
Article 1 

1. The Union shall grant the European Investment Bank (EIB) a budgetary guarantee for financing operations carried out outside the Union (‘EU guarantee’). The EU guarantee shall be granted as a global guarantee in respect of payments due to the EIB, but not received by it, in connection with loans, loan guarantees, and debt capital market instruments granted for or issued for the benefit of EIB investment projects that are eligible in accordance with paragraph 2.
2. Eligible for the EU guarantee shall be the EIB loans, loan guarantees, and debt capital market instruments that are granted for or issued for the benefit of investment projects carried out in eligible countries in accordance with the EIB's own rules and procedures, including the EIB's statement on environmental and social principles and standards, and in support of the relevant Union external policy objectives, where EIB financing has been granted in accordance with a signed agreement which has neither expired nor been cancelled (‘EIB financing operations’).
3. The EIB financing operations in support of Union external policies shall continue to be managed in accordance with the principles of sound banking practices.
4. The EU guarantee shall be restricted to 65 % of the aggregate amount disbursed and guaranteed under EIB financing operations, less amounts reimbursed, plus all related amounts.
5. The EU guarantee shall cover EIB financing operations signed during the period from 1 January 2014 to 31 December 2020.
6. If, on expiry of the period referred to in paragraph 5, the European Parliament and the Council have not adopted a decision granting a new EU guarantee to the EIB against losses under its financing operations outside the Union, that period shall be automatically extended once by six months.
Article 2 

1. The maximum ceiling of the EIB financing operations under EU guarantee throughout the period 2014-20 shall not exceed EUR 30 000 000 000. Amounts initially earmarked for financing operations but subsequently cancelled shall not count against the ceiling.This maximum ceiling shall be broken down into:
(a) a fixed ceiling of a maximum amount of EUR 27 000 000 000;
(b) an optional additional amount of EUR 3 000 000 000.The European Parliament and the Council shall decide in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure on the activation in whole or in part of the amount referred to in point (b) and its regional distribution following the mid-term review as set out in Article 19.
2. The fixed ceiling referred to in point (a) of paragraph 1 shall be broken down into regional ceilings and sub-ceilings as laid down in Annex I. Within the regional ceilings, the EIB shall progressively ensure a balanced country distribution within the regions covered by the EU guarantee.
Article 3 

1. The EU guarantee shall be granted only for EIB financing operations which have added value on the basis of the EIB's own assessment, and support any of the following general objectives:
(a) local private sector development, in particular support to SMEs;
(b) development of social and economic infrastructure, including transport, energy, environmental infrastructure, and information and communication technology;
(c) climate change mitigation and adaptation.
2. Whilst preserving the EIB's distinct character as an investment bank, EIB financing operations carried out under this Decision shall contribute to the general EU interest, in particular the principles guiding Union external action, as referred to in Article 21 TEU and shall contribute to the implementation of international environmental agreements to which the Union is a party. The EIB governing bodies are encouraged to take the necessary measures to adapt the EIB activity to contribute to the Union external policies in an effective manner, and to adequately meet the requirements set out in this Decision.
3. Regional integration among countries, including in particular economic integration between Pre-accession countries, Neighbourhood countries and the Union, shall be an underlying objective for EIB financing operations within areas covered by the general objectives set out in paragraph 1. The EIB shall undertake financing operations in beneficiary countries within areas covered by the general objectives by supporting foreign direct investments that promote economic integration with the Union.
4. In developing countries, as defined in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development list of official development assistance recipients, the EIB financing operations shall contribute, in accordance with Articles 208 and 209 TFEU, indirectly to the objectives of the Union development cooperation policy, such as reducing poverty through inclusive growth and sustainable economy, environmental and social development.
5. To ensure that private sector investments have the greatest development impact, the EIB shall endeavour to strengthen the local private sector in beneficiary countries through support to local investment as provided for in point (a) of paragraph 1. EIB financing operations supporting the general objectives set out in paragraph 1 shall endeavour to also include support to investment projects by SMEs from the Union. In order to effectively monitor the use of funds for the benefit of the SMEs concerned, the EIB shall establish adequate contractual requirements with financial intermediaries, including standards for reporting to be provided by the beneficiaries.The EIB shall cooperate with financial intermediaries that can support the specific needs of SMEs in the countries of operation and that do not participate in EIB financing operations implemented in an eligible country through vehicles located in a foreign non-cooperative jurisdiction referred to in Article 13.
6. EIB financing operations supporting the general objective set out in point (b) of paragraph 1 shall support investment projects predominantly in the areas of transport, energy, environmental infrastructure, information and communication technology, health and education. This includes production and integration of energy from renewable sources, energy systems transformation enabling a switch to lower carbon intensive technologies and fuels, sustainable energy security and energy infrastructure, including for gas production and transportation to Union energy market, as well as electrification of rural areas, environmental infrastructure such as water and sanitation and green infrastructure, telecommunications and broadband network infrastructure.
7. EIB financing operations supporting the general objectives set out in point (c) of paragraph 1 shall support investment projects in climate change mitigation and adaptation which contribute to the overall objective of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, in particular by avoiding or reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the areas of renewable energy, energy efficiency and sustainable transport, or by increasing resilience to the adverse impacts of climate change on vulnerable countries, sectors and communities. The eligibility criteria for climate action projects are defined in the EIB climate change strategy which shall be updated before the end of 2015. To this end, an analysis of the carbon footprint ought to be included in the environmental assessment procedure to determine whether project proposals optimise energy-efficiency improvements. Over the period covered by this Decision, the volume of those operations shall represent at least 25 % of total EIB financing operations.
8. In line with Union and international climate change objectives, before the end of 2015 the EIB, in cooperation with the Commission, shall update its climate change strategy as regards EIB financing operations. This update shall, inter alia, integrate concrete actions to ensure that investment projects under this Decision are in line with Union's climate change objectives and to step up efforts to support renewable energy sources and energy efficiency.
9. The EU guarantee shall cover only EIB financing operations carried out in eligible countries that have concluded a framework agreement with the EIB establishing the legal conditions under which such operations are to be carried out.
Article 4 

1. The list of countries potentially eligible for EIB financing under EU guarantee is set out in Annex II. The list of countries eligible for EIB financing under EU guarantee is set out in Annex III and shall include no countries other than those listed in Annex II. For countries not listed in Annex II, eligibility for EIB financing under the EU guarantee shall be decided on a case-by-case basis in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure.
2. The Commission shall be empowered to adopt delegated acts in accordance with Article 18 concerning amendments to Annex III. The Commission's decisions shall be based on an overall assessment, including economic, social, environmental and political aspects, in particular those related to the democracy, human rights and fundamental freedoms as well as the relevant European Parliament resolutions and Council decisions and conclusions.
3. Delegated acts amending Annex III shall not affect the EU guarantee coverage of EIB financing operations signed before the entry into force of those delegated acts, subject to paragraph 4.
4. Disbursements on EIB financing operations benefiting from a Comprehensive Guarantee as referred to in Article 8(1) shall not be made in countries not listed in Annex III.
5. The EU guarantee shall not cover EIB financing operations in a specific country with which the agreement concerning such operations has been signed after that country's accession to the Union.
Article 5 

1. The Commission shall update, together with the EIB, the existing regional technical operational guidelines for EIB financing operations within one year following the entry into force of this Decision.The regional technical operational guidelines shall be consistent with the wider Union regional policy framework set out in Annex IV. In particular, the regional technical operational guidelines shall ensure that EIB financing under this Decision is complementary to corresponding Union assistance policies, programmes and instruments in the different regions.In updating the regional technical operational guidelines, the Commission and the EIB shall take into account relevant European Parliament resolutions and Council decisions and conclusions. The regional technical operational guidelines shall be consistent with the priorities contained in the national or regional programmes, where available, drawn up by the beneficiary countries, taking due account of any consultation with local civil society in the process of drawing up those programmes.The Commission shall transmit to the European Parliament and to the Council the updated regional technical operational guidelines, as soon as they are established.Within the framework set out by the regional technical operational guidelines, the EIB shall define corresponding financing strategies and ensure their implementation.EIB financing operations shall be consistent with the regional technical operational guidelines and the strategies of the beneficiary country.The regional technical operational guidelines shall be reviewed following the mid-term review referred to in Article 19.
2. Within the framework of the procedure provided for in Article 19 of Protocol No 5, the Commission delivers an opinion on EIB financing operations. In the case of EIB financing operations falling under this Decision, where the Commission delivers an unfavourable opinion, that operation shall not be covered by the EU guarantee.
Article 6 

1. The consistency of EIB external actions with Union external policy objectives shall be further strengthened, with a view to maximising synergies between EIB financing operations and Union budgetary resources, in particular through the updating of the regional technical operational guidelines referred to in Article 5, for which the EEAS shall be consulted on policy issues, as appropriate, as well as through regular and systematic dialogue and early exchange of information on:
(a) strategic documents prepared by the Commission or the EEAS as appropriate, such as country and regional strategy papers, indicative programmes, action plans and pre-accession documents;
(b) the EIB's strategic planning documents, investment project pipelines and EIB annual reporting to the Commission;
(c) other policy and operational aspects.
2. The cooperation shall be carried out on a region-by-region basis, including at Union delegation level, taking into consideration the EIB's role as well as the policies of the Union in each region.
Article 7 

1. EIB financing operations shall be carried out, where appropriate, in cooperation with other European multilateral and Member States' financial institutions (‘European financial institutions’) and international financial institutions, including regional development banks (‘international financial institutions’) in order to maximise synergies, cooperation and efficiency, to develop jointly innovative financial instruments, to ensure prudent and reasonable sharing of risks and coherent investment project and sector conditionality, and in order to minimise possible duplication of costs and unnecessary overlap.
2. The cooperation referred to in paragraph 1 shall be facilitated by coordination between the Commission, the EIB and the relevant European and international financial institutions operating in the different regions, carried out where appropriate in the context of memoranda of understanding or other Union regional cooperation frameworks.
Article 8 

1. For EIB financing operations, except those consisting of debt capital market instruments, entered into with a State, or guaranteed by a State, and for other EIB financing operations entered into with regional or local authorities, or public enterprises or institutions owned or controlled by a State, where such other EIB financing operations have an appropriate EIB credit risk assessment taking into account the credit risk situation of the country concerned, the EU guarantee shall cover all payments due to the EIB, but not received by it (‘Comprehensive Guarantee’).
2. For the purposes of paragraph 1, Palestine is represented by the Palestinian Authority and Kosovo is represented by the Authorities of Kosovo.
3. For EIB financing operations other than those referred to in paragraph 1, the EU guarantee shall cover all payments due to the EIB but not received by it, where the non-receipt has been caused by the realisation of one of the following political risks (‘Political Risk Guarantee’):
(a) non-transfer of currency;
(b) expropriation;
(c) war or civil disturbance;
(d) denial of justice upon breach of contract.
4. For EIB financing operations consisting of debt capital market instruments, only the Political Risk Guarantee shall apply.
5. Financing agreements with individual promoters relating to EIB financing operations shall also include appropriate environmental and social provisions in accordance with the EIB's own rules and procedures.
6. The Commission and the EIB shall set out in the guarantee agreement referred to in Article 14 a clear and transparent allocation policy allowing the EIB to identify, within its external activity, the operations to be financed under this Decision in order to ensure the most effective use of the EU guarantee. The allocation policy shall be based on the creditworthiness of EIB financing operations as assessed by the EIB, the ceilings as defined in Annex I, the nature of the counterparty, whether a sovereign State or a sub-sovereign entity falling under paragraph 1 of this Article or a private entity, EIB risk absorption capacity and other relevant criteria, including added value of the EU guarantee. The European Parliament and the Council shall be informed on the allocation policy in accordance with Article 14.
7. When the EU guarantee is called, the Union shall be subrogated to any relevant rights of the EIB in respect of any obligation in connection to its financing operations, in accordance with the guarantee agreement referred to in Article 14.
Article 9 

1. The EIB shall carry out thorough due diligence and, where appropriate, shall require project promoters to carry out local public consultation, in line with Union social and environmental principles, with the relevant national and local stakeholders, as well as with civil society, at project planning stage and implementation stage on social, human rights, environmental, economic and development-related aspects of investment projects covered by the EU guarantee, and to provide information relevant for the assessment of the contribution to the fulfilment of Union external policy and strategic objectives.Where appropriate, this appraisal shall include an assessment of how the capacities of the beneficiaries of EIB financing can be reinforced throughout the project cycle with technical assistance. The EIB's own rules and procedures shall include the necessary provisions on assessment of environmental and social impact of investment projects and of aspects related to human rights and conflict prevention, to ensure that investment projects supported under this Decision are environmentally and socially sustainable.
2. In addition to the ex-ante assessment of development-related aspects, the EIB shall monitor the implementation of financing operations. In particular, it shall require the project promoters to carry out thorough monitoring during project implementation until completion, inter alia, on the economic, development, social, environmental and human rights impact of the investment project. The EIB shall verify on a regular basis the information provided by the project promoters and make it publicly available if the project promoter agrees. Where possible, project completion reports related to EIB financing operations shall be published excluding confidential information.
3. The EIB monitoring shall also endeavour to cover the implementation of intermediated operations and the performance of financial intermediaries in support of SMEs.
4. The EIB shall establish a comprehensive system to ex-ante assess relative and absolute greenhouse gas emissions related to EIB financing operations where those emissions meet significant thresholds, as defined in a relevant methodology included in the EIB climate change strategy, and where data is available.
5. The results of monitoring shall, where possible, be disclosed, subject to confidentiality requirements and the agreement of relevant parties.
Article 10 
Repayments and revenues for an amount of EUR 110 000 000, originating from operations concluded before 2007, including capital repayments, guarantees released, and repayments of the principal of loans, dividends, capital gains, guarantee fees and interest on loans and on amounts on fiduciary accounts, paid back to the fiduciary account established for the Facility for Euro-Mediterranean Investment and Partnership and attributable to the support from the general budget of the Union, shall constitute external assigned revenue in accordance with Article 21(4) of Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 and shall be used for the Guarantee Fund.
Amounts exceeding EUR 110 000 000 which have been paid back to the fiduciary account established for the Facility for Euro-Mediterranean Investment and Partnership shall be entered in the general budget of the Union after deduction of management costs and fees.
Article 11 

1. The Commission shall report annually to the European Parliament and to the Council on EIB financing operations carried out under this Decision. The report shall be made public and include:
(a) an assessment of EIB financing operations at project, sector, country and regional levels and their compliance with this Decision;
(b) an assessment of the added value, the estimated outputs, outcomes and development impact of EIB financing operations at an aggregated basis, drawing on the EIB's Results Measurement framework annual report. To that effect, the EIB shall use performance indicators in relation to development, environmental and social aspects, including human right aspects, of projects funded, taking into account the relevant indicators under the Paris Declaration of 2005 for Aid Effectiveness. Indicators for environmental aspects of projects shall include criteria for clean technology which are oriented in principle at energy efficiency and technologies for reducing emissions;
(c) an assessment of the contribution of EIB financing operations to the fulfilment of Union external policy and strategic objectives, taking into account the regional technical operational guidelines referred to in Article 5;
(d) an assessment of the financial benefit transferred to beneficiaries of EIB financing operations on an aggregated basis;
(e) an assessment of the quality of EIB financing operations, in particular, the extent to which the EIB has taken into account environmental and social sustainability in the due diligence and monitoring of the investment projects financed;
(f) detailed information on calls on the EU guarantee;
(g) information on the climate change and biodiversity financing volumes under this Decision, the impact on absolute and relative greenhouse gas emissions referred to in Article 9(4) on an aggregated basis as well as the number of projects assessed against the climate risk;
(h) a description of the cooperation with the Commission and other European and international financial institutions, including co-financing. The report shall in particular include a breakdown of Union financial resources and resources of other European and international financial institutions used in combination with EIB financing, thus giving an overview of the overall investment supported by EIB financing operations carried out under this Decision. The report shall also mention the conclusion of new memoranda of understanding between the EIB and other European or international financial institutions having a bearing on EIB financing operations under this Decision;
(i) information on the follow up of the functioning of the Memorandum of Understanding between the EIB and the European Ombudsman in so far as that Memorandum concerns EIB financing operations covered by this Decision.
2. For the purposes of the Commission's reporting referred to in paragraph 1, the EIB shall provide the Commission with yearly reports on EIB financing operations carried out under this Decision including all necessary elements allowing the Commission to report in accordance with paragraph 1. The EIB may also provide to the Commission additional information relevant for the European Parliament and the Council to have a comprehensive overview of EIB external activity.
3. The EIB shall provide the Commission with statistical, financial and accounting data on each EIB financing operation, as well as any additional information necessary to fulfil the Commission's reporting duties or requests by the Court of Auditors and an auditor's certificate on the outstanding amounts of the EIB financing operations. EIB shall also provide the Commission any other necessary documents in line with Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012.
4. For the purposes of the Commission's accounting and reporting of the risks covered by the EU guarantee, the EIB shall provide the Commission with the EIB's risk assessment and grading information concerning EIB financing operations.
5. The EIB shall provide the Commission, at least on a yearly basis, an indicative multiannual programme of the planned volume of signatures of EIB financing operations, so as to ensure compatibility of the EIB's forecast financing with the ceilings established in this Decision and for the Commission to ensure appropriate budgetary planning for provisioning the Guarantee Fund. The Commission shall take account of this forecast when preparing the draft general budget of the Union.
6. The EIB shall on a regular basis provide the European Parliament, the Council and the Commission with all its independent evaluation reports which assess the practical results achieved by the specific activities of the EIB under this Decision and other external mandates.
7. The EIB shall provide the information referred to in paragraphs 2 to 6 at its own expense. The EIB shall also make publicly available the information referred to in paragraphs 2, 3 and 6, in general terms and excluding any confidential information.
Article 12 

1. In accordance with its own transparency policy and Union principles on access to documents and information, and progressively with International Aid Transparency Initiative standards, the EIB shall make publicly available on its website information relating to:
(a) all EIB financing operations carried out under this Decision, after the project approval stage, in particular indicating whether an investment project is covered by the EU guarantee and how it contributes to the goals of the Union external action, noting in particular its economic, social and environmental impact;
(b) unless confidentiality requirements apply, any memoranda of understanding between the EIB and other European or international financial institutions having a bearing on EIB financing operations under this Decision;
(c) where possible and appropriate, existing framework agreements between the EIB and a recipient country. When signing new agreements or amending existing ones, the EIB shall endeavour to make possible their disclosure;
(d) the EIB's allocation policy.
2. The Commission shall make publicly available on its website specific information relating to all cases of recoveries under the guarantee agreement referred to in Article 14, and the agreement laying down the detailed provisions and procedures relating to recovery of claims referred to in Article 15(2), unless confidentiality requirements apply.
Article 13 
In its financing operations, the EIB shall not tolerate any activities carried out for illegal purposes, including money laundering, financing of terrorism, tax fraud and tax evasion, corruption, and fraud affecting the financial interests of the Union. In particular the EIB shall not participate in any financing operation implemented in an eligible country through a foreign vehicle located in a non-cooperative jurisdiction identified as such by the Union, the United Nations, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development or the Financial Action Task Force.
In its financing operations, the EIB shall apply the principles and standards set out in Union law on the prevention of the use of the financial system for the purpose of money laundering and terrorist financing, including a requirement to take reasonable measures to identify the beneficial owners where applicable.
Article 14 
The Commission and the EIB shall sign a guarantee agreement laying down the detailed provisions and procedures relating to the EU guarantee as set out in Article 8, and shall inform the European Parliament and the Council accordingly.
Article 15 

1. Where the Commission makes any payment under the EU guarantee, the EIB shall, in the name and on behalf of the Commission, pursue the recovery of claims for the amounts paid.
2. No later than the date of signature of the guarantee agreement referred to in Article 14, the Commission and the EIB shall sign a separate agreement laying down the detailed provisions and procedures relating to recovery of claims.
Article 16 
The EU guarantee and the payments and recoveries under it attributable to the general budget of the Union shall be audited by the Court of Auditors.
Article 17 

1. The EIB shall notify OLAF promptly and provide it with the necessary information when, at any stage of the preparation, implementation or closure of projects subject to the EU guarantee, it has grounds to suspect that there is a potential case of fraud, corruption, money laundering or other illegal activity that may affect the financial interests of the Union.
2. OLAF may carry out investigations, including on-the-spot checks and inspections, in accordance with the provisions and procedures laid down in Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 883/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council, Council Regulation (Euratom, EC) No 2185/96 and Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 2988/95 in order to protect the financial interests of the Union, with a view to establishing whether there has been fraud, corruption, money laundering or any other illegal activity affecting the financial Interests of the Union in connection with any financing operations. OLAF may transmit to the competent authorities of the Member States concerned information obtained in the course of investigations.Where such illegal activities are proven, the EIB shall assist recovery efforts with respect to its financing operations and within its scope of responsibilities.
3. Financing agreements signed in relation to projects supported under this Decision shall include clauses allowing suspension of EIB financing operations and, if necessary, appropriate recovery measures in cases of fraud, corruption or other illegal activity. The decision whether to suspend or cancel the EIB financing shall be taken by the EIB after due consideration of all circumstances and risks.
4. The EIB shall continue to rely on its single point of contact for anti-corruption and anti-fraud for EIB staff and all stakeholders.
5. In its financing operations, the EIB shall implement its exclusion mechanism for debarment of counterparties involved in fraud and corruption which includes the exclusion criteria of the Union's Central Exclusion Database ensuring that rights of all parties are respected.
Article 18 

1. The power to adopt delegated acts is conferred on the Commission subject to the conditions laid down in this Article.
2. The delegation of power referred to in Article 4 shall be conferred on the Commission for an indeterminate period of time from 11 May 2014.
3. The delegation of power referred to in Article 4 may be revoked at any time by the European Parliament or by the Council. A decision of revocation shall put an end to the delegation of the power specified in that decision. It shall take effect the day following the publication of the decision in the Official Journal of the European Union or at a later date specified therein. It shall not affect the validity of any delegated acts already in force.
4. As soon as it adopts a delegated act, the Commission shall notify it simultaneously to the European Parliament and to the Council.
5. A delegated act adopted pursuant to Article 4 shall enter into force only if no objection has been expressed either by the European Parliament or by the Council within a period of two months of notification of that act to the European Parliament and to the Council or if, before the expiry of that period, the European Parliament and the Council have both informed the Commission that they will not object. That period shall be extended by two months at the initiative of the European Parliament or of the Council.
Article 19 
By 31 December 2016, the Commission, in cooperation with the EIB, shall submit to the European Parliament and the Council a mid-term report evaluating the application of this Decision in the first years accompanied, where appropriate, by a proposal for its amendment. The mid-term report shall draw upon an independent external evaluation and contribution from the EIB.
The report shall include in particular:

((a)) an assessment of the application of the allocation policy;
((b)) an assessment of EIB reporting and where appropriate recommendations on how to improve it;
((c)) an assessment of the REM, including performance indicators and criteria, and their contribution to the achievement of the objectives of this Decision;
((d)) a detailed account of the criteria considered for the recommendation concerning the potential activation in whole or in part of the optional additional amount.
Article 20 
By 31 December 2021, the Commission shall present to the European Parliament and to the Council a final report on the application of this Decision.
Article 21 
This Decision shall enter into force on the third day following that of its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union.
Done at Strasbourg, 16 April 2014.
For the European Parliament
The President
M. SCHULZ
For the Council
The President
D. KOURKOULAS
ANNEX I


A.. Pre-accession countries: EUR 8 739 322 000;
B.. Neighbourhood and Partnership countries: EUR 14 437 225 000, broken down into the following indicative sub-ceilings:

((i)) Mediterranean countries: EUR 9 606 200 000;
((ii)) Eastern Europe, Southern Caucasus and Russia: EUR 4 831 025 000;
C.. Asia and Latin America: EUR 3 407 295 000, broken down into the following indicative sub-ceilings:

((i)) Latin America: EUR 2 288 870 000;
((ii)) Asia: EUR 936 356 000;
((iii)) Central Asia: EUR 182 069 000;
D.. South Africa: EUR 416 158 000.
Within the overall fixed ceiling, the EIB governing bodies may decide, after consulting the Commission, to reallocate an amount of up to 20 % of the sub-regional ceilings within regions and up to 10 % of the regional ceilings between regions.

ANNEX II
A. 

1.. Candidates
Iceland, former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Turkey
2.. Potential candidates
Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo

B. 

1.. Mediterranean countries
Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Palestine, Syria, Tunisia
2.. Eastern Europe, Southern Caucasus and Russia
Eastern Europe: Belarus, Republic of Moldova, Ukraine
Southern Caucasus: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia
Russia

C. 

1.. Latin America
Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
2.. Asia
Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Cambodia, China (including Hong Kong and Macao Special Administrative Regions), India, Indonesia, Iraq, Laos, Malaysia, Maldives, Mongolia, Myanmar/Burma, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, Yemen
3.. Central Asia
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan

D. 
South Africa

ANNEX III
A. 

1.. Candidates
Iceland, former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Turkey
2.. Potential candidates
Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo

B. 

1.. Mediterranean countries
Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Palestine, Tunisia
2.. Eastern Europe, Southern Caucasus and Russia
Eastern Europe: Republic of Moldova, Ukraine
Southern Caucasus: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia
Russia

C. 

1.. Latin America
Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
2.. Asia
Bangladesh, Brunei, Bhutan, Cambodia, China (including Hong Kong and Macao Special Administrative Regions), India, Indonesia, Iraq, Laos, Malaysia, Maldives, Mongolia, Myanmar/Burma, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam, Yemen
3.. Central Asia
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan

D. 
South Africa

ANNEX IV

EIB activity in partners participating in the pre-accession process takes place in the framework established in the Accession and European Partnerships which set out the priorities for candidates and potential candidates with a view to making progress in moving closer to the Union, and which provide a framework for Union assistance. The Stabilisation and Association Process is the Union policy framework for the Western Balkans. It is based on progressive partnership, in which the Union offers trade concessions, economic and financial assistance and contractual relationships through Stabilisation and Association Agreements. Pre-accession financial assistance helps the candidates and potential candidates prepare for the obligations and challenges of membership of the Union. This assistance supports the reform process, including preparations for eventual membership. It focuses on institution-building, alignment with the acquis of the Union, preparation for Union policies and instruments and promotion of measures to achieve economic convergence.
EIB activity in Neighbourhood countries takes place in the framework of the new European Neighbourhood Policy set out in the Joint Communication entitled ‘A new response to a changing Neighbourhood’, adopted by the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and the Commission on 25 May 2011, and the Council conclusions adopted on 20 June 2011, which calls notably for greater support to partners committed to building democratic societies and undertaking reforms, in line with the ‘more for more’ and ‘mutual accountability’ principles, and provides the strategic policy framework for the Union relations with the neighbours. In the framework of this cooperation, EIB financing under this Decision will also be targeted at policies promoting inclusive growth and job creation contributing to social stability in line with an incentive-based approach supporting Union external policy objectives, including in relation to migration issues.
In order to achieve these objectives the Union and its partners implement jointly agreed bilateral action plans defining a set of priorities including on political and security issues, trade and economic matters, environmental and social concerns and integration of transport and energy networks.
The Union for the Mediterranean, the Eastern Partnership, the Black Sea Synergy, the Union Strategy for the Danube Region and the Union Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region are multilateral and regional initiatives aimed at fostering cooperation between the Union and the respective group of Neighbourhood partner countries facing common challenges and/or sharing a common geographical environment. The Union for the Mediterranean aims to relaunch the Euro-Mediterranean integration process by supporting mutual economic, social and environmental development on both sides of the Mediterranean and supports improved socioeconomic development, solidarity, regional integration, sustainable development and knowledge building, underlining the need to increase financial cooperation to support regional and trans-national projects. The Union for the Mediterranean supports, in particular, the creation of maritime and land highways, the de-pollution of the Mediterranean, the Mediterranean solar energy plan, the Mediterranean Business Development Initiative, civil protection initiatives and the Euro-Mediterranean university.
The Eastern Partnership aims to create the necessary conditions to accelerate political association and further economic integration between the Union and Eastern partner countries. The Eastern Partnership will provide additional impetus to the economic and social and regional development of the partner countries. It will facilitate good governance, including in the financial sector, promote regional development and social cohesion and help to reduce partner countries' socioeconomic disparities.
The Union Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region supports a sustainable environment and optimal economic and social development in the Baltic Sea region. The Union Strategy for the Danube Region supports, in particular, the development of transport, energy connections and security, sustainable environment and socioeconomic development in the Danube region. The Eastern Partnership aims to create the necessary conditions to accelerate political association and further economic integration between the Union and Eastern partner countries. Russia and the Union have a wide-ranging strategic partnership, distinct from the European Neighbourhood Policy and expressed through the Common Spaces and Roadmaps. These are complemented at multilateral level by the Northern Dimension which provides a framework for cooperation between the Union, Russia, Norway and Iceland (Belarus, Canada and the United States are observers to the Northern Dimension).
EIB activity in Latin America takes place in the framework of the Union, Latin America and the Caribbean Strategic Partnership. As highlighted in the 30 September 2009 Commission Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council entitled ‘The European Union and Latin America: Global Players in Partnership’, the Union's priorities in the field of cooperation towards Latin America are the promotion of regional integration and the eradication of poverty and social inequality in order to promote sustainable economic and social development. These policy objectives will be fostered taking into account the different level of development of Latin American countries. Bilateral dialogue and cooperation will be pursued in areas of common interest for both regions, including environment, climate change, disaster risk reduction and energy, science, research, higher education, technology and innovation.
In Asia, the Union is deepening its strategic partnerships with China and India and negotiations are progressing on new partnership and free trade agreements with South-East Asian countries. At the same time, development cooperation remains high on the Union's agenda with Asia; the Union development strategy for the Asian region aims at eradicating poverty by supporting broad-based sustainable economic growth, promoting a conducive environment and conditions for trade and integration within the region, enhancing governance, increasing political and social stability, and supporting the achievement of the 2015 Millennium Development Goals. Policies are being put in place jointly to address common challenges, such as climate change, sustainable development, security and stability, governance and human rights, as well as the prevention of, and response to, natural and humanitarian disasters.
The Union Strategy for a new partnership with Central Asia adopted by the European Council of 21-22 June 2007 has strengthened regional and bilateral dialogue and Union cooperation with Central Asian countries on major issues facing the region, such as poverty reduction, sustainable development and stability. The implementation of the strategy has brought about important advances in the fields of human rights, the rule of law, good governance and democracy, education, economic development, trade and investment, energy and transport and environmental policies.
EIB activity in South Africa takes place in the framework of the Joint EU Country Strategy Paper for South Africa. The main focal areas identified in that Strategy Paper are employment creation and capacity development for service delivery and social cohesion. EIB activities in South Africa have taken place in high complementarity with the Union development cooperation programme, namely through the EIB focus on private sector support and investments in expansion of infrastructure and social services (housing, electric power, drinking water purification and municipal infrastructure). The mid-term review of the EU Country Strategy Paper for South Africa conducted in 2009-10 has proposed the strengthening of actions in the area of climate-change through activities supporting the creation of green jobs. For the period 2014-20, EIB activity is expected to support in a complementary fashion Union external cooperation policies, programmes and instruments by continuing to focus on key EU-South Africa priorities in order to promote equitable and sustainable economic growth, contribute to employment creation and capacity development, and support the sustainable provision and equitable access to basic infrastructure and services.
