The political agreement, pending the final approval of the
legal texts by the European Parliament Plenary and the Council, lays the
ground for a successful and sustainable recovery of the European
economy from the coronavirus pandemic in the long run.
Paolo Gentiloni, Commissioner for Economy, said: “This
is a good agreement that opens the way to more financing for
sustainable infrastructure, research and innovation, SMEs and skills.
InvestEU will contribute to Europe's economic recovery and to the
climate and digital transitions. Crucially, Member States will be able
to use InvestEU as a tool to implement their Recovery and Resilience
Plans.”
The InvestEU Programme will provide the EU with crucial long-term
funding, crowding in private investments in support of a sustainable
recovery and helping build a greener, more digital and more resilient
European economy.
The main elements of today's compromise include:
- Four policy windows: Sustainable Infrastructure; Research, Innovation and Digitisation; SMEs; Social Investment and Skills.
- EU budgetary guarantee of EUR 26.2 billion, indicatively distributed across the four policy windows as follows:
- Sustainable Infrastructure window: EUR 9.9 billion
- Research, Innovation and Digitisation window: EUR 6.6 billion
- SME window: EUR 6.9 billion
- Social Investment and Skills window: EUR 2.8 billion
- Strategic investments will be possible under all four windows, in
order to cater for the future needs of the European economy and to
promote the EU's open strategic autonomy in key sectors.
- At least 30% of the investments under InvestEU will contribute to
meeting Union objectives on climate action, confirming InvestEU as one
of the main EU programmes contributing to the European Green Deal
Investment Plan.
- InvestEU will provide for a dedicated Just Transition Scheme (Pillar
2 of the Just Transition Mechanism) to generate additional investments
to the benefit of just transition regions with an approved territorial
just transition plan.
- Member States will be able, on a voluntary basis, to implement part
of their plans under the Recovery and Resilience Facility via the
InvestEU programme and the InvestEU Advisory Hub.
- To ensure rapid deployment and local outreach, InvestEU will be
implemented in partnership with the European Investment Bank and the
European Investment Fund and multiple other implementing partners,
including international financial institutions and national promotional
banks and institutions.
Next steps
Following the technical finalisation of the text reflecting the
political agreement, the European Parliament and the Council will have
to approve the text to allow the Regulation to enter into force and for
InvestEU to become operational.
On 10 November 2020, a political agreement was reached between
the European Parliament, EU Member States in the Council as well as the
Commission on the next long-term EU budget and NextGenerationEU. As a
next step, the legal adoption of the MFF Regulation, the
NextGenerationEU regulation along with the amendment of the Own
Resources Decision is now urgently needed within their respective roles
and procedures.
Once adopted, the EU's long-term budget, coupled with the
NextGenerationEU initiative, which is a temporary instrument designed to
drive the recovery of Europe, will be the largest stimulus package ever
financed through the EU budget. A total of €1.8 trillion will help
rebuild a post-COVID-19 Europe. It will be a greener, more digital and
more resilient Europe.
Background
InvestEU is the EU's proposed flagship investment programme to
kick-start the European economy. It is well-placed to provide long-term
funding and to support Union policies in the recovery from a deep
economic and social crisis. The InvestEU Programme builds on the success
of the Investment Plan for Europe and the European Fund for Strategic
Investments (EFSI).
For more information
What's next? The InvestEU Programme (2021-2027)
Recovery plan
2021-2027 long-term EU budget & Next Generation EU