Alexandra Galazzogianni examines how Europe’s energy transition reflects the growing intersection of digital and energy infrastructure.
Artificial intelligence and data-driven services will increase electricity demand, while power systems deploy digital tools to integrate renewable energy and manage fluctuations. The resulting energy interdependence raises policy questions about resilience, competitiveness, and strategic autonomy.
Digital and energy nexus: system interdependence
The convergence of digital and energy infrastructure will transform Europe’s energy transition. Artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and data-intensive services are driving increases in power consumption, along with data center capacity expansion. Power systems rely heavily on digital tools to integrate renewable energy, predict demand, and manage fluctuations. This new digital-energy nexus poses a trade-off between increased efficiency and increased pressure on energy infrastructure. This is because while digitalization reduces certain operational constraints, it can also shift burdens elsewhere in the energy system, particularly on network capacity, flexibility and investment needs.
Governance gaps in sectoral policy frameworks
These interdependencies reveal the limits of governance regimes. Energy and digital policy remain largely structured along separate institutional lines, despite widespread recognition of the need for greater collaboration. Existing frameworks face the challenge of systematically capturing cross-sectoral feedback effects. In practice, energy plans are increasingly incorporating assumptions about the growth of digital demand, while digital investment decisions depend on expectations about power availability, grid capacity, and connection schedules.
Strategic autonomy and systemic dependencies
These dynamics have implications for Europe’s strategic autonomy. Sovereignty is increasingly defined by the ability to manage interdependencies across energy, digital and industrial systems, rather than control within independent sectors. Shared dependencies such as critical raw materials, supply chains, and specialized skills link domestic resilience with external exposure. Efforts to strengthen capabilities in one domain can induce vulnerabilities in another, and sovereignty becomes an evolving ability to govern interconnected systems and adapt under conditions of constraint and uncertainty.
Infrastructure interactions and new constraints
As energy and digital infrastructure co-evolve, their interactions shape long-term system outcomes. Decisions about the location, size, and timing of data center deployments can impact future electricity demand and grid capacity, create path dependencies, and constrain subsequent policy options. Existing adjustment mechanisms recognize these links but remain limited in addressing long-term structural effects. This highlights the importance of more integrated infrastructure planning, including grid flexibility, cross-border interconnection and alignment with digital growth trajectories.
Policy implications
The interdependence between digital and energy systems presents both efficiency opportunities and coordination challenges across infrastructure, regulation, and investment. If not addressed, such inconsistencies can lead to inefficiencies in future system development. Strengthening the link between energy and digital strategies, improving early-stage coordination, and developing governance models that reflect system-wide interactions can help address these challenges. Europe’s long-term competitiveness and resilience will depend on both infrastructure development and a governance framework that guides convergence.
This opinion editorial was produced in collaboration with European Sustainable Energy Week (EUSEW), the largest annual event dedicated to renewable energy and efficient energy use in Europe. #EUSW2026 is in its 20th year, once again bringing together a community of people interested in building a safe and clean energy future for generations to come.
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