Skip to main content

EIB and European Commission present Cleaner Transport Facility

At a recent TTE council meeting, the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the European Commission present the Cleaner Transport Facility (CTF) initiative, aimed at financing the decarbonisation of the transport sector in Europe. The support for alternative fuels and cleaner technology in transport is aligned with European Union policies on climate action and sustainable transport and specifically the recently-adopted strategy of the European Commission on low-emission mobility. The CTF is a new umbrella in
December 2, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
At a recent TTE council meeting, the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the European Commission present the Cleaner Transport Facility (CTF) initiative, aimed at financing the decarbonisation of the transport sector in Europe.

The support for alternative fuels and cleaner technology in transport is aligned with European Union policies on climate action and sustainable transport and specifically the recently-adopted strategy of the European Commission on low-emission mobility. The CTF is a new umbrella initiative targeting the deployment of alternative fuels in the transport sector. Its objective is to support the accelerated deployment of cleaner transport vehicles and their associated infrastructure needs, such as for charging and refuelling, which are expected to foster socio-economic benefits including reduced health costs due to cleaner air and lower noise.

Projects that deploy alternative fuels, according to the Directive on the deployment of alternative fuels infrastructure, will fall under the CTF. Thereby the facility targets transport vehicles that have lower greenhouse gas emissions - or enhanced environmental performance - compared to conventionally-fuelled transport vehicles. These alternative fuels include electricity, hydrogen, biofuels and natural gas, including biogas, compressed natural gas (CNG) and liquefied natural gas (LNG).

The first project under the facility is expected to be signed early next year and will support the purchase of new hydrogen fuel cell buses, trolley buses and associated infrastructure in Riga, Latvia. Further operations are under approval in Artois-Gohelle in France and in Las Palmas and Palma de Mallorca in Spain.

Related Content

  • May 24, 2013
    Britain's first Bio-LNG filling station launched
    The UK's first open access Bio-LNG filling station, built by Gasrec , has been launched, marking the start of a nationwide investment in infrastructure seeking the ultimate prize of wiping out nearly two-thirds of the nation's heavy goods vehicle (HGV) emissions. Gasrec's ground-breaking new facility in Daventry is the first of its kind. It will lead to significant cuts in pollution and fuel costs; allow gas-powered or dual-fuel trucks to use Bio-LNG; and will operate in a similar way to a traditional petr
  • June 1, 2017
    European Commission takes action for clean, competitive and connected mobility
    The European Commission is taking action to modernise European mobility and transport, with the aim of helping the sector to remain competitive in a socially fair transition towards clean energy and digitalisation.
  • April 25, 2012
    Alternative fuel buses gaining significant traction
    According to a recent report from Pike Research, the trend toward cleaner transit buses will continue over the next several years, and by 2015 the cleantech market intelligence firm forecasts that alternative fuel vehicles will represent more than 50 per cent of the 64,000 total transit buses that will be delivered worldwide during that year, up from 28 per cent of total bus deliveries in 2010.
  • June 15, 2016
    Second pan-Europe hydrogen refuelling infrastructure deployed
    This week sees the launch of a second pan-European deployment of hydrogen refuelling infrastructure and passenger and commercial fuel cell electric vehicles. The six-year Hydrogen Mobility Europe 2 (H2ME 2) project brings together 37 partners from across Europe and will include the deployment and operation of 1,230 fuel cell vehicles, the addition of 20 extra hydrogen-refuelling stations (HRS) to the European network and will test the ability of electrolyser-HRS to help balance the electrical grid. The p