Skip to main content

CEF funds to be used for EFSI ‘only as a last resort’

Parts of the European Commission’s proposals for the European Fund for Strategic Investments, which foresee the reallocation of US$3.5 billion from the Connecting Europe Facility to provide a part of the US$17 billion for the guarantee fund should be deleted, Transport MEPs suggested in their opinion approved on Tuesday. This target amount should instead be met by gradual budgetary commitments to the guarantee fund to be decided in the frame of the annual budgetary procedure, they add. Instead of cuttin
April 17, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Parts of the European Commission’s proposals for the European Fund for Strategic Investments, which foresee the reallocation of US$3.5 billion from the Connecting Europe Facility to provide a part of the US$17 billion for the guarantee fund should be deleted, Transport MEPs suggested in their opinion approved on Tuesday. This target amount should instead be met by gradual budgetary commitments to the guarantee fund to be decided in the frame of the annual budgetary procedure, they add.

Instead of cutting CEF funds to finance EFSI, gradual budgetary commitments, margins and the flexibility instrument available under the MFF 2014-2020 should be used to fund the ‘Juncker Plan’, Transport and Tourism, say committee MEPs. Funds from multiannual programs under heading 1A (e.g. CEF and Horizon2020) should only be used as a last resort, if need for them is demonstrated by actual demand and if these programs prove to be under-committed.

The MEPs made it clear that they are finding additional resources, rather than boycotting the plan. According to Inés Ayala Sender, one of the two co-reporters for the TRAN opinion, the EU infrastructure needs for the period up to 2020 are US$1 trillion. The European Parliament was able to secure US$36 billion for the trans-European networks with the Connecting Europe Facility two years ago. “After today's successful vote, the parliament is strengthening, instead of reducing, the investments in infrastructures with EFSI", she added.

The opinion welcomes the EFSI proposal and reiterates the “irrevocable and unconditional” nature of the EU guarantee, but stresses an urgent need to address the investment deficit. The guarantee fund should not hamper programmes, which already serve the purpose of investment and aim to foster competitiveness and growth, they add.

“CEF should not be sacrificed,” said co-reporter Dominique Riquet, in a debate ahead of the vote.  "The Commission keeps telling us these are additional funds but the EFSI proposal rather looks like a substitution. MEPs want a real addition of investment: the Juncker Plan plus Horizon 2020 plus the Connecting Europe Facility," he added.

In addition to providing European added value and being sustainable with a proven economic and societal added value as regards impact on job creation, investment and competitiveness, investment operations backed by EFSI should also support development of new, existing or missing transport infrastructure and new technologies in accordance with the CEF and  TEN-T regulations, the TRAN opinion  reads.

In the transport sector, project pipeline to be created by the Commission and EIB should take as a basis the priorities and projects identified in TEN-T and CEF regulations.

Related Content

  • Progress with RFID in China
    August 19, 2015
    In its new report, RFID in China 2015-2025, IDTechEx Research has identified over 150 Chinese companies supplying RFID and tracked how the industry in China will grow to become a US$4.3 billion opportunity in 2025. Historically, the development of RFID in China has been heavily supported by the Chinese government. These include large projects such as national identification cards, passports and subway ticket applications. The entry barrier is usually high for those applications, as the suppliers need to
  • Subscribers to OEM telematics in Western Europe to exceed 42 million by 2019
    April 10, 2014
    ABI research’s latest research finds that the number of subscribers to Factory-installed Safety and Security telematics services is set for solid growth in Western Europe at a CAGR of 47 per cent, reaching 42.5 million in 2019. “Traditional safety and security telematics continues its march forward in Europe with both VW’s Car-Net and GM/Opel’s OnStar scheduled for deployment. A slew of new electrical vehicles from VW, Tesla, BMW, Daimler, and others will also boost telematics uptake and awareness,” says
  • Central Europe signs up to ITS standards
    May 31, 2013
    Seamless multi-modal traveller information services are becoming reality in the Danube Region. On 15th of March 2013, a Hungarian national holiday of which many people were unaware, unexpected extreme winter weather paralysed Hungary as well as large parts of Slovakia. Several thousand people were stranded on the region’s highways and the railways incurred delays of several hours. Not only did the transport system in the affected regions break down, the information flow to neighbouring countries was very sl
  • Cooperative infrastructures, cooperative enforcement?
    March 2, 2012
    A dozen years from now, will enforcement still be constrained by the legislative thinking which currently prevails? Or will the needs of the wider transport community bring about some welcome changes?