Judging by the pre-release images, the answer is "yes and no."
As Rinzwind has pointed out, there is a 32-bit build of the EFI version of GRUB 2 provided with Ubuntu 14.04; however, the .iso images I've seen do not include the necessary files to boot the Ubuntu installer on a 32-bit EFI-only computer (like a Minnowboard or some tablets). Thus, to install Ubuntu in EFI mode on such a computer, you'll need to either build your own installation medium with a working boot loader or install Ubuntu in BIOS mode (if your computer supports that) and then install an EFI boot loader afterwards.
Binary package “grub-efi-ia32-bin” in ubuntu trusty
GRand Unified Bootloader, version 2 (EFI-IA32 binaries)
GRUB is a portable, powerful bootloader. This version of GRUB is
based on a cleaner design than its predecessors, and provides the
following new features: .
Scripting in grub.cfg using BASH-like syntax.
Support for modern partition maps such as GPT.
Modular generation of grub.cfg via update-grub. Packages providing GRUB
add-ons can plug in their own script rules and trigger updates by invoking
update-grub. .
This package contains a version of GRUB that has been built for use with EFI-IA32 architecture, such as the one
provided by Intel Macs (that is, unless a BIOS interface has been
activated). It will not automatically install GRUB as the active boot
loader, nor will it automatically update grub.cfg on upgrade, so most
people should install grub-efi-ia32 instead.
GRand Unified Bootloader, version 2 (EFI-IA32 version)
GRUB is a portable, powerful bootloader. This version of GRUB is based on a
cleaner design than its predecessors, and provides the following new features:
- Scripting in grub.cfg using BASH-like syntax.
- Support for modern partition maps such as GPT.
- Modular generation of grub.cfg via update-grub. Packages providing GRUB
add-ons can plug in their own script rules and trigger updates by invoking
update-grub.
This package contains a version of GRUB that has been built for use with
EFI-IA32 architecture, such as the one provided by Intel Macs (that is, unless
a BIOS interface has been activated).
Judging by the pre-release images, the answer is "yes and no."
As Rinzwind has pointed out, there is a 32-bit build of the EFI version of GRUB 2 provided with Ubuntu 14.04; however, the
.iso
images I've seen do not include the necessary files to boot the Ubuntu installer on a 32-bit EFI-only computer (like a Minnowboard or some tablets). Thus, to install Ubuntu in EFI mode on such a computer, you'll need to either build your own installation medium with a working boot loader or install Ubuntu in BIOS mode (if your computer supports that) and then install an EFI boot loader afterwards.See package details for grub-efi-ia32-bin on Launchpad:
and package details for: grub-efi-ia32:
So that would be: yes.
Yes and No: