Infrastructure

Bridging Europe’s €2.5tn Infrastructure Gap

In 2010, China completed the Danyang–Kunshan Grand Bridge, an engineering marvel stretching 102 miles across Jiangsu Province at a cost of USD8.5 billion. It remains the world’s longest bridge.

Europe now faces a different challenge: constructing a metaphorical financial bridge.

To meet its climate and digital transformation goals by 2030, the continent requires around EUR6 trillion in infrastructure investment. Public funding will only cover part of this, leaving an estimated EUR2.5 trillion gap to be filled by private capital, according to DWS analysts.

Europe was the dominant global infrastructure market over the past decade, attracting 34% of transaction volume. Today, it competes more evenly with North America, with each region accounting for roughly one third of global deal flow. Yet capital allocation tells a different story. AXA Investment Managers observes that despite a similar market size, North America attracts nearly two-thirds more capital. This asymmetry means “we expect Europe to deliver attractive risk-adjusted returns over the long-run,” they note.

Digital Infrastructure in Focus

For investors, this is a rare moment to finance Europe’s digital transition.

Despite macroeconomic uncertainty, digital infrastructure remained resilient in 2024, with strong momentum continuing into 2025. Data centers led the surge in transaction volumes, with sovereign wealth and pension funds backing major M&A deals across the region.

Europe offers a diverse set of opportunities—ranging from renewable energy and transport electrification to fibre networks, mobile towers, and hyperscale data centers. These assets underpin essential services from AI and cloud computing to remote work and e-commerce.

According to McKinsey, meeting future AI demand will require USD5.2 trillion in global data center investment by 2030. Hyperscalers like Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft are responding, with multibillion-dollar infrastructure expansions already underway.

CoreWeave is investing USD6 billion in a new facility in Pennsylvania. Meanwhile, OpenAI has signed a USD30 billion deal with Oracle to generate 4.5 gigawatts of power capacity;; three times its annual revenue.

The scale of this single transaction highlights AI’s enormous energy demands, reinforcing the link between digital infrastructure and the broader energy transition.

Europe is stepping up.

French President Emmanuel Macron recently announced a EUR30–50 billion agreement with the UAE to build Europe’s largest AI data center, expected to deliver up to 1 gigawatt of capacity. In the UK, Vantage Data Centres is investing over GBP12 billion, including a flagship campus on the site of the former Ford factory in Wales.

Goldman Sachs Research estimates that data center development alone could increase Europe’s overall power consumption by one third.

Structured Finance Gains Momentum

These capital-intensive projects are increasingly funded through structured finance, particularly securitisation.

James Taylor, Head of Event Marketing, EMEA at S&P Global Ratings, notes that multiple layers of financing are likely across both public and private markets “due to the expansive amount of capital available and significant competition at play in funding digital infrastructure.”

He adds: “Within structured finance there is a well established Data Center and Fiber ABS market in the US and we’re seeing the signs of burgeoning activity in Europe now. Given the rising demand from the hyperscalers and AI model developers for capacity, in Europe, data center securitisations are attracting the most interest. In fact, we’ve already rated two public transactions and more are expected.”

The first was for Vantage Data Centers in Newport, South Wales. The A-2 rated note securitises lease payments and energy capacity at two wholesale data centers. A second transaction covers Vantage’s German assets, with notes rated A- and BBB-, backed by four facilities across Berlin and Frankfurt.

Filling the Strategic Gap

New platforms are emerging to target Europe’s underserved mid-market.

Julien Touati, CEO of Reed-Societe Generale Group, explains that market dynamics show a growing need for infrastructure capital that is agile, technically informed, and impact-driven—able to scale essential solutions while managing complexity.

“That’s exactly the space we occupy,” he says. “We are positioning Reed as the missing link in Europe’s infrastructure financing ecosystem, filling the strategic gap between large-scale infrastructure funds focused on de-risked core assets, and niche investment managers investing at early, pre-infrastructure stage.”

Reed’s flagship infrastructure fund, SHIFT, deploys capital over a typical seven-year investment horizon, combining yield generation with scalable growth. The fund targets clean energy, digital infrastructure, water resilience, and circular waste solutions—backing platforms such as Evergreen (EV charging for trucks), Voltekko (modular data centers), Olenergies (battery storage), and IAGE (water-quality services).

“We see strong momentum from the convergence of infrastructure and enabling technologies, driven by digitalisation and industrial shifts,” adds Touati. “Looking ahead to the 2040s, infrastructure must evolve into adaptive, data-driven systems, resilient to shocks and responsive to societal needs. Reed SHIFT anticipates this transition by integrating technology, operational expertise, and impact measurement from day one.”

Strategic Tailwinds for Investors

The rise of AI, 5G, and IoT is reshaping infrastructure demand, not just for hyperscale data centers, but also for edge computing and AI-optimised platforms. These shifts are generating opportunities across platform creation, development, M&A, and recapitalisation.

One trend to watch is the rise of carve-out, YieldCo-style structures, which are used to finance development while generating stable cash flows. These vehicles typically house operating assets in ring-fenced entities, providing investors with yield-backed exposure to data center and renewable energy projects.

Governments are also aligning behind the sector.

The EU and UK now classify digital infrastructure as “Critical National Infrastructure,” placing it alongside energy and healthcare in terms of strategic priority. Subsidies, regulatory fast-tracking, and other incentives are accelerating deployment.

In an investment environment defined by volatility and the search for uncorrelated returns, infrastructure offers defensive value, long-duration exposure, and increasing policy tailwinds.

With a EUR2.5 trillion funding gap to close, digital and energy infrastructure in Europe represent not just a capital need but a multi-decade opportunity.

James Williams
James is an experienced financial journalist and editor with over 20 years experience covering private markets and alternatives. He is host of the Clockwork CIO podcast.