LUXEMBOURG / RankWire.AI / July 16, 2026: The European Investment Bank Group authorized €17.4 billion of new financing, directing capital toward power systems, nuclear generation, transport links, public infrastructure and business lending as the European Union expands investment in energy autonomy and competitiveness. The approvals include €3.7 billion for energy projects and an €800 million loan to extend the operating life of Unit 1 at Romania’s Cernavodă nuclear plant. The boards of the EIB and the European Investment Fund approved the transactions during meetings in Luxembourg.

Energy accounts for the most prominent disclosed sector allocation in the EIB Group financing package. Funding will cover electricity networks in Belgium and Spain, German wind farms, French solar generation and the Romanian nuclear refurbishment. Cernavodă provides about one-fifth of Romania’s electricity, making the Unit 1 overhaul a major component of the country’s power supply planning. The loan will support replacement of key equipment and modernization of operating systems. Plant operator Nuclearelectrica has identified the refurbishment as central to maintaining generation from the existing reactor fleet.
Romania nuclear refurbishment secures €800 million
The approvals deepen the EIB’s role in financing the infrastructure needed to electrify Europe’s economy. Nadia Calviño, the group’s president, said the projects support European security and autonomy and help maintain affordable energy for households and companies. She said the bank was moving toward another strong operating year, citing record investment in grids, interconnectors and technologies supporting the energy transition. The group signed €100 billion in financing and advisory services during 2025, covering more than 870 projects under eight policy priorities.
The EIB Group financing package extends beyond energy into assets that influence labor mobility, public services and regional investment. Approvals include new trains in Austria, hospital upgrades in the Czech Republic, cultural and sports facilities in Sweden, and education infrastructure in Lithuania. Business investment in Denmark, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain will also receive support. The mix reflects the EIB’s mandate as the European Union’s long-term lending institution, combining large infrastructure loans with instruments intended to attract private capital into corporate and innovation projects.
New financing covers grids in Belgium and Spain
A separate decision doubled the EIB’s pan-European securitisation programme to €6 billion. The EIF also authorized securitisation and guarantee operations designed to advance the European Union savings and investment agenda. By transferring or sharing risk linked to existing loan portfolios, securitisation can free bank capital for new lending. The group said the expanded programme would increase financing capacity for green and innovative businesses, while the EIF’s guarantees and equity activities would continue targeting smaller companies, startups and venture-backed enterprises.
The package also channels financing toward Ukraine’s transport and commercial infrastructure. The EIB approved modernization of road border crossings on routes included in the trans-European transport network, covering customs facilities, processing terminals and digital systems. The projects are intended to improve connectivity between Ukraine, EU member states and Moldova. Additional financing for Ukrainian companies was also authorized. The bank has described Ukraine as its main external priority, and its current activity builds on record 2025 commitments supporting public services, infrastructure and the functioning of the country’s economy.
The international component adds wind-power projects in Egypt, solar generation and grid investment in Tunisia, and sustainable agriculture in Moldova. Those transactions align with the EU’s Global Gateway, its framework for financing sustainable transport, energy, digital and social infrastructure with partner countries. The latest EIB Group financing package therefore combines European investment with cross-border connectivity and external partnerships. Owned by the EU’s 27 member states, the group uses loans, guarantees, equity and securitisation to support policy priorities and mobilize additional investment.
