2 minute read / April 28, 2026
The study published in April 2026 recommends concentrating CEF‑Transport on a limited portfolio of high‑impact cross‑border and dual‑use projects, strengthening conditionalities and targeted technical assistance in Cohesion Policy, establishing an innovation‑to‑deployment pipeline between research and investment instruments, and reinforcing governance, transparency and security mainstreaming in EU transport investment.
The 2028–2034 Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) will be the first full seven‑year European Union (EU) budgetary cycle implemented under the revised Trans‑European Transport Network (TEN‑T) Regulation and in a changed geopolitical context, marked in particular by Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine and rising security concerns at the EU’s external borders. A central issue is how the main funding instruments are designed and combined so that limited public resources deliver high value for money in terms of TEN‑T completion, decarbonisation, resilience, security and territorial cohesion.
The study also highlights structural risks: possible dilution of transport‑specific priorities within broader envelopes where internal allocations remain indicative, and the persistence of administrative capacity constraints in certain Member States, which may hinder timely absorption and compliance with TEN‑T, climate, state‑aid and security requirements.
The complete study is available here.