Commission welcomes political agreement on the up to €50 billion Ukraine Facility

By European Commission

Commission welcomes political agreement on the up to €50 billion Ukraine Facility

The Commission welcomes the political agreement reached between the European Parliament and the Council on a Regulation to set up a Ukraine Facility, proposed by the Commission in June 2023.

Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, said: “Europe will be at Ukraine’s side for every single day of the war and for every single day thereafter. The political agreement on the €50 billion Ukraine Facility is a major step forward. Europe is true to its word. We will continue to deliver much-needed funding and predictability for our brave partner and aspiring member. We aim to make the first payment in March.”

The new Ukraine Facility will provide stable and sustainable financing to support Ukraine’s recovery, reconstruction, and modernization, including key reforms necessary on its EU accession track. The overall amount of the Facility for the period of 2024-2027 is €50 billion. This amount is composed of €17 billion in grants and €33 billion in loans.

The Ukraine Facility is structured in three pillars:

  1. Direct support to the State budget based on a plan to be developed by Ukraine for the recovery, reconstruction, and modernization of the country, including a set of related reforms and investments.
  2. An investment framework to attract public and private investment for Ukraine’s recovery and reconstruction, composed of guarantees and blended finance (a mix of loans and EU grants).
  3. Technical assistance and other support measures to the reforms, as well as grants covering the borrowing costs of loans to the Government of Ukraine.

It will be equipped with a robust framework for audit and control, to ensure the protection of EU financial interests, while at the same time supporting the further improvement of Ukraine’s system of internal controls as part of the reforms under the plan.

The political agreement also paves the way for the so-called ‘exceptional bridge financing’, under the Facility and This means immediate support of up to €1.5 billion per month for a limited period, while the other elements of the Facility are being put in place such as the Ukraine Plan or the establishment of the Audit Board. First payments under the Facility can take place very soon after it enters into force, expected as early as March. This crucial support will ensure that Ukraine can continue focusing efforts on winning the war and will finance the functioning of the state, such as paying salaries, and pensions, and providing basic public services.

To finance the loan support, the European Union will raise €33 billion on the financial market until the end of 2027 by issuing EU Bonds under the unified funding strategy. This financing is backed by the headroom of the EU budget. The amounts needed will be accommodated within the EU’s debt issuance program over this period.

The non-repayable support will be financed through the EU annual budget under a new special instrument, the “Ukraine Reserve”, over and above the MFF expenditure ceiling. This instrument will be mobilized every year in the context of the annual budgetary procedure to best take into account progress in the implementation of EU assistance and reforms and possible evolving needs, depending on the evolution of the situation on the ground.

See also: 🔴 LIVE UPDATES | Humanitarian response to Ukraine crisis