
According to the National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA), U.S. energy demand is projected to grow 50% by 2050. Electrical manufacturers have invested more than $10 billion since 2021 in new technologies to expand grid and manufacturing capacity, also reducing reliance on materials from China by 32% since 2018.
Power access, sustainable infrastructure, and land acquisition have become critical factors shaping where and how data center facilities are built. As we previously reported in Data Center Frontier, investors realized this years ago, viewing these facilities both as technology assets and a unique convergence of real estate, utility infrastructure, and mission-critical systems that can also generate revenue.
One of those investors is global asset manager Blackstone, which through its Energy Transition Partners private equity arm, recently acquired Shermco Industries for $1.6 billion. Announced August 21, the deal is part of Blackstone’s strategy to invest in companies that support the growing demand for electrification and a more reliable power grid. The goal is to strengthen data center infrastructure reliability and expand critical electrical services.
Founded in 1974, Texas-based Shermco is one of the largest electrical testing organizations accredited by the InterNational Electrical Testing Association (NETA). The company operates in a niche yet important space: providing lifecycle electrical services, including maintenance, testing, commissioning, repair, and design, in support of data centers, utilities, and industrial clients. It has more than 40 service centers in the U.S. and Canada.
In addition to helping Blackstone support its electrification and power grid reliability goals, the Shermco purchase is also part of Blackstone’s strategy to increase scale and resources—revenue increases without a substantial increase in resources—thus expanding its footprint and capabilities within the essential energy services sector.
As data centers expand globally, become more energy intensive, and are pressured to incorporate renewables and modernize grids, Blackstone’s leaders plan to leverage Shermco’s national footprint and technical depth to help meet these needs, especially as new capacity is added to the grid and legacy infrastructure is modernized.
In addition, Shermco’s recurring, mission-critical service model offers resilient cash flows even during economic downturns, according to AInvest. Blackstone has both capital and operational experience to drive Shermco’s expansion while extracting value across infrastructure and energy transition portfolios.
Meanwhile, Shermco leaders anticipate this partnership to fuel its growth trajectory so it can grow its operational footprint and service offerings. It likely will benefit from strong growth driven by the expansion of data centers, renewable energy facilities, and industrial electrification.
Blackstone’s Data Center Portfolio
Blackstone is investing, acquiring companies, and forming joint ventures spanning real estate, infrastructure, and credit, to diversify and grow its data center portfolio. The Shermco acquisition adds to a long list of recent investments Blackstone has made as part of its portfolio diversification.
For example, in August, leaders announced an agreement to acquire data analytics energy intelligence platform Enverus, which provides comprehensive data analytics platform for capital allocation and asset optimization. Blackstone’s Senior Managing Directors Eli Nagler and Bilal Khan said Enverus’ advanced analytics and technology will help customers navigate the AI-driven electricity demand growth and the broader energy transition.
Other recent investments include the following:
• Joint venture with PPL Corp., announced in July, to build, own, and operate new gas-fired, combined-cycle generation stations to power data centers in Pennsylvania.
• Investment of more than $25 billion in Pennsylvania’s digital and energy infrastructure, plus accelerate an additional $60 billion investment, also announced in July.
• Significant growth investment in July into IT services provider NetBrain to expand network automation and AI solutions to global enterprises, at a $750 million valuation. NetBrain is a top IT services provider in Japan.
• Acquisition of Potomac Energy Center in January, a power infrastructure in Virginia supporting data centers and AI.
• The 2024 acquisition of SEVES Group, parent company of Sediver Group, a provider of specialized electrical glass insulator solutions for the high-voltage transmission grid. Sediver has more than 600 million insulators in service worldwide and plays a key role in electrical grid modernization.
• Acquisition of Trystar in 2024, which designs and manufactures critical electrical power solutions for data center, industrial, commercial, healthcare, and utility markets.
• A 2024 investment into a $600 million senior secured credit facility with technology infrastructure company Aligned Data Centers, financing the development of Aligned’s newest and largest data center in Utah.
• Acquisition of Asia-Pacific data center giant AirTrunk in 2024, in a deal valued at $24 billion.
• Acquisition of Power Grid Components, Inc. in December 2023 for $600 million. PCG design and manufactures components for protection, monitoring, and safety applications in electrical substations, essential for the electrical grid. Products include high voltage disconnect switchgear, porcelain and glass insulators, and instrument transformers for revenue metering and protective relaying to electric utilities.
• Acquisition of QTS Realty Trust for $10 billion in August 2021, marking a major step into the data center market, with hopes to build QTS into the fastest-growing data center company in the world.
Other Investment Firms in the Game
As AI-driven cloud computing, grid modernization, and the electrification of manufacturing continues to escalate, firms are investing in data centers, power generation, and renewable energy transition to profit from the huge and growing energy market. Leaders at these firms see long-term infrastructure investment opportunities.
And Blackstone isn’t the only investment firm carving out a piece of the data center and energy markets. Companies like Apollo Global Management, DigitalBridge Group, KKR & Co. Inc., CBRE Group, Cushman & Wakefield, Jones Lang LaSalle Inc. (JJL), Newmark, and others are investing in and acquiring organizations that support the data center and energy demand growth, including:
• Data centers.
• Data center builders and operators.
• IT service providers.
• Power companies.
• Power generation stations.
• Power product suppliers.
• Renewable energy and datacenter financing and banking firms.
• Electrification, power and digital infrastructures providers.
Because data centers are the backbone of the digital revolution and a primary driver of increased power needs, investment firms will continue to look for opportunities to support the sector.