Poland to finalise $27 billion in military deals under EU SAFE by end-May, PM says


Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk attends a signing ceremony for Poland's SAFE programme loan agreement, making it the first EU member state to sign the agreement, in Warsaw, Poland, May 8, 2026. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

WARSAW, May 28 (Reuters) - Poland ⁠will sign agreements by the end of May ⁠to finance military equipment worth 100 billion zlotys ($27.41 ‌billion) under the European Union's SAFE program worth 43.7 billion euros, Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Thursday.

• Poland has signed its loan agreement ​under a European Union defence financing ⁠programme (SAFE) to strengthen its ⁠military as the bloc steps up efforts to boost security ⁠amid ‌heightened geopolitical risks.

• Under EU rules, to benefit from SAFE funding, a single country must sign ⁠purchase agreements by the end of May. After ​this date, purchases ‌must be made by at least two countries participating ⁠in the ​program.

• Prime Minister Tusk said that by the end of May, 100 billion zlotys had been allocated in approximately 40 ⁠agreements, and that over 10,000 Polish companies ​would benefit from the funds provided under the SAFE program.

• Poland is the biggest beneficiary of the 150 billion euro ($174.17 ⁠billion) SAFE initiative. Poland has emerged as Europe's top defence spender by share of national wealth as measured by gross domestic product, and plans to spend 4.8% of GDP ​on defence in 2026.

• The country ⁠has placed large orders for tanks, artillery and air defence ​systems, while also seeking to expand ‌domestic production in partnership with ​foreign manufacturers.($1 = 3.6478 zlotys)

($1 = 0.8613 euros)

(Reporting by Pawel Florkiewicz, Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk, Alan Charlish; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

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