Bpifrance was established in 2012 as part of a broader effort by the
French government to consolidate public financial support for businesses. It brought together three major state-backed bodies: OSEO, which focused on loans and guarantees for small and medium-sized enterprises; the
Fonds Stratégique d’Investissement (FSI), created in 2008 to support long-term strategic equity holdings; and CDC Entreprises, the venture capital subsidiary of
the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations. The new institution became operational in 2013, offering a unified structure for loans, guarantees, equity investments, and export financing. In 2015, Bpifrance expanded its mandate to include innovation funding and support for international business development. In 2017, it launched “Bpifrance Export” to streamline export insurance and trade promotion services, previously managed by
Coface. During the
COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Bpifrance played a central role in the French government's economic response by providing state-guaranteed loans to businesses affected by the crisis. In the following years, the institution increased its involvement in strategic sectors such as renewable energy, biotechnology, and industrial decarbonization. In 2024, Bpifrance provided export credit support for a £5 billion loan arranged by a consortium of 13 commercial banks to finance the construction of the Sizewell C nuclear power station in the
United Kingdom. In early 2026, Bpifrance reached a significant financial milestone by becoming the first French bank to issue an inaugural "European Green Bond" (EuGB), raising €1 billion with a maturity date of 2036 to fund ecological transition projects. This was followed in April 2026 by a targeted investment in the digital health sector, where the bank’s Digital Prevention Fund co-led a €4 million Series A funding round for Axomove, a
Lille-based
health-tech startup specializing in
musculoskeletal rehabilitation. ==Subsidiaries and minority interests==