European Tech Champions Initiative: Portugal joins EIB fund aiming to mobilise 80 billion euros
Portugal has joined the EIB's European Tech Champions Initiative, which aims to raise 15 billion euros and mobilise up to 80 billion for 1,500 European scale-ups.
Portugal will put its own money into the new phase of the European Tech Champions Initiative, the investment alliance led by the European Investment Bank that aims to mobilise up to 80 billion euros for 1,500 European tech companies in their scale-up phase. The announcement came this Friday from finance minister Joaquim Miranda Sarmento, on the sidelines of the Ecofin meeting in Brussels.
How much will Portugal invest in the initiative?
Nobody knows yet — and that is the honest answer. All 27 member states have agreed to take part, but most have not settled on amounts. In Portugal’s case, a technical meeting between the finance ministry and the EIB is scheduled for next week, and the final figure will be, in the minister’s words, proportional to Portugal’s size and to the fund’s opportunities.
What is the European Tech Champions Initiative?
It is Europe’s answer to an old problem: the continent’s tech companies grow up to a point and then go looking for capital in the United States — often relocating altogether. The new phase wants to raise up to 15 billion euros, roughly four times the first edition launched in 2023, and use it as leverage to reach that 80 billion in total investment. The EIB Group is committing up to 1.25 billion, and the novelty is that beyond mega-funds, the initiative will now also invest in mid-sized growth funds above 300 million and create a pan-European platform to ease private investors into the European tech market. The final size will be settled in the second half of 2026.
The first phase backed 15 mega-funds and helped create 12 European unicorns. For the Portuguese ecosystem, which keeps drawing capital — the national space sector is already worth 1.2 billion euros — having the state at this table means more direct access to a financing machine designed precisely for the stage at which our scale-ups tend to emigrate.
By Beatriz Mota
Image: Caroline Martin / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0 igo)