18 February 2026 | Tirana hosted the Corridor VIII Economic Forum, bringing together CVIII partner governments, European institutions, international financial institutions (IFIs) and economic stakeholders.
Corridor VIII is far more than a transport axis. It is a strategic development platform for Albania, a stabilising east–west backbone for the Western Balkans, and the missing horizontal link between the Adriatic and the Black Sea within Europe’s connectivity architecture. It is the only east–west corridor in the Southern Balkans, fully traversing NATO member states.
The panel dedicated to the financing of Corridor VIII, moderated by TCF Coordinator Ardian Hackaj, focused on mobilising national, EU, Member States and international financial instruments in order to accelerate the works along that Corridor. Discussions addressed the persistent infrastructure financing gap that continues to impact delivery; the need for strategic coordination among partner countries; potential synergies drawn from blending EU instruments (IPA, INTERREG CBC, and CEF) with national budgets; need to attract more EU-based companies; the role of Italy and Bulgaria in translating political backing into concrete financial engagement and the role of IFIs in structuring EU and Western Balkans commitments into bankable, multimodal project pipelines.
During the debates, rail connectivity was identified as a structural priority. Interoperable rail segments are essential to ensure that Corridor VIII evolves as a fully integrated multimodal network, rather than a collection of fragmented national projects. Consequently, the Skopje–Durrës Port segment must be included in the CEF III Regulation Annex of Projects of Common Interest.
Reflecting on CDI’s expertise in connectivity governance, Mr. Hackaj steered the debate toward practical implementation steps: enhancing intergovernmental coordination, aligning financing instruments with clearly defined investment sequences, and reducing fragmentation across national segments. Ms. Eridana Cano, Executive Director of the State Agency of Strategic Programming and Aid Coordination, brought to attention the role of Corridor VIII as a territorial development platform, along which only in Albania are 44 IPA cross-border and Interreg projects, with a total value of almost EUR 19 million, and which involve 94 direct beneficiaries from central and local level, civil society and academia.
Through the Connected for Cohesion (Co4Co) initiative, CDI supports cross-border coordination of connectivity actors, reinforcing regional rail connectivity, and enhancing long-term economic and financial resilience.
The Forum took place alongside the Ministerial Meeting, where the Tirana Joint Declaration on Corridor VIII was adopted by the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of Albania, Bulgaria, Italy, North Macedonia and Romania, reaffirming Corridor VIII’s strategic role in strengthening connectivity and regional stability.





