Skip to main content

EU hopes for private investment in planned €1.77 trillion infrastructure spending

Securing sufficient funding to complete truly European infrastructure projects is the major challenge lying ahead of EP's three co-rapporteurs on the Commission's proposal of a new funding instrument for Trans European transport, energy and ICT networks. The first joint meeting of TRAN and ITRE members to discuss the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF) took place on yesterday. TRAN-members Dominique Riquet (France) and Inés Ayala-Sender (Spain), and Adina Ioana Valean (Romania) from the committee for Industry,
March 28, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Securing sufficient funding to complete truly European infrastructure projects is the major challenge lying ahead of EP's three co-rapporteurs on the Commission's proposal of a new funding instrument for Trans European transport, energy and ICT networks. The first joint meeting of TRAN and ITRE members to discuss the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF) took place yesterday.

TRAN-members Dominique Riquet (France) and Inés Ayala-Sender (Spain), and Adina Ioana Valean (Romania) from the committee for Industry, Research and Energy recognized the ‘groundbreaking nature’ of the €50 billion fund and welcomed the Commission's proposal as ‘ambitious’, if not ‘audacious’. They will have to achieve a large backing from Parliament – including from members of the Budget and Regi committees - in order to convince Council to sign on.

"It is within this vicious circle of postponed investments awaiting better times which never come, that the CEF can be seen as an opportunity to be innovative and creative on the financial market", said Adina Ioana Valean. Transparent procedures and clear priorities of the CEF will be key in order to provide the “stable and predictable environment private investors seek,” she added, referring to the tremendous financial needs - one trillion euros (US$1.336 trillion) for energy networks, €500 billion for transport and €270 billion for ICT.

Riquet pointed out that member states should decide on concrete funding figures and sources as soon as possible to enable shaping the centralised governance and arbitrage models of the CEF and start building synergies between the three sectors. “Our biggest challenge will be to ensure that we really obtain sufficient funding to create the most European added-value”, said Ms Ayala-Sender.

An expert hearing on CEF will be held on 24 April, at the next joint meeting ITRE-TRAN. The Committee’s vote (first reading) is scheduled for November.

The CEF is the financing instrument for the Transeuropean Networks for Transport, Energy and Telecommunications. The new approach is placing all three TEN sectors under one single financing umbrella which is centrally managed by the Commission and the TEN-T Agency. The management of the CEF will be based on competitive calls for proposals (or beneficiaries identified in the work programme) for the allocation of funding, and a ‘use it or lose it principle’ to ensure effective implementation.

Related Content

  • Moody’s: Burden of infrastructure spending increasingly falling on US states
    January 24, 2017
    Repairing or replacing aging transportation infrastructure, such as roads and bridges, will require US states to shoulder additional cost burdens since federal funding has stagnated over the last 20 years, Moody’s Investors Service says in a new report. States with large maintenance burdens and backlogs will face budgetary challenges in meeting these needs. US federal highway aid has seen little growth from fiscal 2009-15 and is projected to remain flat when adjusted for inflation through fiscal 2020. Th
  • Germany considers privatising motorways
    November 15, 2016
    Germany’s Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble is studying selling a stake of just under 50 per cent in the country's motorways to allow it to develop the network's infrastructure more efficiently, Der Spiegel magazine said on Saturday. Ownership of the 13,000 km network, the world's second largest behind the United States jointly shared between the federal government and the country's 16 states. The Finance Ministry is considering selling off all but a tiny fraction of the latter share, leaving Berlin w
  • ITS America Annual Meeting - setting the scene
    May 1, 2012
    Gloria J. Jeff, District of Columbia Department of Transportation, and one of the co-chairs of the 2012 Annual Meeting Organizing Committee, sets the scene on what will be this year’s most important event for the ITS industry.
  • EU transport committee welcomes cycling declaration
    October 9, 2015
    Following the first informal meeting of transport ministers focused exclusively on cycling on the organised by the Luxembourg Presidency of the Council of the EU, Chair of the EP transport committee Michael Cramer (Greens/EFA, DE) welcomed the signing of the declaration on cycling, saying: "This week brings along a historic decision for a sustainable transport policy. "The Council meeting of transport ministers has been kicked-off with a meeting on cycling, on 7 October. “During this session the represen