European Commission launches €2.1 billion investment package for Western Balkans
- European Commission has launched a new financial package to support 14 investment flagships in transport, energy, environment, human capital, and private sector support in the Western Balkans, worth, in total €2.1 billion. This is the fifth investment package under the EU’s Economic and Investment Plan for the Western Balkans.
- Post By Silvana Kocovska
- 17:51, 4 July, 2023
Brussels, 4 July 2023 (MIA) - European Commission has launched a new financial package to support 14 investment flagships in transport, energy, environment, human capital, and private sector support in the Western Balkans, worth, in total €2.1 billion. This is the fifth investment package under the EU’s Economic and Investment Plan for the Western Balkans.
“With this new investment package we are sending a loud and clear message to our Western Balkans partners: their future is within the EU, and we are making steady progress to close the economic development divide,” EU Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement, Olivér Várhelyi, said.
The €2.1 billion investment package, which includes €528 million in EU grants from the Instrument for Pre-accession Assistance (IPA III), additional bilateral contributions from EU Member States and Norway, loans from international financing institutions, and contributions from the economies of the Western Balkans, has been endorsed by the Operational Board of the Western Balkans Investment Framework (WBIF), the European Commission said in a press release.
The 14 new projects approved cover the following priority sectors: sustainable transport: construction of motorway sections and subsections in Road Corridor Vc in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Corridor VIII in North Macedonia. These projects will facilitate regional trade, reduce travel times, and spur sustainable economic growth; clean energy: rehabilitation of hydropower plants in Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance energy efficiency in North Macedonia. Other projects include strengthening North Macedonia’s transmission network or deploying green transport in Tirana; environment & climate: rehabilitation of Sarajevo water system to enhance public health, boost commercial infrastructure, and improve the overall efficiency of water supply in the Sarajevo canton; human development: improvement of energy efficiency and integrated energy management of the University of Belgrade; private sector: supply of financing for renewable and efficient energy measures in the region, sustainable access to finance for entrepreneurship, and a combination of specialised financing for digitalisation and competitiveness for micro and small businesses (MSMEs). These projects will help reduce inequality, increase job creation, and reduce energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions.
The EU’s Economic and Investment Plan for the Western Balkans, of up to €30 billion in investments, including up to €9 billion of EU grant funding, aims to spur the long-term recovery, accelerate a green and digital transition, as well as foster regional cooperation and convergence with the EU.
Photo: MIA archive