GreenWay, an electric vehicle charging infrastructure operator, has secured 138 million euros from a consortium of banks. The funds will be used to expand its network in Poland, Slovakia, Croatia and other countries across Central and Eastern Europe.
The consortium includes Crédit Mutuel Arkéa, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) with support from the InvestEU programme, ING Bank Śląski, and mBank, which also serves as security agent and green loan coordinator. The investment is aimed at strengthening GreenWay’s market position in Poland and developing its offering in Slovakia, Croatia and the wider region.
So far, GreenWay has raised up to 258 million euros for electromobility development in Central and Eastern Europe. This total includes backing from professional international infrastructure funds such as Generation Capital, Helios Energy Investments and Mirova, as well as early-stage investors Janom Investments and Neulogy Ventures.
Financing structure and historical backing
The transaction of up to 138 million euros comprises a refinancing line, an investment financing line (CAPEX) and a working capital line totalling 113 million euros, plus an additional non-binding increase line of 25 million euros. This structure allows for flexible deployment of capital across new projects and operational needs.
GreenWay was the first company in the region to receive funds from the Connecting Europe Facility / Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Facility for public charging infrastructure in Slovakia (2013) and Poland (2016). It was also the first regional company to obtain the InnovFin distinction and financing from the European Investment Bank (2018), and has been a beneficiary of support programmes from Poland’s National Fund for Environmental Protection and Water Management.
Market growth and GreenWay’s position
GreenWay currently operates 5,800 charging points across over 1,680 locations and boasts a market share exceeding 90 percent among registered electric vehicle users on each of its key markets. The European electric vehicle market grew by 19 percent in the first two months of 2026 compared to the same period last year.
In Poland, the battery electric vehicle (BEV) fleet increased by about 62 percent year-on-year as of April 2026, reaching 147,000 vehicles. Slovakia saw a 68 percent increase to nearly 28,500 BEVs. The current geopolitical situation is expected to further accelerate this trend, boosting demand for charging infrastructure across the region.
Źródło: WNP.PL, Fot. materiały prasowe GreenWay






