Here is the part of this story that nobody in Brussels wants you to focus on: while 200 companies were waiting for their grant money, the CEO of the organisation that owed them that money was already planning to register a new legal entity and return to Brussels to ask for more public funds.
That is not a glitch. That is the system working exactly as designed.
I am Violetta Bonenkamp, also known as Mean CEO. I am the founder of CADChain, a blockchain IP protection startup for engineering files, and Fe/male Switch, a startup game for women entering entrepreneurship. I have bootstrapped both startups across the Netherlands and Malta while applying for EU grants at every level. My startups have received several of those grants, and I have also sat on the wrong side of a process that consumed months of my time and delivered nothing. I have written about EU funding dysfunction for Sifted and my own blog. And this situation is the most concrete, most damaging example of what I have been describing.
This article covers what happened, why it matters for every bootstrapping founder in Europe, and exactly what you need to do before you touch another EU grant application.
TL;DR: EIT Manufacturing bankruptcy: what it means for startups in Europe
EIT Manufacturing (EITM), an EU-backed body that awarded grants between €50,000 and €500,000 to manufacturing startups, filed for liquidation on March 25, 2026, after the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT) froze its payments amid a fraud investigation. More than 200 companies are now waiting for a combined €15 million in promised funds. One Maltese startup spent €40,000 of its own money after receiving a project green light from EITM in January 2025, while the organisation had already known since June 2024 that its payments were frozen.
What Happened: The EIT Manufacturing Bankruptcy Timeline
Let's break it down, because the sequence matters.
EIT Manufacturing launched in 2019 as one of nine Knowledge and Innovation Communities (KICs) funded through the European Institute of Innovation and Technology. KICs are large consortium-style partnerships grouping universities, research centres, and private sector organisations into thematic sectors: EIT Digital, EIT Health, EIT Manufacturing. Each KIC receives funding from the EIT, which draws from the EU's Horizon Europe programme. The chain is long. The accountability at the end of it, where your startup is, is essentially zero.
Through its Accelerate programme, EITM distributed grants ranging from €50,000 to €500,000 to manufacturing startups across Europe. It selected companies, signed programme agreements, and told founders to start spending.
Here is what happened next, step by step.
- 2020 to 2022: Irregularities occurred in EITM's grant selection and project implementation processes, later confirmed by the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF).
- June 2024: The EIT froze all payments to EITM after OLAF launched its investigation.
- September 2024: OLAF shared its first report, finding "serious irregularities in the implementation of certain calls for proposals and selection of projects for funding," according to EIT spokesman Balint Linder quoted in Science Business.
- January 2025: EITM gave the green light to new project starts, including a Maltese startup called ELM Fabrication Ltd. Payments were still frozen at this point.
- October 2025: The EIT allocated €163 million to its network, and EITM expected to receive its portion.
- December 2025 / early 2026: A second OLAF report found that irregularities went beyond those identified in the first report. The EIT refused to issue a letter confirming the €163 million allocation was coming to EITM. Without that letter, EITM could not secure a bridging bank loan.
- March 25, 2026: EIT Manufacturing filed for liquidation. Outstanding obligations: €15 million to over 200 beneficiaries, half of them SMEs and startups.
EITM CEO Caroline Viarouge told Sifted: "EIT, as the grant authority, are the ones that need to step in and pay for these companies." The EIT responded by saying it would cooperate with the liquidator and was "particularly mindful of the impact on start-ups." Some targeted payments to the most vulnerable beneficiaries were authorised.
For the majority of the 200 companies, the situation remains unresolved as of this writing.
The Human Cost: A Maltese Startup Spent €40,000 on a Grant That Vanished
Numbers are one thing. Here is what this looks like in a real founder's life.
David Sciberras is co-founder of ELM Fabrication Ltd, a Maltese deep-tech startup that built a 2m x 2m x 6m 3D printer capable of producing boats and furniture from recycled plastic. EITM selected ELM for a €217,000 grant, representing 70% of the project cost. In January 2025, EITM told ELM to start the project.
The signed grant agreement never arrived.
In April 2025, EITM called an emergency meeting and instructed ELM to stop spending. EITM asked ELM to submit a breakdown of costs already incurred: €40,000. EITM pledged to reimburse €28,000 in Q1 or Q2 2026. Then the liquidation news hit.
Sciberras told WhosWho.mt that many startups in their cohort had to file for bankruptcy after counting on funds that never came. ELM survived because, as Sciberras put it, they stayed lean, did not pay themselves salaries, and did not hire the people they had planned to hire.
Read that sentence again. People they planned to hire. Gone. Because a EU-funded body kept them in a compliance reporting loop throughout 2025, while it had known since June 2024 that its payments were frozen.
ELM has since opened an equity round with 20% already subscribed and moved its projected launch to Q4 2026. They were fortunate that they bootstrapped lean. Others in their cohort were not.
This is what "particularly mindful of the impact on startups" looks like in a human life.
Why This Is a System Problem, Not a One-Off Fraud Case
The institutional reflex in situations like this is always the same: one case, not representative, move along.
Jan Palmowski, secretary general of the Guild of European Research-Intensive Universities, told Times Higher Education that the collapse "raised serious questions about the EIT model itself." The EIT's official response was to say this case "does not affect the operations or financial stability of the other KICs."
That response is a structural reflex, not an answer.
Here is the actual structural problem. The organisations distributing EU grant money are evaluated on process compliance: reports filed, events held, governance structures documented. They are not evaluated on whether the companies they fund actually build something, hire people, or generate revenue.
This creates a specific incentive: protect the institution's compliance record, not the founder's runway. And that incentive runs through every layer of the system.
When OLAF flagged irregularities at EITM, the EIT's job was to protect EU funds. Freezing payments was the compliant response. Understandable from an institutional perspective. Devastating from a founder perspective. And the founders had no recourse, no appeal channel, no way to recover the money from somewhere else. They waited.
Seven months passed between the payment freeze in June 2024 and EITM giving ELM a project green light in January 2025. The body already knew it was in serious financial distress. It kept issuing project starts.
I am not speculating about intent. I am naming what it produced.
At Fe/male Switch, I hear these stories regularly from the founders in our community. They rarely make it into press coverage, because telling the story publicly feels too risky when you are still trying to recover the money. The more founders talk about this, the harder it becomes for institutions to absorb the damage quietly and start fresh under a new letterhead.
The New Legal Entity Play: The Part That Should Enrage You
After filing for liquidation, and during an active OLAF fraud investigation, EITM CEO Caroline Viarouge publicly announced that the organisation was exploring setting up a new legal entity to continue supporting manufacturing innovation in Europe.
She told Science Business: "We have some partners who are willing to take part of this endeavour. We have an opportunity to use this ecosystem in a new model, but we need to understand if the EIT is willing to support this new model."
Here is what that means in practice. EITM was structured as a French non-profit association. When it files for liquidation, that legal entity winds down. A new association can be registered. Partners, institutional relationships, staff, and the institutional knowledge of how to write Brussels-facing applications can all transfer across under a new legal structure.
The 200 companies waiting for €15 million do not get a new legal entity. They get a liquidator.
This is entirely legal. That is, again, almost the most disturbing part.
The Budget Context That Should Worry Every Startup Founder in Europe
Zoom out a level further and the picture gets worse.
In October 2025, the EIT received €1 billion to fund the nine KICs in its network. One billion euros. And the EIT could not issue a letter confirming €163 million was on its way to EITM, which was the one thing needed to prevent the collapse.
On top of that: in the proposed EU budget covering 2028 to 2034, the EIT is not mentioned by name at all. The €38 billion proposed for the European Innovation Council and "innovation ecosystems" is widely interpreted to cover KIC activities, but the parent EIT institution has no confirmed place in the next multi-year financial framework.
MEPs are pushing for EIT continuity, but nothing is settled. So the institution that just allowed one of its bodies to collapse while owing €15 million to startups now faces an uncertain future past 2027, while the eight remaining KICs operate under a parent whose name appears next to the word "fraud" in every major research publication this week.
Bootstrapping founders in Europe should take note.
EU Funding Risk by Type: A Comparison
Not all EU funding carries the same risk profile. Here is a breakdown of the main instruments, so you can assess what you are actually applying for.
The pattern is clear. The more intermediary bodies sit between the European Commission and your startup, the higher your structural risk. Not because intermediaries are corrupt by default, but because each layer adds a potential point of institutional failure that you cannot control and cannot appeal.
The Hidden Cost Nobody Counts: EU Grant Compliance Overhead
There is a dimension to the EITM collapse that almost no coverage mentions.
ELM Fabrication spent months on documentation required by EITM. EU grant paperwork is not a form. It is a full-time operational commitment. I wrote in my Sifted piece on EU funding that roughly 50% of your activities in EU-funded projects go towards writing reports. ELM was not even at the reporting stage. They were still waiting on a signed grant agreement while responding to compliance cost-breakdown requests.
At CADChain, my team and I have spent entire project sprints on single grant applications. That was just the application. The reporting and compliance burden once a project is underway is many times heavier.
And all of this work, the compliance calls, the emergency meetings, the revised timelines, the cost breakdowns, happened while EITM already knew its payments were frozen.
Founders were doing unpaid work to maintain a grant relationship with a body that could not pay them. And they found out the truth only when the bankruptcy news hit the press.
Count that cost. It is real. It does not appear in anyone's impact reports.
Due Diligence SOP: What to Check Before You Accept Any EU Grant
I still believe European founders should apply for EU grants. The non-dilutive capital matters. The runway matters. For some programmes, the network access genuinely adds value.
But apply with clear eyes. Here is a step-by-step due diligence process you should run before you spend one hour of your own time or one euro of your own money on a grant-funded project.
Step 1: Map the full funding chain. Who actually holds the money? Who authorises each payment? Is there a parent institution with final sign-off authority? For KIC grants, the chain is: European Commission to EIT to KIC to you. That is three institutional layers. Find out what happens to your payment if any layer faces a compliance or governance issue.
Step 2: Find out if the intermediary body is currently under any investigation. OLAF publishes its investigation notices. The EIT froze EITM's payments in June 2024. EITM was giving project green lights in January 2025. A simple check on the OLAF website or a search for the funding body's name plus "OLAF" would have flagged this risk before ELM spent €40,000.
Step 3: Do not start spending until you have a signed grant agreement in hand. A green light email is not a contract. An oral commitment in an emergency meeting is not a contract. A signed grant agreement is a contract. If the body cannot or will not produce a signed agreement before asking you to begin work, do not begin work.
Step 4: Read the payment structure before you build your cash flow plan. Standard EU grant structure: 40% upfront, 40% at mid-term, 20% on final report. If the funding body collapses after your mid-term payment, you are doing the final 60% of the work for free. Map this against your actual cash position.
Step 5: Run a parallel fundraising track. A single grant from a multi-layer consortium structure is not a runway. It is a promise. Keep your equity or revenue-based fundraising options open while the grant is in progress.
Step 6: Ask who else is in the current cohort and whether they have received payments. Founders talk. If three other companies in your cohort tell you their Q3 tranches are delayed without explanation, that is signal. The ELM situation would have been visible to anyone paying attention to other EITM grantees in mid-2024.
Step 7: Check the funding body's own audit history. Every EU-funded body publishes annual reports and financial statements. If the most recent available report shows significant unpaid obligations, reserve fund depletion, or auditor qualifications, treat that as a structural warning sign.
Insider Mistakes Bootstrapping Founders Make With EU Grants
These are the patterns I see most often, from my own experience and from the founders I work with at Fe/male Switch and through Mean CEO's blog.
Mistake 1: Treating the grant as confirmed the moment you receive a selection notification. You are selected. The grant is not yours until the signed agreement is in your hands and the first tranche has hit your account. Adjust your planning accordingly.
Mistake 2: Stopping parallel fundraising while you wait for the grant. EU grant timelines stretch. EITM grantees waited for payments from June 2024 through March 2026, nearly two years. Any founder who paused investor conversations because "the EU grant was coming" spent two years at a standstill.
Mistake 3: Taking on fixed costs (salaries, leases, equipment) against a grant that has not paid yet. This is the one that causes collapses. ELM survived because they did not hire the people they planned to hire. Others in their cohort did not survive for exactly that reason.
Mistake 4: Spending your own money to match-fund a grant before the agreement is signed. EU grants often require co-investment: you fund a percentage, the grant funds the rest. Do not put your own money in until the signed agreement establishes clearly what happens to your contribution if the grant is not paid.
Mistake 5: Confusing administrative leniency with financial stability. EITM staff were helpful, responsive, and professional throughout the 2025 process, by most accounts. That is not evidence of financial health. An organisation can have excellent people and still be institutionally insolvent.
Mistake 6: Not reading the force majeure and insolvency clauses in your grant agreement. These clauses exist. They usually protect the funding body, not you. Read them before you sign.
What Good EU Funding Infrastructure Would Look Like
Viarouge named the problem plainly: KICs need a stable, transparent, simplified framework with clear governance from the coordinating body. She is right. The current model creates maximum fragility at exactly the point where failure causes the most damage, which is the moment money was supposed to reach the people building real things.
A better model would include:
A direct legal relationship between the European Commission and each startup beneficiary, with the KIC or consortium in a coordination role, not a payment-gatekeeping role. When the intermediary fails, the startup's grant agreement should remain enforceable against the grant authority.
A mandatory insolvency clause in every grant agreement that defines exactly what happens to promised payments if the intermediate body becomes insolvent, including a stated recovery fund or direct EIT/EIC payment path.
A published cohort transparency register, updated quarterly, showing whether each grant body is current on its payment obligations. Founders would see payment delays before committing further resources.
An independent appeals mechanism for founders affected by institutional failures they had no part in causing, separate from the same institutional chain that produced the failure.
And a rule, one that apparently needs to be stated explicitly, that no successor entity created by the same leadership team of an organisation under active fraud investigation should receive new public funding until all outstanding obligations from the previous entity are settled in full.
The fact that this rule does not exist tells you everything about whose interests the current system was built to protect.
The Bootstrapper's Alternatives: EU Funding Options With Lower Structural Risk
If EITM's collapse has made you cautious about KIC cascade grants, here are the alternatives worth evaluating, especially for bootstrapping startups where cash timing is survival-critical.
EIC Accelerator (direct application). The European Innovation Council offers direct grants and blended finance to individual startups at TRL 6 to 8. The money flows from the EIC directly to your company. No intermediary KIC layer. In the first 2026 results cycle (October 2025 cut-off), the EIC selected 61 startups from 17 countries from among 121 companies that reached interview stage, with total proposed funding of €467 million.
Eurostars. Aimed at R&D-intensive SMEs collaborating across borders. Requires at least two entities from two different Eurostars countries. National agencies handle payment distribution, not an EIT KIC. Call 11 opens July 2026.
National grant programmes. The Netherlands has RVO instruments including the WBSO R&D tax credit and various MIT scheme grants. Malta has Malta Enterprise grant schemes. These national programmes have shorter institutional chains, typically faster payment cycles, and lower administrative overhead than EU cascade grants.
Revenue and community-first bootstrapping. I know this sounds obvious. And I know that for capital-intensive deep tech, grant funding is genuinely critical. But for business model types where revenue is reachable before you need the grant money, the smartest thing you can do is build a revenue base that makes the grant optional, not existential. At Learn Dutch with AI, the entire model is built to generate revenue from day one. No grant dependency. No waiting for tranches. And at Healthy Restaurants in Malta, the same principle applies: build something that works without the funding, then add the funding as an accelerant, not a lifeline.
What Happened to the Other Startups in the EITM Cohort
The honest answer is: we do not fully know yet.
The liquidation process is ongoing. The EIT has stated it will cooperate with the liquidator and that some targeted payments to the most vulnerable beneficiaries have been authorised. What "cooperate with the liquidator" means in practice for 200 companies owed €15 million collectively will become clearer over the coming months.
What we do know from Sciberras's account and from my own conversations with founders in the EITM ecosystem is that the cohort was not homogeneous in how they planned around the grant. Companies that scaled headcount or took on fixed costs against the expected grant money are in significantly worse positions than those who stayed lean.
Some filed for bankruptcy. Some are still trying to recover costs. Some, like ELM, found a way to pivot and survive.
The EU's OLAF investigates around 200 to 250 cases per year across all EU-funded programmes (so it's basically one case per day?). The EITM case is unusually visible because of its scale and the public communications around it. But it is not statistically anomalous. Irregularities in multi-layer EU funding structures happen regularly. The founders affected are rarely this organised in their response, and their stories rarely reach the press.
Frequently Asked Questions on EITM scandal
What is EIT Manufacturing and why did it go bankrupt?
EIT Manufacturing (EITM) was a Knowledge and Innovation Community (KIC) funded by the European Institute of Innovation and Technology, an EU agency. It distributed grants between €50,000 and €500,000 to manufacturing startups across Europe through its Accelerate and other programmes. It went bankrupt because the EIT froze its payments in June 2024, following an OLAF investigation that found serious irregularities in EITM's grant selection and project implementation between 2020 and 2022. After a second OLAF report in late 2025 found additional irregularities, the EIT refused to confirm a €163 million allocation that EITM needed to secure a bridging bank loan. Without the loan, EITM had no option but to file for liquidation on March 25, 2026. Outstanding obligations at the time of filing reached €15 million owed to over 200 beneficiary companies.
Will the 200 startups affected by EIT Manufacturing's bankruptcy get their money?
As of early April 2026, the situation remains unresolved for the majority of affected companies. The EIT has stated it will cooperate with the appointed liquidator and has authorised some targeted payments to the most vulnerable beneficiaries, including certain startups. Whether the full €15 million will be paid out, and on what timeline, depends on the liquidation process and whether the EIT steps in as the grant authority to cover obligations. EITM CEO Caroline Viarouge publicly stated that the EIT, as grant authority, is the one that needs to step in and pay the companies. The EIT has not yet confirmed it will do so for all outstanding obligations.
What is an EIT KIC and how does EU grant money flow through it?
EIT stands for European Institute of Innovation and Technology, an EU agency created in 2008. KIC stands for Knowledge and Innovation Community. KICs are large partnerships of universities, research centres, and private companies organised around specific sectors: EIT Digital, EIT Health, EIT Manufacturing, EIT Climate-KIC, and others. Funding flows from the European Commission through Horizon Europe to the EIT, and from the EIT to each KIC, which then distributes grants to individual startups and SMEs. This means there are at minimum two institutional layers between the European Commission and the startup receiving the money. If any layer experiences governance problems or funding disputes, payments to startups can be frozen or stopped entirely, as happened with EITM in 2024.
Is EU funding safe for bootstrapping startups after the EIT Manufacturing collapse?
EU funding carries meaningful risk for bootstrapping startups, and the EITM collapse makes that risk concrete and visible. The risk is specifically higher with cascade grants distributed through intermediary bodies like KICs, because the startup has no direct legal relationship with the grant authority and no recourse if the intermediary fails. EU funding through direct programmes like the EIC Accelerator, where the European Innovation Council pays the startup directly, carries lower structural risk. National grant programmes also tend to have shorter institutional chains and faster payment cycles. The advice is not to avoid EU grants, but to understand the full funding chain before applying, never to start spending on a project before a signed grant agreement is in hand, and never to build your only runway on a grant that has not yet paid.
What should I do if I am currently waiting on an EIT Manufacturing grant payment?
First, document everything: your signed or unsigned agreements, all correspondence with EITM, all costs already incurred. Second, engage a lawyer familiar with EU funding law to advise on your options as a creditor in the liquidation process. Third, contact the EIT directly, not just EITM, to register your status as a beneficiary and request information on the targeted payments being authorised for the most vulnerable companies. Fourth, reach out to other startups in your EITM cohort and coordinate, because collective representation has more weight in a liquidation process than individual claims. Fifth, if you have not already, open parallel fundraising conversations immediately. Grant uncertainty cannot be your only option.
What are the signs a EU-funded intermediary body is in financial trouble?
Signs that a EU grant intermediary may be experiencing financial difficulty include: payment delays beyond the stated timeline without clear explanation; requests to pause project work without a documented reason; emergency meetings that produce only verbal reassurances and no written confirmation; silence or vague responses to direct questions about grant agreement signing timelines; and co-founders or peers in your cohort reporting similar delays. A proactive check you can run is searching the OLAF website and EU funding databases for any active investigations involving the intermediary. The EIT froze EITM's payments in June 2024; that information was available to anyone who looked for it, more than six months before EITM was issuing project green lights.
How does the EIT Manufacturing bankruptcy affect other EIT KICs?
The EIT has stated publicly that the EITM situation "does not affect the operations or financial stability of the other KICs." The eight remaining KICs, including EIT Digital, EIT Health, EIT Climate-KIC, EIT Food, EIT Urban Mobility, EIT Raw Materials, EIT InnoEnergy, and EIT Culture and Creativity, continue operating. Jan Palmowski of the Guild of European Research-Intensive Universities has noted that universities and other participants in EU-funded projects generally enjoy strong protection from the European Commission. The structural concern is not that other KICs are about to collapse, but that the oversight model that allowed this failure has not been reformed. The same incentive structure (protect institutional compliance over protecting the founder's cash position) operates across all KICs.
Can EIT Manufacturing set up a new organisation and apply for EU funding again?
As of April 2026, EITM CEO Caroline Viarouge has publicly stated that the organisation is exploring the possibility of setting up a new legal entity to continue supporting manufacturing innovation and would need EIT support for such a model. Under current EU rules, there is no explicit prohibition preventing a successor entity from applying for new public funding, even if it is founded by the same leadership team as an organisation under active OLAF investigation. Whether the EIT or the European Commission would approve funding for such an entity in practice is a political and governance question that has not yet been answered. What is clear is that no rule currently requires all €15 million in outstanding obligations to be settled before a new entity can receive new public funds.
What are the best EU grant alternatives for manufacturing or deep-tech bootstrapping startups right now?
For manufacturing and deep-tech startups, the primary alternatives are the EIC Accelerator (for TRL 6 to 8, direct application to the European Innovation Council), EIC Pathfinder (for earlier stage, TRL 1 to 4), EIC Transition (for TRL 4 to 6), and Eurostars (for cross-border R&D SME collaboration). All of these involve a more direct relationship with the EU grant authority than KIC cascade grants. National programmes are also worth prioritising: RVO instruments in the Netherlands, Malta Enterprise schemes in Malta, Germany's EXIST, France's France 2030 and Bpifrance, and Spain's NEOTEC. Stacking national co-funding with Eurostars is a common and effective approach for early-stage startups. The key principle is to minimise the number of institutional layers between you and the grant authority.
What structural reforms does EU grant funding need after the EIT Manufacturing collapse?
Several reforms would materially reduce the risk of a repeat. A direct legal relationship between the EC and startup beneficiaries, with intermediary bodies in a coordination role rather than a payment-gatekeeping role, would mean that an intermediary's insolvency does not sever the startup's grant rights. A mandatory insolvency clause in all cascade grant agreements should define explicitly what happens to promised payments if the intermediary becomes insolvent. A quarterly published payment status register for all KIC cohorts would allow founders to spot delays before committing further resources. An independent appeals mechanism for founders caught in institutional failures would separate their recourse from the same chain that produced the failure. And a rule that no successor entity created from the leadership of an organisation under active OLAF investigation may receive new public funding until all outstanding obligations are settled in full would close the obvious loophole the current situation has exposed.
What to Do Right Now
If you are a bootstrapping founder in Europe considering EU grants, start by understanding the precise institutional layer you are dealing with. A direct EIC application is a fundamentally different risk category from a cascade grant distributed through a KIC or consortium programme like the Epic-X acceleration I wrote about on Mean CEO.
Run the seven-step due diligence process above before you commit any of your own time or money.
Watch the EITM liquidation process develop over the next several months. The 200 companies waiting for €15 million will find out what "cooperate with the liquidator" actually means in practice. Pay attention to that.
And if you have experienced a situation where a EU-funded body failed to pay promised grants, write about it. Publish it. The more founders speak publicly, the harder it becomes for institutions to absorb the damage and reappear under a new letterhead.
If you want to build your startup alongside other founders who understand these realities firsthand, Fe/male Switch is where that community lives. And if you want the unfiltered take on what bootstrapping startups in Europe actually looks like, the Mean CEO blog is where I write it.
The money might not come. Build as if it will not.
Read More on the Topic
The EIT Manufacturing bankruptcy has sent shockwaves through the European startup ecosystem, and coverage of the fallout continues to grow.
For a deep dive into how over 200 companies ended up stranded without promised grants, read 200 Startups Are Waiting for Money That Will Never Come — a detailed breakdown of the full timeline, from the first OLAF audit to the March 2026 liquidation filing.
If you want to understand what the EIT Manufacturing liquidation means specifically for early-stage founders navigating EU funding, Fe/male Switch covers the structural risks that made this collapse possible — and why the CEO's plans to launch a new entity and return to Brussels only deepened the EIT Manufacturing scandal.
The nonprofit arm of Fe/male Switch goes further, examining how the liquidation is hitting female entrepreneurs disproportionately hard.
For those tracking the legal and financial dimensions of the EIT Manufacturing fraud, Grant-Grants and CadChain both offer founder-focused perspectives on the ongoing EIT Manufacturing investigation and what it signals for EU grant reliability.
Finally, the Fe/male Switch build blog looks at what bootstrapping founders should take away from the EIT Manufacturing controversy when evaluating whether to pursue public funding at all — and Medium readers can follow the fraud investigation explainer for a concise summary of what this case means for startup grants across Europe.
