Approximately 7,400 families and companies affected by recent severe weather have joined government-decreed bank moratoriums. Deputy Governor of the Bank of Portugal (Banco de Portugal or BdP) Clara Raposo confirmed that the total credit amount covered by these measures reached 930 million euros by the end of March.
Over 7,000 clients join bank loan moratoriums

Context & Explainers
Banco de Portugal is Portugal's central bank, founded in 1846. It is a member of the European System of Central Banks (ESCB) and the Eurosystem, working alongside the European Central Bank (ECB) to implement monetary policy in the euro area.
Its main functions include supervising banks and financial institutions, ensuring financial stability, managing Portugal's gold and foreign currency reserves, and producing economic research and statistics. It also operates the payment systems infrastructure and issues banknotes.
Banco de Portugal is led by a Governor — currently Mário Centeno (since 2020) — who also sits on the ECB's Governing Council. For residents, the central bank matters because it regulates the banks they use, sets macroprudential rules (such as mortgage lending limits), and provides a complaints mechanism for banking disputes.





