
ELTI Management Board met in Rome at the CDP headquarters
Rome/Brussels, 5 December 2025 – The Management Board of the European Long-Term Investors Association (ELTI) met today to discuss the work carried out this year, the outlook and projects for 2026, dialogue with stakeholders and institutions, and the tools to be adopted to ensure market competitiveness.
Held at the Cassa Depositi e Prestiti headquarters in Rome under the chairmanship of CDP Chief Executive Officer Dario Scannapieco, it was ELTI’s fifth such meeting this year.
The gathering offered an opportunity to exchange views on the strategies to strengthen the association and talk about the progress of the main dossiers under discussion at the European level.
At the President’s request, the Board observed a minute of silence to honour the passing of our esteemed Secretary General, Helmut Von Glasenapp, who served the association with outstanding dedication and professionalism since 2016.
During the session, the Board also approved the co-optation of Colin Moran as a new member of the Management Board for the Strategic Banking Corporation of Ireland (SBCI), replacing outgoing Vice President, June Butler. Moran currently serves as CEO Delegate at SBCI, which he joined in 2022 after gaining more than twenty years of experience at Bank of Ireland.
Founded in Paris in 2013, ELTI brings together 33 financial institutions from 19 European Union countries, two candidate countries (Montenegro and Turkey) and two international institutions (the Council of Europe Development Bank and the Nordic Investment Bank). Since July 2023, the role of Chairman of the Association has been held by Dario Scannapieco.
National Promotional Institutions provide long-term financial support and advisory services throughout Europe to promote sustainable investment, strategic infrastructure, innovation and small and medium-sized enterprise development. In 2024 alone, ELTI members financed projects worth over €290 billion, more than 30% of which was allocated to sustainability. These included more than 800,000 social housing units built thanks to €50 billion in funding.