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Press Release10 March 2026Smart InfrastructureZug, Switzerland
Industrial leaders ready to invest in flexible, electrified operations, Siemens study finds
The Siemens Infrastructure Transition Monitor 2025 is a biennial study commissioned by Siemens, surveying 1,400 senior executives and government representatives in 19 countries across energy, buildings and industries
The Siemens Infrastructure Transition Monitor, which surveyed 1,400 senior executives, finds that almost two-thirds of industrial leaders (65 percent) see electrification as the most effective lever to achieve net zero targets, with additional progress already accelerating onsite renewable usage, and decarbonizing core operations. The proportion of organizations that are mature or advanced in onsite renewable energy production has risen to 42 percent, and in decarbonization of core operations to 38 percent – both up from 27 percent in 2023.
At the same time, demand-side flexibility is
gaining traction as a practical way to cut emissions and energy costs by
shifting consumption according to market conditions. Nearly six in ten (59
percent) industrial organizations plan to use their energy assets to benefit
from flexibility mechanisms, and 45 percent say their efforts are already
mature or advanced.
Digitalization is underpinning these
advances, with 63 percent of industrial leaders viewing it as a critical
enabler of decarbonization, particularly through smarter energy management and
AI-driven optimization. More than half believe better data sharing between
energy producers and consumers would improve both efficiency (56 percent) and
resilience (58 percent) of the overall system.
Yet to maintain this momentum, companies
need a clearer policy environment. Almost two thirds (63 percent) say policy
uncertainty is now a growing threat to the energy transition, 60 percent report
that regulatory uncertainty discourages private sector investment in
renewables, and 57 percent say uncertainty about the future energy system is
delaying clean energy investment.
Matthias Rebellius, Managing Board Member of
Siemens AG and CEO of Smart Infrastructure, said: “Industrial companies are
proving that sustainability and competitiveness can advance together. They are
investing in electrification, flexibility and digital technologies that deliver
results today. What they need now is long-term policy clarity and supportive
regulations to plan ahead with confidence and accelerate the transition to
cleaner, more efficient operations.”
About the Siemens Infrastructure Transition Monitor
The Siemens Infrastructure Transition Monitor is a biennial study commissioned by Siemens, surveying 1,400 senior executives and government representatives in 19 countries across energy, buildings and industries.
For this press release
Siemens Smart Infrastructure (SI) is shaping the market for intelligent, adaptive infrastructure for today and the future. It addresses the pressing challenges of urbanization and climate change by connecting energy systems, buildings, and industries. SI provides customers with a comprehensive end-to-end portfolio from a single source – with products, systems, solutions, and services from the point of power generation all the way to consumption. With an increasingly digitalized ecosystem, it helps customers thrive and communities progress while contributing toward protecting the planet. To protect this journey, we foster holistic cybersecurity to ensure secure and reliable operations. Siemens Smart Infrastructure has its global headquarters in Zug, Switzerland. As of September 30, 2025, the business had around 79,400 employees worldwide.
Siemens AG (Berlin and Munich) is a leading technology company focused on industry, infrastructure, mobility, and healthcare. The company’s purpose is to create technology to transform the everyday, for everyone. By combining the real and the digital worlds, Siemens empowers customers to accelerate their digital and sustainability transformations, making factories more efficient, cities more livable, and transportation more sustainable. A leader in industrial AI, Siemens leverages its deep domain know-how to apply AI – including generative AI – to real-world applications, making AI accessible and impactful for customers across diverse industries. Siemens also owns a majority stake in the publicly listed company Siemens Healthineers, a leading global medical technology provider pioneering breakthroughs in healthcare. For everyone. Everywhere. Sustainably. In fiscal 2025, which ended on September 30, 2025, the Siemens Group generated revenue of €78.9 billion and net income of €10.4 billion. As of September 30, 2025, the company employed around 318,000 people worldwide on the basis of continuing operations. Further information is available on the Internet at www.siemens.com.