Germany's Infrastructure Fund Struggles: A Call for Accelerated Implementation
Germany's €500 billion infrastructure and climate fund is designed to enhance economic growth but needs faster implementation. In 2025, spending was €13.3 billion lower than planned, with only a third of projects progressing. The finance ministry aims for better milestone achievement by 2026.
A recent report highlights the sluggish progress of Germany's €500 billion ($583 billion) infrastructure and climate fund. According to the finance ministry, spending fell short last year, with only €24 billion disbursed instead of the planned €37.2 billion.
The special fund aims to finance significant infrastructure and climate-neutrality projects over 12 years. As of 2026, only 26 out of 107 planned milestones had been met. The report indicates that most projects in 2025 remained in planning, while just one-third advanced to implementation.
The shortfall in spending, partly due to delayed funds to federal states, highlights administrative bottlenecks. Looking ahead, the finance ministry expects better progress toward investment milestones, with only 28% of 2026's planned funds disbursed by April 30.
(With inputs from agencies.)

