European finance ministers outline the strategy for the digital euro as an alternative to U.S.-based payment networks.
According to Reuters, during ministerial meetings in Copenhagen, EU finance ministers discussed how the digital euro could operate alongside commercial bank money, offering consumers and merchants a digital wallet linked to the Eurosystem’s balance sheet.
The ECB considers the digital euro project a strategic move by the EU to counter U.S. dominance in international payment systems, currently controlled by giants like Visa and Mastercard.
Political agreement: controls and safeguards
A compromise reached between EU finance ministers, ECB President Christine Lagarde, and European Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis establishes that EU ministers will have a say in the decision to issue the digital euro. The agreement also sets precise limits on the amount each European citizen can hold in the digital currency, a measure designed to prevent bank runs, according to Frankfurt.
Christine Lagarde commented:
“The digital euro is not just a means of payment, it is also a political statement concerning the sovereignty of Europe and its capacity to handle payment, including on a cross-border basis, with a European infrastructure and solution.”
Digital euro timeline
Despite progress, the issuance of the digital euro will still take several years. The European Parliament has yet to approve the necessary legislation, with intense debates expected this autumn. The ECB hopes to complete the regulatory framework by June 2026, followed by an additional three-year period for the actual issuance of the digital currency.
Political resistance in the EU
The digital euro project faces some resistance, led by Spanish MEP Fernando Navarrete Rojas, a center-right parliamentarian and rapporteur on the digital currency dossier. Navarrete published a 27-page study titled “Do we really need a digital euro?”, describing the project as a solution to a non-existent problem.
In his document, the MEP highlights potential risks:
“Amidst the ECB’s shifting narrative, the possible risks associated with a digital euro, such as the destabilising effect it could have on financial stability…data privacy concerns that have sparked significant public debate, and the allocation of additional responsibilities in areas such as fraud prevention and anti money laundering, should be carefully assessed.”





