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Middle East, North Africa and the Gulf

Palestine*

Palestine

EU and Palestine

The European Union is the biggest provider of external assistance to the Palestinians. In line with the goal of a negotiated two-state solution, EU efforts aim at promoting greater Palestinian control, autonomy, and capacity to exercise responsibility to prepare for future statehood. The EU is also supporting efforts to strengthen the Palestinian Authority’s transparency and accountability, with a view to reinforce its role and credibility.

Relation between the EU and Palestine is based on the Interim Association Agreement on Trade and Cooperation, signed in 1997 between the European Community and the Palestine Liberation Organisation, on behalf of the Palestinian Authority. The EU-Palestine Action Plan was approved in May 2013, setting the agenda for economic and political cooperation with the EU. The Action Plan was recently prolonged for additional three years, until 2025.

Bilateral Cooperation

EU’s assistance to Palestine is primarily funded through the Neighbourhood and Development Cooperation Instrument – Global Europe (NDICI-GE) for the period 2021 to 2027.

 The European Union is the biggest provider of external assistance to the Palestinians with a bilateral allocation amounting to indicatively €1.36 billion for 2021-2024. Furthermore, the EU proposed an allocation up to €1.6 billion for 2025-2027, including a support from the European Investment Bank.The EU’s cooperation portfolio in Palestine is implemented in different ways:

i) Direct Financial Support

The EU is helping the Palestinian Authority meet its recurrent expenditure by contributing to the payment of salaries and pensions of a number of civil servants in the West Bank. It also provides assistance to the most vulnerable Palestinian families and helps pay for health referrals to the East Jerusalem hospitals. This support is channelled through the PEGASE instrument (“Mécanisme Palestino-européen de Gestion de l’Aide Socio-économique”). It is accompanied by a policy dialogue aimed at encouraging reforms, which includes an incentive-based framework that links part of this support to reforms in key sectors.

ii) Support to Palestine refugees

The EU is one of the largest providers of assistance to Palestine refugees.

The EU’s funding ensures that the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East’s (UNRWA) is able to provide health, education and social services to Palestinian refugees, including salaries for teachers, doctors and social workers active in refugee camps.

iii) Development programmes

EU-funded development programmes in Palestine focus on job creation and access to water and energy. It is also used to support cooperation between Israel and Palestine, notably on energy and water, working with the Office of the Quartet.

The above EU programme for Palestinian Recovery and Resilience complements the Economic and Investment Plan for the Southern Neighbourhood (EIP) to strengthen resilience and build prosperity in the region. The EIP implements the Global Gateway in the region. EIP projects implemented in Palestine include: 

  • Sustainable Use of Natural Resources and Energy Finance (SUNREF II), guiding the private sector towards a greener economy, with a primary focus on green energy
  • Northeast Ramallah Wastewater collection, building a new wastewater collection system for 14 municipalities, trunk lines leading to its solar photovoltaic panels to contribute to its energy needs
  • Sustainable Growth 4 All, aiming at enabling the uptake of green and sustainable investments and promoting access to finance and know-how for micro and SMEs, in particular female entrepreneurship and financial inclusion

More on EU-Palestine relations: Factograph - EU-Palestine relations - European Commission

Pact for the Mediterranean

On 28 November 2025, on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the Barcelona Declaration, the EU and its Southern Mediterranean partners launched the Pact for the Mediterranean to reinforce the EU’s partnership with the region. On 17 April 2026, the European Commission presented the Action Plan which also covers Palestine.

 

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*  This designation shall not be construed as recognition of a State of Palestine and is without prejudice to the individual positions of the Member States on this issue.
** Mécanisme Palestino-européen de Gestion de l’Aide Socio-économique

The Pact for the Mediterranean

Further information

Factsheets available to download

Key documents

For specific information on programming documents and financing decisions (see below):

2025
2024
2023
2022

C(2022) 5632 – Individual Measure in favour of Palestine for 2022-2024

C(2022)9734 – Annual Action Programme in favour of Palestine for 2022

C(2022) 6835 - COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING DECISION of 21.9.2022 amending Commission Implementing Decision C(2018) 7933 final of 26.11.2018 on the Annual Action Programme in favour of Palestine for 2018

C(2022) 8279 - COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING DECISION adopting a multiannual indicative programme for Palestine

C(2022) 4166 - COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING DECISION of 14.6.2022 on the financing of the individual measure in favour of Palestine1 for 2021-2023

2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009

ENPI 2009/C(2008)8267/Palestine SM Part I

ENPI 2009/C(2009)9958/Palestine SM Part II

ENPI 2009/C(2009)9388/Palestine SM Part III

ENPI 2009/C(2011)5001/Palestine SM I/"Support to Social and Economic Development and Contribution of PEGASE to Private Sector Reconstruction in Gaza"/Modification

ENPI 2009/C(2012)3398/Palestine SM II/"Fostering co-operation on water management between the Israeli Palestinian and Jordanian water authorities"/Modification

ENPI 2009/C(2009)8489/Pilot Project for Finance for Agricultural Production in the Occupied Palestinian Territory

2008
2007