Equitix is an international infrastructure investor, developer and fund manager focused on small to mid‑sized core infrastructure assets. Founded in 2007 and headquartered in London, it manages over 300 assets valued at around £13.8 billion across more than 20 countries. The firm invests on behalf of fund investors in both operating businesses and greenfield projects, tailoring strategies to local markets in the UK, wider Europe, North America and the Middle East. It works closely with Equitix Management Services to provide active asset management, including quality assurance, compliance and stakeholder relationship management.
Equitix’s portfolio spans six sectors: social infrastructure, transport, renewable power, environmental services, network utilities and data infrastructure. In social infrastructure it holds over £2.5 billion AUM in more than 170 project companies, including hospitals, social housing, schools, student accommodation and other public facilities. In transport it is a major UK investor in road and rail assets such as High Speed 1, the M25 and Agility Trains, and has expanded to continental Europe, North America, Australia and the Middle East. In renewable power it manages about 7.5 GW of generating capacity in technologies including offshore and onshore wind, solar, hydro and geothermal, and owns interests in projects such as Beatrice Offshore Windfarm, Hornsea One and Triton Knoll, as well as five UK offshore transmission assets. Environmental services holdings include energy‑from‑waste and other waste treatment facilities, while network utilities and data infrastructure assets provide electricity, gas, water, heat and digital connectivity to millions of end users.
Equitix employs more than 200 infrastructure professionals of over 20 nationalities, based across roughly 15 offices in 10 countries. The firm states that it integrates environmental, social and governance considerations across the investment lifecycle, supports the objectives of the Paris Agreement and net‑zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, and reports against frameworks such as the UN‑supported Principles for Responsible Investment and the Task Force on Climate‑related Financial Disclosures. Recent initiatives include partnerships with public and sovereign investors such as the UK Infrastructure Bank and Ireland’s Strategic Investment Fund, and dedicated programmes to use data and climate analytics in active stewardship of its energy and infrastructure portfolio, including offshore wind and battery storage assets.