Funding commitments by the European Investment Bank (EIB) in Ireland are expected to top €1 billion for the first time next year, its president Werner Hoyer has said.
Mr Hoyer was speaking at the official opening of its new office in Dublin which is expected to strengthen links between the EIB, the world’s largest international public bank, and Ireland.
The EIB, the financial arm of the European Union, also announced the signing of a €50 million loan agreement with the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) as part of a €106 million investment in the institution's Dublin campus.
The bank, which offers lower-cost access to capital markets, typically for large-scale infrastructure projects, agreed investment commitments totalling €750 million in Ireland last year.
Mr Hoyer said investment commitments are forecast to reach €900 billion in 2016 and to top €1 billion in 2017.
Private sector
In addition to providing funding for infrastructure projects, the bank is increasingly lending to the private sector with Irish life sciences company Malin securing a €70 million, seven-year debt facility in June.
Overall, the EIB has provided low-cost loans amounting to €15 billion in Ireland since 1973, the bank’s president said. More than €3.8 billion has been given in the last three years alone for investment to improve education, transport, energy and water infrastructure and access to finance by small business.
Key infrastructure projects supported by the bank in recent years include Luas Cross City and the building of Terminal 2 at Dublin Airport. EIB also committed €100 million late last year to finance Dublin Port’s Alexandra Basin Redevelopment (ABR) project, which will deepen the navigation channel at the port to allow for bigger container and cruise ships.
Mr Hoyer also said the EIB, which is owned by EU member states, is expecting to invest in a large social housing project in Ireland next year.
Education building
The loan agreement agreed with
RCSI
is for the college’s new 10-storey 120,000sq ft academic education building on York Street in Dublin 2. It comprises a state-of-the-art surgical and clinical training suite containing a flexible wet laboratory, a mock operating theatre, clinical training wards, standardised patient rooms and task training rooms.
It also includes a 540-seat auditorium, a library spanning three floors with 500 study spaces, a sports hall and a fitness suite.
The funding also includes a significant investment in the expansion of RCSI's education and research centre on the grounds of Beaumont Hospital.
Taoiseach Enda Kenny described the opening of a permanent office in Dublin by the bank as an important milestone for both the EIB and Ireland.
“The strengthening of the relationship between Ireland and the EIB is particularly important at this critical time in our recovery. It is accepted that as our national finances continue to recover and our economy grows stronger that the Government and companies based in Ireland will need to focus more on capital investment in the years ahead,” Mr Kenny said.