HEALTHY WORLD
“The COVID-19 crisis is unprecedented. Likewise, the European Guarantee Fund has been more
than business as usual. It has been unconventional in scope, timeline and its underlying
instruments, as well as in its governance, with a Contributors Committee representing the
participating member states as guarantors. Like the virus itself, COVID-19’s economic effects do
not stop at national borders. Support for companies affected by the economic fallout can be more
efficient when it reaches beyond individual countries. ”
Ioanna-Victoria Kyritsi, head of European Guarantee Fund implementation unit, EIB
“Life science is a vital solution for pressing global needs. The European Investment Bank has
directly supported 80 highly innovative, early-stage European biotech or medtech projects to the
tune of over €2 billion, from new drugs for rare and infectious diseases and immuno-oncology
treatments to the development of more accurate surgical implants and sophisticated diagnostic
tools. Supporting resilient health systems, access to primary healthcare, and manufacturing
capacity for essential medical goods, including vaccines, is a crucial area of our activity. ”
Felicitas Riedl, head of life sciences and health, EIB
European Investment Bank life sciences experts have
been at the heart of the effort to combat COVID-19 and
build a healthier future. This section includes what a
few of them say about the vaccines we financed in 2021
— and the work we are already doing to guard against
future pandemics.
Outside the European Union, our development work
includes projects designed to make vaccination
equitable and global.
The EIB Group has backed Europe’s small and medium-
sized enterprises through its European Guarantee
Fund. From a restaurant in Croatia to a bank in Finland,
here are the stories of businesses that received vital
financing during the COVID-19 crisis
WHY RISKY IDEAS ARE GOOD
IN A CRISIS
To get out of this pandemic and avoid future crises, we must take more risk
and increase innovation in COVID-19 vaccines and all types of life sciences
research
By Cristina Niculescu and Nadya Velikova
One might say that vaccines have become victims of their own success. The COVID-19 vaccines
were developed in record time, but it has been hard to gain widespread support for their use.
We have become accustomed to vaccinations over many decades. But we also have grown much
more concerned with vaccine safety. Many people today tend to forget or take for granted the
benefits of vaccination programmes. Fake news and easy access to all kinds of information through
social media are causing people not to trust their doctors and science as much as they did 50 years
ago.
Vaccines and mass vaccination programmes have contributed to the eradication of certain diseases
in wealthy countries. Today, many infectious diseases from the past are rare and almost forgotten.
Childhood immunisations have helped eradicate smallpox and have nearly eradicated diphtheria,
Haemophilus influenza type B meningitis, measles, mumps, poliomyelitis, rubella and tetanus. In the
developing world, the lack of vaccines still causes children to die, while in developed countries, we
have the vaccines but there is growing hesitancy to get them. This resistance is jeopardising the
gains achieved after decades of hard work by the medical community, researchers and
governments.
Despite the threat that transmissible diseases pose to public health, the development of new
vaccines has been delayed in the last few years by a shortage of investment for the developers and
manufacturers involved in research and production. High development costs, low returns on
investment and all the business challenges involved in the development and production of vaccines
have forced some biopharmaceutical companies to leave the vaccine development field. All these
problems have hurt vaccine development for many years.
Everything in the toolbox
When it became clear that the coronavirus would be a big crisis, the European Investment Bank
decided to leverage all its financing tools and all the technology that science could offer to help
companies and society. We did not focus on one company or one technique. We reached out to
traditional vaccine developers and new ones, such as BioNTech in Germany, which created one of
the leading mRNA vaccines. mRNA is a novel technology that can pave the way for vaccines to treat
many other illnesses, including cancer.
Not every project the Bank supported during this crisis was successful, but we did not have the
privilege to hope that one solution would work for everyone or the comfort to invest a lot of time
European Investment Bank Activity THE INNOVATION RESPONSE Report 2021