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

  • European Commission: tighter rules for safer/cleaner cars
    December 12, 2017
    The European Commission (EC), European Parliament and the Council have reached a political agreement on the commission proposal from January 2016 to raise the quality level and independence of type-approval and testing before a car is placed on the market. It would enable the EC to be able to initiate EU-wide recalls and impose penalties on manufacturers or technical services of up to €30,000 (£26,000) per non-compliant car.
  • EU defines nine European transport corridors
    November 19, 2013
    As part of the revision of its infrastructure policies, the European Commission (EU) has defined nine corridors aimed at transforming road transport, rail connections, flights and transport by water into a uniform and efficient European network (Trans-European transport network of TEN-T). These corridors are the Adriatic Baltic Sea region, the North Sea-Baltic region, the Mediterranean region, the East and East Mediterranean region, Scandinavia-Mediterranean, Rhine-Alps, Atlantic, North Sea-Mediterranean
  • MEPs strengthen vehicle type approval regulations
    February 10, 2017
    In a drive to prevent a recurrence of the VW emissions scandal, the European Parliament’s Internal Market Committee has amended EU car type approval to make environmental and safety testing more independent and strengthen national and EU oversight of cars already on the road. Type approval is the process whereby national authorities certify that a vehicle model meets all EU safety, environmental and production requirements before it can be placed on the market. The proposals would require national m
  • eMi3 launches its first standard specification
    November 19, 2015
    eMobility ICT Interoperability Innovation, (eMI3) has released its first standard specification, setting its vision for interoperability in the electric vehicle (EV) market by enabling interoperability across EV products and services. Focused on presenting the EV market place with a first set of industry agreed standardised use cases and business objects, the coalition of EV more than 20 product and service providers behind eMI3 claim that interoperability matters to this sector as it means the speed at