
Author: Alexandra Garatzogianni, Digital Ambassador of the European Sustainable Energy Week (EUSEW), Researcher and Strategic Leader, Leibniz Information Centre for Science and Technology (TIB) & Leibniz University Hannover
Europe’s energy transition reflects the growing intersection of digital and energy infrastructures. Artificial intelligence and data-driven services generate higher electricity demand, while power systems deploy digital tools to integrate renewables and manage variability. The resulting interdependencies raise policy questions on resilience, competitiveness, and strategic autonomy.
The Digital–Energy Nexus: Systemic Interdependencies
The convergence of digital and energy infrastructures transforms Europe’s energy transition. Artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and data-intensive services, alongside expanding data centre capacity, drive higher electricity consumption. Electricity systems rely substantially on digital tools to integrate renewables, forecast demand, and manage variability. This emerging digital-energy nexus introduces trade-offs between efficiency gains and rising pressure on energy infrastructure, as digitalisation may alleviate certain operational constraints while shifting strains elsewhere in the energy system, particularly to network capacity, flexibility, and investment needs.
Governance Gaps in a Sectoral Policy Framework
These interdependencies expose limitations in governance arrangements. Energy and digital policies remain largely structured along separate institutional tracks, despite broad recognition of the need for enhanced coordination. Existing frameworks face challenges in capturing cross-sector feedback effects in a systematic manner. In practice, energy planning progressively incorporates assumptions about digital demand growth, while digital investment decisions depend on expectations regarding electricity availability, grid capacity, and connection timelines.
Strategic Autonomy and Systemic Dependencies

These dynamics have implications for Europe’s strategic autonomy. Sovereignty is increasingly defined by the capacity to manage interdependencies across energy, digital, and industrial systems, rather than control within standalone sectors. Shared dependencies, including critical raw materials, supply chains, and specialised skills, link domestic resilience with external exposure. Efforts to strengthen capability in one domain may induce vulnerabilities in another, rendering sovereignty an evolving capacity to govern interconnected systems and adapt under conditions of constraint and uncertainty.
Infrastructure Interaction and Emerging Constraints
As energy and digital infrastructures co-evolve, their interplay shapes long-term system outcomes. Decisions on the location, scale, and timing of data centre deployment influence future electricity demand and grid capacity, creating path dependencies that may constrain later policy options. While existing coordination mechanisms acknowledge these linkages, they remain limited in addressing longer-term structural effects. This underscores the importance of more integrated infrastructure planning, including grid flexibility, cross-border interconnections, and alignment with digital growth trajectories.
Policy Implications
Interdependencies between digital and energy systems entail both efficiency opportunities and coordination challenges across infrastructure, regulation, and investment. If not addressed, such misalignments may embed inefficiencies in future system development. Strengthening alignment 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 both on infrastructure development and on the governance frameworks guiding convergence.
This opinion editorial is produced in co-operation with the European Sustainable Energy Week (EUSEW) – the biggest annual event dedicated to renewables and efficient energy use in Europe. #EUSEW2026 marks the 20th edition and will once again bring together the community of people who care about building a secure and clean energy future for the next generations.
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Neither the European Commission nor any person acting on behalf of the Commission is responsible for the use that might be made of the information in the article. The opinions expressed are those of the author(s) only and should not be considered as representative of the European Commission’s official position.







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