Lending Activities 2006-10
In 2010, the EIB’s lending activities in the Baltic Sea Region remained at a similar level to those seen in 2009. The total volume of signed loans to the Baltic Sea Region was €10.9 billion (€11.5 billion in 2009), which amounted to 15.2% of the EIB’s total lending in the EU in 2010. During the last five years (2006-10), the yearly lending volume has grown from around €4-5 billion to a level of €10-11 billion. Furthermore, the total lending volume during the five-year period reached almost €40 billion. The largest recipient of EIB loans was Poland which accounted for 45% of the total loans granted in the Baltic Sea Region in this period, followed by Sweden with 16%, and the German Länder bordering the Region with 13%. The most significant sector in Poland was transport which received 38% of the total EIB loans to the country. The remainder was evenly distributed among the other sectors, mainly urban development, industry, energy and SMEs. In the other Baltic Sea Region countries, industrial research, development and innovation (RDI) was dominant in Denmark, Finland and Sweden, while EU funds co-financing loans, mainly for public sector infrastructure, were of most importance in the three Baltic States. In the Region overall, the most important sectors were transport and industrial RDI.
Jessica and Jeremie
JEREMIE Holding funds in Lithuania and Latvia are the first EIB-managed holding funds established in the EU and have already disbursed funds to final beneficiaries.
The size of the holding fund in Lithuania is up to €210 million, of which up to € 114 million has been signed with intermediaries. Furthermore, about €17 million had been disbursed to final beneficiaries by February 2011.
The size of the holding fund in Latvia is up to €91.5 million, of which €87 million has been signed with intermediaries. Furthermore, about € 6 million had been disbursed to final beneficiaries by February 2011.
Lithuania’s JESSICA holding fund, managed by the EIB, with an initial capital committed by the Lithuanian government of €227 million, is one of the first and largest of such funds established in the EU to date. The fund now has three financial intermediaries in place considering project proposals from several housing associations already approved for financing by the Lithuanian Housing and Urban Development Agency. It was the first JESSICA fund to disburse €16 million to an intermediary, of which up to € 0.7 million had been contracted with final beneficiaries by February 2010.
Table: EIB lending in the region 2006-10 in € million
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Signatures
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2006
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2007
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2008
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2009
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2010
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EU
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Denmark
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32
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209
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379
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422
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387
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Estonia
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40
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0
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87
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841
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75
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Finland
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670
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613
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710
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1145
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1000
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Germany 1)
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674
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699
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1218
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1427
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990
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Latvia
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35
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35
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860
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285
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100
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Lithuania
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79
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20
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10
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1169
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20
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Poland
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2031
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2281
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2837
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4784
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5475
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Sweden
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282
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713
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1311
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1135
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2608
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EFTA
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Iceland
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0
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146
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0
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170
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0
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Norway
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310
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0
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0
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0
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50
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EASTERN EUROPE
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Russia
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0
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0
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0
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133
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250
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Total
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4153
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4716
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7412
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11511
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10955
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1) in the Länder Berlin, Brandenburg, Hamburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Schleswig-Holstein
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EIB supporting Co-Financing with EU Structural Funds
Most of the EIB-financed projects in the Region support the EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region, with many projects being classified as Flagship Projects or projects directly supporting the key objectives of the Strategy. The EIB has also approved a number of projects or programmes that are wholly or partly co-financed with EU Structural Funds. For the 2007-13 programming period, the EIB has, to date, approved 15 Structural Programme loans with a total amount of €5.7 billion in the Baltic Sea Region. As the EIB on average co-finances some 13% of the total project cost under the Structural Programme loans, the EIB loans support total investments of €42bn in the Region, which contribute to growth and employment in the Baltic Sea Region.
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2007-13 programming period
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Country
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Name of operation
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Project cost € million
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Approved EIB loans
€ million
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Signed € million
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Share of EIB loan out of total project cost %
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Approved programmes
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Estonia
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EU Funds Co-Financing 2007-13 (EST)
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4 331
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550
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550
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13%
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Latvia
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EU Funds Co-Financing 2007-13 (LV)
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5 834
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750
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750
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13%
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Lithuania
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EU Funds Co-Financing 2007-13 (LT)
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9 564
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1 132
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1 132
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12%
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Poland
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EU Funds Co-Financing 2007-13 (PL)
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19 305
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2 000
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2 000
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10%
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Poland
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National Environmental Protection Fund*
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300
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150
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121
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50%
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Poland
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Mazovia Regional Infrastructure*
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400
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180
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88
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45%
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Poland
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Poznan Municipal Infrastructure*
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209
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81
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81
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39%
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Poland
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Poznan Municipal Infrastructure III*
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333
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145
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145
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44%
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Poland
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Gdansk Municipal Infrastructure II*
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368
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145
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64
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39%
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Poland
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Lodz Regional Infrastructure*
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323
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106
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106
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33%
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Poland
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Lodz Municipal Roads*
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240
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71
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18
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30%
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Poland
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Lublin Municipal Infrastructure*
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386
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126
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126
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33%
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Poland
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Malopolska Regional Infrastructure*
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318
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72
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38
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23%
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Poland
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Szczecin Municipal Infrastructure III*
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185
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75
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75
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41%
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Poland
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Zachodniopomorskie Regional Framework*
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284
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84
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84
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30%
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Total approved projects
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42 380
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5 667
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5 272
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13%
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(*) Partly co-financed with the Structural Funds regional and municipal investment framework operation.
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The EUSBSR Implementation Facility
In 2010, the Bank continued to promote the idea of an Implementation Facility, a Technical Assistance facility for the EUSBSR – which aims to enhance the implementation of EUSBSR projects. Small and medium sized projects in the Baltic Sea Region, at regional or municipal level, often have difficulties in obtaining the necessary technical assistance for the timely and efficient implementation of projects. The EIB has therefore proposed to the European Commission and the Member States in the Baltic Sea Region to establish a separate Implementation Facility that could be a hub for providing the necessary technical and financial expertise in order to speed up the implementation. Such an Implementation Facility could, for instance, assist in the launch of new studies, in providing advice on procurement documents and/or in removing other bottlenecks in the implementation process.
The Facility will be managed by the EIB with its established network of consultants and outside experts and will complement and closely cooperate with existing sources for technical assistance. In particular, it could assist in the implementation of the projects prepared by JASPERS. The Facility will remain open for local, regional, national and cross-border projects.
The proposal aims to start a pilot project for 2011-13 with a total amount of €10 million. The funding of such facility is under discussion.
Project Examples: EIB loans approved in 2010
Estlink 2, power cable between Finland and Estonia
Energy security in the Baltic States will improve greatly thanks to a 650 MW power cable linking Estonia and Finland which will be completed by 2014. The EIB has provided a €75 million loan to the Estonian grid operator Elering to part-finance the project. Estlink 2 will almost triple transmission capacity between the two countries. By establishing a higher capacity connection between the Baltic States and Finland and the rest of the Nordic grid, Estlink 2 will lead to less congestion in an existing cable, lower price discrepancies and help ensure supply at peak loads. Estlink 2 is also one of the key projects under the Baltic Energy Market Interconnection Plan (BEMIP) which was launched as an initiative of the EU Commission in 2008.
Wrocław Water and Wastewater Project, Poland
In Poland, the EIB approved a €117 million loan to the Wrocław water and wastewater programme in 2010. This includes investments to improve drinking water supply and collection and treatment of wastewater with the aim of achieving compliance with EU directives on drinking water quality, wastewater collection, and effluent standards. The project will significantly improve public health and environmental protection in the region by reducing the pollution load to the Odra River and the Baltic Sea and by ending the current practice of discharging around 50,000m3 of wastewater per day (approximately 38% of the daily generated volume) through the irrigation fields. The EIB has financed 46% of the total cost, which is estimated at €255 million.
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