CEB pledges more than €100 million to support post-earthquake reconstruction
The Council of Europe Development Bank (CEB) has pledged more than €100 million in grant and loan financing for post-earthquake reconstruction efforts in Albania.

The 6.4 Richter magnitude earthquake that hit Albania on 26 November 2019, and the more than 1,000 aftershocks that followed, have left 51 people dead and thousands injured. The towns of Durrës, Lezhë, Laç as well as the capital Tirana and the village of Kodër-Thumanë were severely damaged. Post-earthquake reconstruction efforts have been estimated at close to €1 billion and the European Commission has called for an international donors’ conference on 17 February in Brussels to mobilise a part of the funding required.


In this context, the CEB has decided to support further needs assessment and project preparation efforts with a €500,000 grant from its Social Dividend Account, and to commit up to €100 million in financing for reconstruction works proper. The grant has been signed today in Brussels and will allow the Albanian Development Fund – CEB’s partner on an ongoing regional infrastructure development programme aimed at small urban and rural communities - to hire additional expertise for geological and seismic studies, micro-zones inspections, hydrological evaluations of the terrain, and topographic surveys.

CEB Vice-Governor Tomáš Boček said: “Helping member countries respond quickly and effectively to natural disasters has been the CEB’s statutory objective since its inception. The focus is on long-term reconstruction and also on risk preparedness and mitigation action. We are pleased to confirm a pledge of more than €100 million comprising a technical assistance grant of €500,000, which we signed today, and €100 million in loans to be mobilised upon specific demands.[1] In addition, we are ready to contribute with our in-house expertise in housing, healthcare, or education infrastructure to the preparation of specific investments, as needed and appropriate, so that the people affected by the earthquake can have proper homes and benefit from adequate schools and hospitals in the shortest time possible.”


Albania joined the Council of Europe Development Bank in April 1999. Since then, the Bank has provided €164 million in funding for investments in social housing, health, education, rural and urban regeneration, and sustainable tourism.

The Social Dividend Account (SDA) is funded mainly with earmarks from the CEB’s annual results decided by member states. It is used to support high social impact projects, located mainly in the Bank's target countries. This support can take the form of technical assistance, loan guarantees, interest-rate subsidies and investment grants. Moreover, on an exceptional basis and for purposes related to its mandate, the CEB can mobilise SDA grants in the framework of emergency situations.

The Albanian Development Fund (ADF) was established in 1993, based on an agreement between the Albanian Government and the World Bank. Its mission is to encourage a sustainable, balanced and cohesive socio-economic development at local and regional level. The CEB has been working with the ADF on rural and urban infrastructure development throughout Albania since 2001.