In the new Working Progamme 2025 (announcement, programme), the European Banking Authority (EBA) has high expectations of the enhanced data infrastructure and the data portal it is creating.
For instance on page 11 of the programme, that speaks of ‘new data sets’ (marking by me):
33. Contributing to the EU’s Supervisory Data Strategy, the implementation of the EBA’s own Data Strategy will improve the way regulatory data is acquired, compiled, used, and disseminated to relevant stakeholders, and will strengthen the authority’s analytical capabilities. The EBA will continue to leverage on its EUCLID platform to enable data flows between diverse endpoints and provide access to high-quality, curated data and insights to internal and external stakeholders by employing more advanced technical capabilities, with the objective to foster the ingestion and dissemination of critical data assets, insights and analytics policies as well as to go-live with the Pillar 3 data hub requested by the level 1 legislation. The EBA dissemination platform will be further expanded to new data sets. The EBA reporting framework and EUCLID scope will cover also new scope of entities with DORA and MiCAR reporting. In addition, the EBA will continue developing the relevant ESG related data and metrics within the disclosures and reporting.
34. In 2025 the EBA will finalise implementation and transition to the improved data point model and methodology (the DPM standard 2.0) to ensure the EBA data dictionary is fit for future challenges of reporting and digital processing. (…)
and on page 40:
As part of its data strategy, the EBA will capitalise on EUCLID, the European Centralised Infrastructure of Data, which became operational in 2020 and provides a reliable, secure and efficient platform to collect and process micro and aggregated data for all financial institutions. EUCLID includes data on smaller institutions and specialised business models, which will allow more proportionality in the EBA’s work, resulting in more comprehensive analyses and better impact assessments. The EBA aims to reduce the burden for banks and competent authorities by maximising already reported supervisory data when supporting ad hoc data collections.
The upgraded data infrastructure and broader data set will support the implementation of the EBA’s data strategy, allowing to provide access, via a dissemination portal, to high-quality data and insights to internal and external stakeholders, by employing more advanced technical capabilities.

