This article summarizes the main infrastructure trends that have caught the attention of the IPEM Community team these past few months, and will help shape the IPEM Global 2026 event program.
Sovereignty is the defining investment theme of the decade
Infrastructure has always attracted capital for its defensive characteristics — inflation-linked cash flows, long-duration contracts, essential service demand. But the conversations we've been having with the infrastructure community over the past few months reveal the structural tailwinds for infrastructure now have a new urgency, especially in Europe.
The conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East have accelerated the debate around energy security and digital sovereignty in ways that are now translating directly into investable assets.
With public finances constrained, the need for private capital to plug Europe's infrastructure funding gap is now a policy reality.
The sovereignty agenda is generating unprecedented government-backed demand for private capital in energy, defence and digital infrastructure. Mastering the course means having deep sectoral expertise, the ability to navigate government relationships and regulatory environments, and the operational capability to actually build and manage long-duration assets at scale."
Managing Director, global infrastructure platform
The fundraising data reflects it. Global infrastructure fundraising reached a record $289 billion in 2025, with European fundraising in the first half of 2025 alone already exceeding the full-year 2024 total.
An infrastructure debt specialist frames it as a simultaneous convergence of structural demand drivers (like energy transition, electrification, digital build-out) arriving at the same moment that banks are retrenching and geopolitical uncertainty is rising.
A clean energy fund manager sees that these macro forces are now a daily part of what the investment team navigates every day.
For many international allocators, Europe is also becoming the preferred destination. We've heard how allocators have reassessed US exposure as a result of trade tensions, higher valuations and broader geopolitical uncertainty. This is sending capital toward markets that offer stronger policy support and more attractive entry points.
"Europe faces structural, highly visible long-term capital requirements driven by energy transition, security of supply and digitalisation. These are not cyclical themes — they are the defining investment backdrop of the next decade."
Partner, European energy transition fund
A partner leading a European sovereignty growth fund describes the past 18 months as a genuine pivot point: "the convergence of energy insecurity and industrial competitiveness in Europe is a generational investment opportunity."
Deep expertise required
Repeatedly, infrastructure managers have told us that the scale of the opportunity is not the hard part, it's being able to execute against it. Many have said that the capabilities required to win in this environment are materially more demanding than they were five years ago.
Infrastructure investing has always required patience. What has changed is the complexity. Partner, large energy infrastructure fund
A managing director at an infrastructure platform believes that operational capability — the ability to actually build and manage assets at scale — is now the primary differentiator over being able to source and structure deals.
More flows into the asset class also means capital alone is no longer sufficient. A partner at a large energy infrastructure fund says that navigating government relationships and regulatory environments has become a core investment competency. These are relationships that take years to build and cannot be replicated quickly.
We are navigating macro forces — interest rates, government policy, energy prices — live, every day. The managers who will win are those who have built the operational and relational infrastructure to move with those dynamics, not just analyse them from the outside."
Energy transition fund manager, European infrastructure platform
Meanwhile, mid-market infrastructure is also in demand. One debt specialist identifies origination capability, structuring expertise and the experience to execute bilateral transactions in less competed segments are critical skills.
This dynamic has important implications for LP manager selection. In a market where local knowledge and delivery discipline matter as much as capital, the gap between managers with operational depth and those riding sector momentum is likely to widen.
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The infrastructure services opportunity
One of the more differentiated themes emerging from our conversations is the growing interest in infrastructure-adjacent services businesses.
These are companies that provide the engineering, maintenance, digital support and essential services that underpin physical infrastructure assets without the same development risk or regulatory complexity.
Transportation, energy, digital and social infrastructure all sit at the intersection of essential services and structural megatrends. The businesses that service and maintain those assets — rather than develop them — offer a compelling blend of defensiveness and operational upside that is only now getting serious institutional attention."
Infrastructure credit specialist, European mid-market platform
These businesses combine the stability of long-term contracts and essential-service demand with a more active operational value-creation playbook. We hear from LPs that blend of defensiveness and growth potential is increasingly attractive to allocators looking for resilient returns without giving up upside.
A managing director at a major alternatives platform points to data centres and digital assets as the clearest current expression of this convergence — offering infrastructure-like characteristics, long-dated contracted cashflows and investment-grade counterparties.
A senior research analyst flags the "why now" case as particularly compelling: AI and digital infrastructure demand, energy transition and the structural shift away from bank financing are all arriving simultaneously, creating a unique market environment.