A strategic opportunity for New Zealand

The infrastructure boom of our generation is here. New Zealand can capture it.

Global capital is pouring into the energy and data infrastructure of the digital economy at a scale not seen since the build-out of the national grid. The world is short of one thing above all: firm, clean, always-on power, delivered fast. New Zealand has it in abundance. The only question is whether we move quickly enough to host it.

~US$1T/yr
Global data-infrastructure
investment by 2027
~5 yrs
US grid-connection wait
New Zealand undercuts it
1-3 GW
New Zealand's assessed
geothermal headroom
51/100%
Crown ownership: generators
/ the national grid
01 Where the world's capital is going

The biggest private build-out of physical infrastructure in modern history

The companies building the digital economy are spending more on physical infrastructure than almost any private enterprise ever has, on track for roughly one trillion US dollars a year by 2027. This is the railways-and-electricity moment of the 21st century: a generational build-out of the foundations the rest of the economy will run on.

And it is supply-constrained. The scarcest input is not money, investors are desperate to deploy it, but firm, reliable power delivered quickly. In the United States, the wait to connect a large new facility to the grid now averages around five years and is rising. Developers are paying steep premiums for on-site generation simply to move sooner, and much of that new power is gas-fired, locking in fossil fuels for decades. New Zealand would not have to make that trade.

The world has the capital. What it lacks is power, and the speed to deliver it.

02 New Zealand's edge

What New Zealand has that the world now needs

New Zealand sits on one of the most valuable energy endowments for this moment in history: abundant geothermal power, renewable, always-on, and already proven at scale. More than a gigawatt generates today, with a further 1-3 gigawatts in assessed potential, exactly the clean, firm baseload the world is short of.

Built alongside that generation, a facility can draw power directly, sidestepping the grid queues that hold the rest of the world back. New Zealand can host this infrastructure faster than almost anywhere on earth.

  • 01Firm renewable power. Geothermal baseload that runs 24/7, with gigawatts of headroom to develop.
  • 02Speed. Power drawn beside the source skips the multi-year grid queues seen overseas.
  • 03Climate & water. A naturally cool climate and ample water keep these facilities efficient and cheap to run.
  • 04Certainty. A fast-track consenting regime gives investors a clear, time-bound path to build.
  • 05Stability. Rule of law, political stability, and straightforward access to skilled people.
03 New Zealand's unfair advantage

One thing New Zealand can do that almost no other nation can

The Crown owns a controlling stake in the country's largest electricity generators and the entire national grid. The build-out of generation and transmission is not at the mercy of fragmented private interests, it can be directed, deliberately, by national decision.

No other developed country with this opportunity also holds these levers. It is New Zealand's single greatest advantage, and right now it is sitting unused.

51%
of the major generators, owned by New Zealand
100%
of the national transmission grid, owned by New Zealand
04 The window is open now

This opportunity is real, but it is not permanent

Capital is being allocated this decade, and once these facilities are sited, they stay for a generation. The countries that move first will anchor the investment, the jobs, the energy build-out, and the strategic capability that comes with it. The only thing standing between New Zealand and a share of this is a decision: to prepare the ground ahead of demand, rather than after it.

If we move now
A generation of abundance
New Zealand hosts billions in private investment, builds out clean energy at no cost to the taxpayer, and gains a lasting, productive stake in the industry that will define the century.
If we wait
The advantage goes elsewhere
The capital flows to countries that prepared, the energy stays undeveloped, and New Zealand watches a once-in-a-generation opening close from the outside.
05 What needs to happen

Three decisions stand between New Zealand and this opportunity

1
Treat it as nationally strategic
Give this infrastructure political priority and a clear, fast pathway to delivery, the same seriousness any country gives to the foundations of its future economy.
2
Ready the supply ahead of demand
Direct the state's energy companies and grid operator to prepare firm generation and connection-ready sites before investors arrive, so a project can begin in months, not years.
3
Take it to the world
Package these sites and present New Zealand to global investors as the fastest clean route to new capacity anywhere, while the capital is still being allocated.

New Zealand will not pay for this infrastructure, the world's largest companies will. What it costs us is a decision. What it returns is a generation of abundance.