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E.ON increases investments to $57 Billion to expand and modernise the energy grid

E.ON, Europe’s largest energy network operator, announced on Wednesday that it will increase its investments to 48 billion euro ($57 billion) in the next five-year period. The investment is part of a drive to expand grids, and to prepare them for the construction of data centres throughout the continent.

Grid operators are rushing to invest more in their assets due to the increasing demand for power infrastructure. This includes?renewables and storage, as well as an anticipated surge in electricity consumption to power artificial-intelligence projects.

"The energy system is growing larger, decentralized and more complex. We are working to ensure that it is secure, affordable and resilient for our customers," said CEO Leonhard Birnbaum.

The new investment program, which runs from?2026 until 2030, is a comparison to a?43-billion euro programme that ran between 2024 and 2028. It highlights E.ON’s efforts to inject more money into its regulated networks in order to boost both their asset base and profit.

Utility stocks are among the winners of an AI boom. It is also expected that a surge of data centres, which will be needed to power this technology, will drive demand for grids and other infrastructure.

E.ON's shares have risen by more than 16 percent in the past year, beating out both the European stock market and the sector index.

According to a LSEG poll, the company's average analyst forecast for 2025 was 0.57 euros.

The shares of the group are still -0.6% lower than they were in pre-market trading due to a "conservative view" from a local trader, who said that it was a "conservative forecast", which predicts a core profit between 9.4 and 9.6 billion euros in 2026. This is down from last year's 9.8 billion euros.

In a survey conducted by the company, analysts expect a core profit of 9 billion euros in 2026. (1 dollar = 0.8477 euro) (Reporting and editing by Linda Pasquini, Shri Navaratnam and Tom Kaeckenhoff)

(source: Reuters)