never installed so many solar panels on its territory. The only problem is that they are mainly made in China, a country which holds 80% of the world market. In the name of national sovereignty and reindustrialization, the government — essentially under the leadership of former Minister of the Economy Bruno Le Maire — has made the return of the production of these panels to France a great symbol. A vast program just a stone’s throw from making pschitt.

Since the 2010s, Chinese competition has stifled the European photovoltaic industry. With slashed prices, it has conquered…

This article is reserved for subscribers. You have 80% left to discover.

Black Friday: last days

-70% on digital subscription

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, while maintaining the same key facts, dates, and quotes. The new text should feel completely fresh, naturally flowing, and as if written from scratch by a professional human news editor.
Retain all people’s declarations in quotation marks (” “) exactly as they appear in

DECRYPTION – The abandonment of the takeover of Photowatt by Carbon is a new snub for the government’s ambitions.

France’s vast reindustrialization program is collapsing in entire sections as the days go by. This Thursday, the takeover of Photowatt, the last French producer of photovoltaic panels by Carbon, a start-up dedicated to being the new flagship of French solar power, fell through. The Photowatt unions, based in Bourgoin-Jallieu (Isère), issued a negative (advisory) opinion on this takeover project on Wednesday, considering it too fragile.

However, France has never installed so many solar panels on its territory. The only problem is that they are mainly made in China, a country which holds 80% of the world market. In the name of national sovereignty and reindustrialization, the government — essentially under the leadership of former Minister of the Economy Bruno Le Maire — has made the return of the production of these panels to France a great symbol. A vast program just a stone’s throw from making pschitt.

Since the 2010s, Chinese competition has stifled the European photovoltaic industry. With slashed prices, it has conquered…

This article is reserved for subscribers. You have 80% left to discover.

Black Friday: last days

-70% on digital subscription

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, incorporating them naturally into the rewritten text.
Preserve all original HTML tags from

DECRYPTION – The abandonment of the takeover of Photowatt by Carbon is a new snub for the government’s ambitions.

France’s vast reindustrialization program is collapsing in entire sections as the days go by. This Thursday, the takeover of Photowatt, the last French producer of photovoltaic panels by Carbon, a start-up dedicated to being the new flagship of French solar power, fell through. The Photowatt unions, based in Bourgoin-Jallieu (Isère), issued a negative (advisory) opinion on this takeover project on Wednesday, considering it too fragile.

However, France has never installed so many solar panels on its territory. The only problem is that they are mainly made in China, a country which holds 80% of the world market. In the name of national sovereignty and reindustrialization, the government — essentially under the leadership of former Minister of the Economy Bruno Le Maire — has made the return of the production of these panels to France a great symbol. A vast program just a stone’s throw from making pschitt.

Since the 2010s, Chinese competition has stifled the European photovoltaic industry. With slashed prices, it has conquered…

This article is reserved for subscribers. You have 80% left to discover.

Black Friday: last days

-70% on digital subscription

Already subscribed? Log in

, including those for images, photos, videos, embeds (e.g., Instagram, X/Twitter), and other multimedia elements, and ensure they are correctly positioned in the rewritten article.
Write with a human-like tone and style, avoiding repetitive phrasing, robotic patterns, or overly formal language. Use creative yet professional language, focusing on engaging and authentic storytelling.
Follow Associated Press (AP) guidelines for style, clarity, and professionalism, including proper use of numbers, punctuation, and attribution.
Be optimized for SEO, using structured HTML tags (H1, H2, H3) and adhering to Google’s E-E-A-T standards. Write a new, keyword-optimized headline that feels natural and engaging.
Exclude all references to the original source or publication, ensuring no identifiable details about

DECRYPTION – The abandonment of the takeover of Photowatt by Carbon is a new snub for the government’s ambitions.

France’s vast reindustrialization program is collapsing in entire sections as the days go by. This Thursday, the takeover of Photowatt, the last French producer of photovoltaic panels by Carbon, a start-up dedicated to being the new flagship of French solar power, fell through. The Photowatt unions, based in Bourgoin-Jallieu (Isère), issued a negative (advisory) opinion on this takeover project on Wednesday, considering it too fragile.

However, France has never installed so many solar panels on its territory. The only problem is that they are mainly made in China, a country which holds 80% of the world market. In the name of national sovereignty and reindustrialization, the government — essentially under the leadership of former Minister of the Economy Bruno Le Maire — has made the return of the production of these panels to France a great symbol. A vast program just a stone’s throw from making pschitt.

Since the 2010s, Chinese competition has stifled the European photovoltaic industry. With slashed prices, it has conquered…

This article is reserved for subscribers. You have 80% left to discover.

Black Friday: last days

-70% on digital subscription

Already subscribed? Log in

remain.
Be between 800–1,200 words long, with clear subheadings for readability.
Provide only the final rewritten article text with all original HTML tags properly retained and integrated. Ensure the content reads naturally, as if written by a skilled human journalist, with no robotic tone or AI-like repetition. Do not include any notes, explanations, or commentary.

What are some common commands used in ‍SVG⁢ path data, and​ what actions‍ do they perform?

The text you’ve provided appears to​ be a series of SVG path data commands. ⁤These commands are used to define shapes and⁢ paths within an SVG graphic.

**Understanding SVG ⁣Path Data**

SVG path ⁢data consists of a series of letters, numbers, and sometimes symbols. ⁤

* **Letters:**‌ Each letter represents a different⁤ type of path‌ command, such as:

* ⁤`M`: Move to ‍a specific coordinate.

‍ * `L`:​ Draw a line to a specific coordinate.

* `C`: Draw a cubic Bezier curve.

* ​`Z`: Close the path (connect the last point to the first).

* **Numbers:** These represent the coordinates (x and y) for the commands.

* **Spaces:** Used‌ to ‌separate commands and​ coordinates.

**Interpreting Your Data**

Due to the complexity and length of the data you provided, deciphering it precisely without a specialized tool would be quite challenging.

**Tools for Viewing SVG Data**

There are several tools and methods to​ visualize SVG path data:

1. **Online SVG Editors:**⁢ Many ⁤online SVG editors allow ⁣you to paste in ​path data and see the resulting shape. Here are a few examples:

* ⁣**Vectr:** https://vectr.com/

* **Boxy SVG:** ​https://boxy-svg.com/

2. **SVG Viewer:** Some web ‍browsers have⁣ built-in SVG ⁣viewers.⁤ Additionally, you can download dedicated SVG viewers.

3. **Code Editors with SVG ‍Support:** Some ​code editors have extensions or plugins that⁤ can help display SVG graphics.

Let me know if‍ you have ⁤specific parts of the path‌ data you’d like me to try and explain​ further.

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