
The deal would cement private‑capital dominance in the power‑generation sector and accelerate investment in renewable assets needed for AI‑driven data centre growth, reshaping the energy‑infrastructure landscape.
The acquisition target, AES Corp, has built a diversified generation platform that spans wind and solar farms, natural‑gas and coal plants, and regulated utility operations in Indiana and Ohio. Over the past decade the company has pivoted toward supplying clean electricity to the world’s biggest cloud providers, securing long‑term contracts with Google, Microsoft and Amazon. This client base ties AES’s revenue growth directly to the exponential rise in data‑centre capacity, a sector that is expected to consume an increasing share of global electricity as artificial‑intelligence workloads expand.
Global Infrastructure Partners, the private‑equity arm of BlackRock, manages roughly $170 billion in assets and has a track record of large‑scale infrastructure deals, including the $40 billion purchase of Aligned Data Centers. EQT’s newly raised €21.5 billion infrastructure fund signals strong investor appetite for energy‑transition projects, with the firm already active in digital, logistics and renewable‑energy assets. By teaming up on the AES bid, the two firms combine deep capital resources and sector expertise, positioning themselves to capture the long‑term cash flows generated by power assets that are critical to the digital economy.
If the transaction closes at the projected $12.4 billion valuation, it would rank among the biggest infrastructure M&A of the year and could set a pricing benchmark for future power‑generation deals. The deal also highlights a broader shift: private capital is increasingly willing to finance assets traditionally dominated by utilities, betting on decarbonisation and the surge in AI‑driven electricity demand. Regulators may scrutinise the concentration of ownership, but the infusion of private‑sector efficiency could accelerate upgrades to the grid, supporting the rapid expansion of renewable‑powered data centres across North America.
Comments
Want to join the conversation?
Loading comments...