ACER's Updated Unit Investment Cost Indicators Show Rising Energy Infrastructure Costs
Summary
ACER has published its 2026 Unit Investment Cost (UIC) indicators for energy infrastructure, updating reference values last published in 2023. The report shows that infrastructure costs have increased above inflation across most categories including electricity lines, cables, and substations, based on data and technical information collected from project promoters between October 2025 and January 2026. Key cost drivers identified include increased exposure to price volatility and dependence on supply chains for materials from third countries.
“Infrastructure costs have increased above inflation across most categories (e.g. electricity lines, cables and substations).”
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What changed
ACER has updated its Unit Investment Cost (UIC) indicators and corresponding reference values for European energy infrastructure, fulfilling its obligation under the TEN-E Regulation to publish updated indicators every three years. The 2026 report provides updated cost information expressed per unit (kilometre, installed power, capacity) and includes additional indicators and sensitivity analysis accounting for cross-country differences in labour costs.
Project promoters, transmission system operators, and energy infrastructure investors should note that while the indicators provide a common framework for assessing comparable investment costs, they are based on historical data from commissioned projects and may underestimate actual current costs. Data representativeness remains limited for several infrastructure categories, though ACER recommends stronger cooperation on supply chains and better use of existing infrastructure to alleviate bottlenecks.
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Apr 24, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
24.4.2026
ACER’s updated unit investment indicators show rising energy infrastructure costs that call for closer monitoring
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ACER’s updated unit investment indicators show rising energy infrastructure costs that call for closer monitoring
What is it about?
ACER publishes its report on unit investment cost (UIC) indicators for energy infrastructure, updating the reference values last published in 2023.
What are UIC indicators?
Transparent cost estimation is essential for planning energy networks. Standardised reference values for specific infrastructure costs can improve the quality and credibility of assessments and enable consistent comparisons across the EU.
Under the TEN-E Regulation, ACER is required to develop and publish a set of UIC indicators and corresponding reference values every three years. These indicators provide a common framework for assessing the investment costs of comparable energy infrastructure projects.
What did ACER observe?
The 2026 ACER report provides updated cost information for energy infrastructure, expressed per unit (kilometre, installed power, capacity). It analyses the factors influencing infrastructure costs over time, using cost data and technical information collected from project promoters between October 2025 and January 2026. The report also includes additional indicators and a sensitivity analysis based on an alternative methodology that accounts for cross-country differences in labour costs.
ACER’s analysis shows that:
- Infrastructure costs have increased above inflation across most categories (e.g. electricity lines, cables and substations). As the indicators are based on historical data from commissioned projects, they do not fully reflect current price levels and may underestimate actual costs.
- Cost drivers point to increased exposure to price volatility and dependence on supply chains, particularly for materials from third countries, as well as other manufacturing-related costs.
- Data representativeness remains limited for several infrastructure categories, with inputs unevenly distributed across countries, which can affect the robustness of the indicators. Future updates would benefit from data covering a wider range of commissioned projects across countries and infrastructure categories. Despite some limitations, the indicators provide valuable insights into infrastructure costs and support more transparent and informed planning decisions.
Looking ahead
As the assessment is based on historical data from commissioned projects, the indicators may not yet fully reflect recent cost developments. Further work is needed to better capture these cost developments in future updates, for example by exploring alternative methodologies or taking into account recent tender outcomes. ACER notes that regulatory oversight, stronger cooperation on supply chains and better use of existing infrastructure can alleviate bottlenecks.
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