"European Investment Bank financing helps ensure that firms like Jennewein can grow in Europe, rather than taking their innovations to the United States for support and development."
Summary sheet
Jennewein is a highly innovative German biotechnology food company focused on novel production processes for the synthesis of human milk oligosaccharides (functional nutritive sugars) for a wide range of applications, including nutritional, pharmaceutical and cosmetic products.
The project will cover research and development (R&D) costs, both operational expenditure (OPEX) and capital expenditure (CAPEX) related to the up-scaling of the production of the human milk oligosaccharides, clinical trials for the new products and related R&D activities.
The project mainly concerns investments in R&D that are expected to be carried out in existing facilities already authorised for the same purpose and would therefore not require an environmental impact assessment (EIA) under the Directive 2011/92/EU. Full environmental details will be verified during the appraisal.
The promoter is a private company, not operating in the utilities sector and does not have the status of a contracting authority; thus the project is not subject to the EU directives on procurement.
Documents
News & Stories
Inside the project
How and Why
A breakthrough technology
Why
- Multinationals had tried to figure out how to manufacture oligosaccharides at a price low enough to make mass production feasible. Jennewein actually did it
- To build a R&D centre to expand human milk oligosaccharides product portfolio and increase production capacity
- Fill a market gap as commercial banks are reluctant to invest in an early-stage company in a new and innovative market.
How
- Financing in the form of venture debt with equity-like remuneration
- Because it’s not an actual equity investment, Jennewein’s founders and early investors retain their stake in the company, instead of diluting it.
Sectors & Countries
"This is an excellent example of the type of firm we can advance in Europe, and the key is providing the right financing ecosystem."
Related media
Healthy sugar for baby formula
Venture debt keeps the vultures away
Related projects and stories
Why cleantech is central to Europe’s energy transition
Why cleantech is no longer a niche sector, how it supports decarbonisation and competitiveness, and why access to capital is critical
Joint Statement by Seven Multilateral Development Banks Pledging Support to Address Impacts of the Middle East Conflict
Paris, May 18, 2026. The signatory Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) are responding to requests for support from countries and clients to help address the heterogeneous and compound impacts from the conflict in the Middle East, including disruptions to energy and fertilizer markets and trade routes, with spillover effects on inflation, food security, jobs, fiscal and external balances, and financing conditions.
EIB presents credit risk information in the Middle East and North Africa
The European Investment Bank (EIB) on Monday hosted a half-day seminar focused on the Global Emerging Markets Risk Database (GEMs), the world’s largest credit risk database for emerging markets, and its role in supporting investment in Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs).