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AI, Climate, and the Future of Infrastructure: How Leaders See AI, Data, and Climate Reshaping What We Build NextĀ 

From Romanian backroads to French digital twins and agentic AI, five Bentley leaders explain what’s at stake—and how smarter design and technology can tip the balance.

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Jay Moye

A collage featuring an energy conference, aerial city views, infrastructure plans, an abstract pattern, a street rendering, and a portrait of a smiling man in a suit.

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With climate risks increasing, data volumes exploding, and the global race to build new, more resilient infrastructure accelerating, experts at Bentley Systems are offering fresh insights on how to confront the world’s infrastructure challenges—both now and in the future. Ā 

The Long Way Home: 6 hours, 1 lane, No Excuse. Here’s Why Better Infrastructure Starts with Better Design.Ā Ā 

Bentley marketing manager Oana Crisan had a lot of time to think during a grueling six-hour drive from her village in central Romania to Bucharest. The bone-rattling journey on narrow, decades-old roads wasn’t just inconvenient; it highlighted the bleak reality of Romania’s EU-leading road fatality rate.Ā 

Crisan’s trip didn’t end there. She boarded a plane to London, where trains run along the sleek Elizabeth Line, and then to Philadelphia, traveling along highways to visit Bentley’s headquarters. She gained perspective on the global infrastructure divide—inspiring her to write a manifesto for better infrastructure design.Ā 

Crisan now advocates for design-driven solutions powered by modern tools and technologies like digital twins, artificial intelligence (AI), and collaborative modeling software. The solutions can prevent long-term problems by enabling comprehensive scenario analysis and stakeholder collaboration before construction begins.Ā 

“What you choose to model today decides what you will maintain and operate tomorrow,” Crisan writes. ā€œGood infrastructure saves time, great infrastructure saves lives, and brilliant infrastructure—the kind that’s modeled intelligently, designed collaboratively, and maintained proactively—builds freedom.” Ā 

The Earth Beneath Our Feet: Our Greatest Asset and ChallengeĀ 

Ā After a week of meetings with government officials in Washington, D.C., Dr. Thomas Krom from Seequent, the earth and subsurface modeling company owned by Bentley, had a sobering realization: “The ground beneath our feet represents both our greatest resource and our most significant vulnerability.”Ā Ā 

Ā The subsurface realm holds critical resources—aquifers, lithium deposits, and geothermal energy potential—yet we’re managing it with dangerous inadequacy. Water scarcity threatens communities globally, and critical minerals for electric vehicles and renewable energy face supply constraints. Meanwhile, recent earthquakes remind us that “we remain sitting ducks” to geological forces we can’t control but must prepare for, Krom says.Ā 

These global challenges are creating political unity. In the U.S., both liberal and conservative states are facing droughts and battling floods, and they’re finding common ground in better resource management. Even financial markets reflect this reality: Gold recently hit a record high as investors seek tangible assets over purely financial instruments. The subsurface truly represents the ultimate common resource, crossing all boundaries.Ā 

“The Earth itself is non-partisan,ā€ Krom writes. ā€œAnd increasingly, so too are approaches to managing its resources and risks.”Ā 

The U.S. Is Falling Behind in the Global Infrastructure Race Can We Make a Comeback?Ā 

Ā This spring, the U.S. earned its highest-ever infrastructure grade—a C—from the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). The rating should serve as a wakeup call, according to Rory Linehan, director for infrastructure policy advancement at Bentley. Ā 

Ā The federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act expires in 2026, which Linehan says will create an inflection point for America to reclaim its infrastructure leadership through a combination of coordinated funding, capability-building investments to close the engineering skills gap, modernized permitting and regulatory processes, and a heightened focus on resilience. Importantly, he says, the U.S. must scale digital twins, real-time sensors, AI-driven maintenance planning, and other innovative technologies.Ā 

Ā ā€œThe U.S. has the resources, ingenuity, and momentum to lead the world in infrastructure again,ā€ Linehan writes. ā€œBut it will take more than optimism. It will require action that is coordinated, innovative, and sustained.ā€Ā 

A speaker presents at a 2025 ASCE event on improving the energy grid, with four seated panelists and a backdrop featuring energy infrastructure images.
Otto Lynch, vice president and head of Power Line Systems at Bentley, delivers opening remarks at the Energy Panel during the ASCE Report Card Launch in Washington, D.C. Otto is joined by panelists Atfab Khan (PJM Interconnection), Adrien Ford (Constellation), and Michael Miller (Exo).

Infrastructure in the Agentic Era: How AI and Open Data Are Shaping the Built EnvironmentĀ 

The infrastructure industry is entering the “Agentic Era” of AI, where intelligent systems graduate from simply analyzing data to taking action, Bentley’s Vice President of Ecosystem and Ventures Tom Kurke wrote in a thought leadership piece for AEC Magazine.Ā 

Imagine AI agents monitoring digital twins of bridges, roads, and water networks, automatically identifying issues, and recommending preventive maintenance before costly breakdowns occur. This isn’t science fiction, he says. It’s the next logical step as the industry faces mounting project demands and an engineering talent shortage.Ā 

Kurke cites open ecosystems as the key enabler. “Open data fosters access to valuable information, breaks down barriers, and enables seamless data sharing across platforms, systems, disciplines, organizations, and colleagues,” he writes.Ā 

With the geospatial market potentially reaching $1.4 trillion by 2030, open standards and collaboration between companies like Bentley, Cesium, and Google are creating unprecedented opportunities for infrastructure innovation.Ā 

Kurke concludes: “This transformative chapter will bring systems capable of analyzing digital twins of infrastructure assets—bridges, roads, dams, or water networks—to identify issues and recommend preventive action, avoiding costly breakdowns or safety hazards.” Ā 

A smiling man in a suit is pictured on the left. On the right, a cityscape at dusk with digital lines and colored nodes overlaid in the sky.

A View of The Future: Visiting Pau, the French City With a Digital Twin That’s Showing the World What’s PossibleĀ 

In the 19th century, poet Alphonse de Lamartine proclaimed Pau, France, to have “the most beautiful view of the Earth,” with the snow-capped Pyrenees stretching across the horizon. Today, digital twins are making residents say ā€œOui!ā€ to responsible development. Ā 

When city officials sought approval for a major skyline project, they ditched 100-page reports and static drawings. Instead, they used a comprehensive digital twin of the city to help residents explore, interact, and see exactly how developments would integrate into the landscape without impacting Pau’s scenic skyline.Ā 

The technology helped transform Boulevard d’Aragon into a leafy oasis, upgrade the Les Halles market, and revitalize the neglected Le Foirail neighborhood. Pau’s digital twin won the prestigious Founders’ Honors Prize at Bentley’s 2024 Year in Infrastructure and Going Digital Awards in Vancouver.Ā Ā 

ā€œPau’s story demonstrates the art of the possible, showcasing the value of digital twins for cities of any size,ā€ writes Dorothea Manou, solution manager for cities and urban infrastructure at Bentley. ā€œIt is a model for others to follow. Pau has proven that you don’t need to be a megacity to be a smart city that, through technology, puts the needs of citizens first.ā€Ā 

Aerial view of a city intersection with digital overlays, displaying a citizen engagement platform interface and a suggestion list for community feedback on the right side.

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