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ESG best practice mitigates risk and enhances returns, says Whitehelm Capital chief executive Graham Matthews. What’s more, investors are becoming increasingly sophisticated at spotting the real thing.
Infrastructure investors’ attitudes to risk have evolved significantly but there is still more work to be done, says FIRSTavenue’s head of US project management Chris Tehranian.
A growing number of investors are looking to complete co-investments alongside their infrastructure managers, says Jessica Kennedy, director of investor relations at Northleaf Capital Partners.
With the possibility of a downturn on the horizon, execution-driven value creation strategies are an investor’s best course, say Todd Bright and Simon Merriweather of Partners Group.
In the first of two roundtables this month, six infrastructure experts discuss the opportunities and challenges that lie ahead in the US, Canada and Mexico.
Deutsche Bank’s Adam Raffa, Dean Kennedy, Thalia Delahayes and Gerd Meyer share their thoughts on supporting infrastructure investment over the past 10 years and the decade to come
In the second of our roundtables this month, industry experts discuss how managers are finding plenty of opportunities in Europe’s energy transition and digitisation, despite political upheaval, meagre growth and the lack of a government-fuelled pipeline
Rapid urbanisation, the growth in energy exporting and changing consumer behaviour are all creating huge demand for infrastructure investment in the US, says MIRA’s head of Americas David Fass.
Ardian has brought a 14-year track record of European investment to US shores and is embracing the country’s essential infrastructure story, say the firm’s senior managing directors Mark Voccola and Stefano Mion.
Solar, 5G roll-out and data centres will dominate North American infrastructure in the year ahead, says Wilmington Trust’s head of project finance Will Marder.