ECB secures key parliamentary backing for digital euro


FILE PHOTO: Euro banknotes, Visa and Mastercard cards are placed on a keyboard in this illustration taken September 24, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

FRANKFURT, June 23 (Reuters) - The European ⁠Central Bank secured key parliamentary backing on Tuesday for the launch of ⁠a digital euro, an electronic means of payments aimed at making the ‌euro zone less reliant on U.S. credit cards at a time of fraying transatlantic relationships.

The digital euro, essentially an electronic wallet guaranteed by the central bank but marketed by banks or fintech companies, will ​allow all euro zone residents to make payments online ⁠and in person.

Six years in the ⁠making, the ECB's digital cash has become a more pressing issue since Donald Trump ⁠returned ‌to the White House, slapping tariffs on even established trade partners such as the European Union and raising fears that the U.S. could one ⁠day weaponize its dominance over payment networks like Visa and ​Mastercard.

The approval of draft ‌rules by the economic committee of the European Parliament comes after three ⁠years of wrangling ​between the ECB and banks, which have been concerned about deposit outflows and lost revenues and sought to limit the scope of the project.

"The introduction of the digital euro would... reduce ⁠overreliance on non-European providers by becoming a pan-European ​means of payment and would bring the single currency into the digital era by giving Union citizens the freedom to opt to pay with central bank money in their ⁠daily transactions," the draft regulation says.

Siegbert Frank Droese of the far-right Europe of Sovereign Nations, a political group in the European Parliament, said his group had voted against the proposal, raising the likelihoodthat a further vote would be needed at the Parliament's plenary.

Barring ​an objection there, lawmakers should start negotiating with EU ⁠governments and the European Commission next month, aiming for final approval by the end ​of the year.

The ECB plans to run a 12-month ‌pilot of the digital euro starting in the ​second half of next year before a full launch in 2029.

(Reporting by Francesco Canepa and Valentina Za; Editing by Andrew Heavens and Susan Fenton)

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