Moreover, supply delays related to the energy transition are ranked as a top three risk by one third (32%) of executives, according to Beazley’s latest Risk & Resilience research
Tensions in the Strait of Hormuz are heightening energy security fears and pressure on businesses, while surging demand from energy-intensive technologies is making investment in alternative energy urgent, as 74% of global executives say uncertainty is stalling transition investment.
In the face of the vast transition opportunity, Beazley’s latest Spotlight on Energy Transformation 2026 finds that converging risks are raising barriers to capital deployment and delaying investment decisions – highlighting the need to transfer risk to unlock capital.
Based on a survey of 3,500 global business leaders, the report highlights both the scale of the transition opportunity and the complex, interconnected risks in delivering it. Progress is being slowed by several key execution challenges, even as the commercial opportunity grows, including:
As businesses contend with a confluence of risks that can distract from delivery, specialty insurance can help unlock investment by assessing, pricing and managing the complex, interconnected risks they face. In doing so, it gives companies and investors the confidence to commit capital and move transition projects forward.
Kelly Malynn, Head of Transition & Emerging Risk, Beazley, commented:
“From surging energy demand driven by technological transformation to the need for greater energy security and resilience, the energy transition is one of the biggest commercial opportunities of our time. But ambition is running ahead of readiness, with many businesses and infrastructure struggling to advance.
“Specialty insurance has a critical role to play. Our sector has been at the forefront of every major technological and energy shift, and now is the time for the industry to step up again. By adapting at pace, crafting the solutions, and pooling our industry’s cross-disciplinary expertise and risk data, we can support businesses to move forward at scale. It is critical that we act now, because the energy transition will not wait.”
Methodology
In January 2026, Beazley partnered with research firm Opinion Matters to survey 3,500 business leaders from internationally operating companies based in the UK, US, Canada, Singapore, France, Germany, and Spain.
Respondents represented a range of company sizes, from US$/CA$/SG$/GB£/EUR€ 250,000 to over 1 billion in annual revenue, across all surveyed markets.
The main survey was conducted between 5th–13th January 2026. This annual Risk & Resilience Survey began in 2021 with 1,000 respondents from the UK and US. It expanded to 2,000 in 2022–2023 with the addition of Canada and Singapore, and to 3,500 in 2024 with France, Germany, and Spain.