Why will material choice become central to future infrastructure investment strategy?
Material choice is increasingly a strategic decision rather than a purely technical one. Infrastructure assets are expected to perform reliably over several decades, often under evolving environmental and operational conditions. Decisions taken at the outset therefore shape not only the initial delivery but also the asset's long-term performance, risk profile and economic value.
What has shifted is the growing recognition that infrastructure must be evaluated through a life cycle lens. Asset owners and investors are placing greater emphasis on durability, predictability and resilience. In my experience working with long-life cycle infrastructure systems, material selection is often one of the most consequential decisions in determining how reliably an asset performs over time. Ultimately, infrastructure investment is an exercise in managing uncertainty over long horizons. Materials that enhance durability and reduce variability directly help preserve asset integrity and ensure more stable long-term outcomes.
How should decision-makers assess sustainable infrastructure materials beyond upfront cost from a life cycle perspective?
Upfront cost alone rarely reflects the true economic profile of infrastructure. A more meaningful assessment considers life cycle performance, maintenance requirements, operational continuity and expected asset longevity.
Materials that support durability and consistent performance reduce the need for intervention, operational disruption and long-term uncertainty. In practice, infrastructure owners increasingly recognise that material decisions play a central role in balancing operational reliability with long-term capital efficiency. I have experienced this in recent years and notice it more with several larger infrastructure owners, including municipalities, in the Nordics. This shift is reflected not only in their mindset and communication, but also in improvements to their designs and project implementation strategy. Making this happen requires a shift in perspective that didn’t happen overnight. The goal isn't just to minimise initial costs; it's to allocate capital to ensure predictable performance and protect long-term asset value.
How do innovation and material science support life cycle infrastructure planning and long-term resilience?
Advances in material science are expanding the performance and longevity of infrastructure systems. Materials that offer greater resistance to degradation and environmental stress contribute directly to more resilient and reliable infrastructure.
Durability and sustainability are closely linked. Extending asset lifespan reduces life cycle intervention and resource consumption, supporting both economic efficiency and environmental objectives. Strategically, innovating materials strengthens the infrastructure’s ability to perform consistently over time, making it a stable and dependable foundation for economic activity.
What role do education and industry dialogue play in changing long-established material preferences?
Infrastructure sectors are, appropriately, cautious. Established material choices reflect accumulated operational experience and a focus on reliability. However, evolving performance requirements make it increasingly important to evaluate material decisions through a broader life cycle and risk perspective.
Education and industry dialogue help decision-makers understand long-term performance implications and build confidence in alternative approaches. Access to operational experience and transparent performance data helps you make informed decisions. Progress in infrastructure is typically gradual, shaped by evidence, experience and leadership's willingness to take a long-term view. This is one of the reasons why we, as a company, are always welcoming fellow industry players, asset owners and government representatives to our third-party-accredited laboratory in Norway to share knowledge and discuss the latest developments, with the aim of improving each other's performance where possible.
What leadership is required for sustainable infrastructure and material strategy?
Sustainable infrastructure requires leadership with a clear long-term orientation. In my experience, material decisions must be elevated from technical specifications to strategic investment considerations. Choices made early in a project directly influence life cycle risk, operational reliability, and capital efficiency for decades.
Leaders, therefore, need to operate across disciplines, understanding engineering performance while translating it into financial predictability and long-term asset value. Particularly in an environment of increasing regulatory scrutiny and tighter capital allocation, this integration becomes critical.
Meaningful progress often comes from reframing the decision criteria itself. When the focus shifts from upfront cost to durability, resilience, and total life cycle performance, the quality of outcomes improves. Ultimately, leadership in this field is about responsible stewardship, aligning technical integrity with economic resilience to create infrastructure systems that remain dependable and investable over time.