Private Capital Rushes In as Project Finance Hits a Global Turning Point

WILMINGTON, DE — Global project finance is entering a period of rapid expansion and rising complexity as demand for energy capacity, digital infrastructure, and large-scale public works reshapes where capital is flowing and how deals are being financed.
Infrastructure stands out as the dominant growth engine, with 70 percent of respondents identifying it as the strongest area for future investment. Renewables followed at 48 percent, while technology, media, and telecommunications drew interest from 43 percent. Within renewables, wind ranked highest, cited by half of respondents, while renewable natural gas and green hydrogen each drew support from 41 percent, signaling sustained momentum behind energy transition technologies.
Rising power consumption is a central driver, particularly from data centers supporting artificial intelligence and accelerated digitalization. Energy, TMT, transportation, social infrastructure, and critical minerals are increasingly viewed as the backbone of the next wave of project finance.
The survey shows that shift already underway. More than half of respondents now view private equity as a primary source of equity funding, alongside infrastructure funds and development finance institutions. Private credit is also gaining ground, cited by 38 percent of respondents as an increasingly important source of capital. On the debt side, private debt, infrastructure platforms, and syndicated loans are all playing significant roles.
With deal volume and complexity rising, execution risks are becoming more pronounced. Know-your-customer requirements were cited by 80 percent of respondents as the top challenge, followed by tight financing timelines and regulatory compliance. In response, project sponsors and lenders are placing greater emphasis on operational support, with real-time transparency tools and comprehensive administrative services viewed as critical to managing cross-border, multi-party transactions.
Bryan Gartenberg, managing director and global sales head of project finance and loan agency at CSC, said demand for energy, infrastructure, and digital capacity is outpacing traditional financing channels. He said private capital is increasingly filling the gap, but successful execution now depends on partners with the operational discipline and expertise to manage complexity at scale.






