FTI Consulting Belgium

FTI Consulting Belgium

FTI Consulting Belgium operates as a leading public affairs and corporate communications consultancy in Brussels, part of the global FTI Consulting network focused on corporate finance, forensic litigation, economic consulting, strategic communications, and technology services. Originally launched as Blueprint Partners 15 years prior to its integration into FTI in March 2008, the firm advises clients across sectors like financial services, energy, environment, health, life sciences, agro-chemicals, food, beverage, technology, telecommunications, competition, trade, consumer goods, and cyber security.

It advances client interests through constructive engagement with EU institutions on key legislative proposals, including the Digital Services Act, Artificial Intelligence Act, Data Act, corporate sustainability reporting directives, and anti-money laundering regulations. The Brussels office, located at Avenue des Arts 56, emphasizes integrated public affairs, media relations, stakeholder outreach, and policy intelligence, positioning it as a pan-European communications hub since 2003.

FTI Consulting Belgium adheres to codes like EPACA and registers voluntarily under the EU Transparency Initiative, serving private companies, public sector entities, associations, and non-profits amid complex EU policy landscapes such as climate action, digital economy, trade, and sustainability. Its activities include attending conferences, EP committee meetings, position papers, webinars, op-eds, social media campaigns, and partnerships like with EurActiv, while tracking proposals on data governance, cybersecurity, and green transition consumer protections.

With a broad interest spectrum covering agriculture to youth policy at European, national, sub-national, and global levels, the firm leverages its 89 members contributing 54.5 FTE to lobbying efforts, as last updated June 17, 2024. Notable impacts include shaping aviation sustainability policies and building alliances in crowded fields like post-Brexit travel and flight-shaming responses.

FTI Consulting Belgium is categorized as a professional consultancy (SA entity form) with EP accreditation number 56. It represents client interests across 35 policy areas including banking, climate action, digital society, energy, trade, and public health. Communication involves events, media relations, social campaigns, and institutional visits.

No related lobbyists found.

  • Agriculture and rural development

  • Banking and financial services

  • Borders and security

  • Budget

  • Business and industry

  • Climate action

  • Communication

  • Competition

  • Consumers

  • Culture and media

  • Customs

  • Digital economy and society

  • Economy, finance and the euro

  • Education and training

  • Employment and social affairs

  • Energy

  • Enlargement

  • Environment

  • External relations

  • Food safety

  • Foreign affairs and security policy

  • Humanitarian aid and civil protection

  • Institutional affairs

  • International co-operation and development

  • Justice and fundamental rights

  • Maritime affairs and fisheries

  • Public health

  • Regional policy

  • Research and innovation

  • Single market

  • Sport

  • Taxation

  • Trade

  • Trans-European Networks

  • Transport

  • Youth

  • AmCham EU

  • AmCham Belgium

  • British Chamber of Commerce

  • Spanish Chamber of Commerce

  • EPACA

  • SEAP

  • Friends of Europe

  • CIPR (Chartered Institute of Public Relations)

  • Institute of Directors

  • WFES (Women’s Forum for Economy and Society)

  • Institute of Journalists

  • EU40

Detailed yearly breakdowns are not specified in public profiles; total lobbying costs declared exceed €1,000,000 (exact current year and historical figures require register access). Contributions based on 54.5 FTE from 89 members indicate sustained investment since 2010.

FTI engages European Commission, European Parliament committees, and related institutions on legislative files like data privacy, AI, sustainability reporting, and AML. Levels include European, national, sub-national, and global advocacy.

Specific meeting logs since 2010 to June 2025 are not detailed in available public summaries; engagements occur via visits to EU institutions, EP committees, conferences, and outreach on tracked proposals. Register declarations note constructive dialogues but no exhaustive list.