Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP) is a Danish investment firm focused on large-scale energy infrastructure, with a particular emphasis on greenfield renewable energy. Founded in 2012 and headquartered in Copenhagen, it manages 13 funds with approximately EUR 35 billion raised from around 200 international institutional investors. CIP positions itself as a global leader in energy infrastructure investments and offshore wind, with a project pipeline of about 120 GW and a portfolio spanning offshore and onshore wind, solar PV, biomass and energy-from-waste, transmission and distribution, reserve capacity, utility-scale storage, advanced bioenergy and Power-to-X technologies including green hydrogen. The firm has more than 2,300 professionals and 19 offices across Europe, North America, Asia-Pacific and Latin America, and invests in both low-risk OECD markets and high-growth middle‑income markets.
CIP’s fund platform is structured around several strategies. Its Flagship Funds invest in regulated and long-term contracted renewable infrastructure in Western Europe, North America and developed Asia-Pacific, while its Growth Markets Funds target large greenfield projects in Asia, Latin America and EMEA. The Energy Transition Fund focuses on next‑generation infrastructure such as industrial-scale Power‑to‑X, clean hydrogen and CCU/S to decarbonise hard‑to‑abate sectors, and the Advanced Bioenergy Funds back biofuel and biomethane projects using agricultural and industrial biowaste. The Green Credit Fund provides subordinated private project finance debt to renewable and grid assets globally. Across these vehicles CIP develops, builds, owns and sometimes exits projects including large offshore wind farms (such as Vineyard Wind and Star of the South), onshore wind and solar portfolios, battery storage (including multi‑hundred‑MW BESS in the UK), and integrated solar and Power‑to‑X platforms. CIP is a UN PRI signatory and frames its investment strategy around high ESG standards and supporting a net‑zero emissions trajectory by 2050, targeting up to EUR 100 billion in renewable investments by 2030.