So Accenture is moving into Latin America in a meaningful way. Last week, the firm announced it is acquiring Verum Partners, a Belo Horizonte-based infrastructure and capital projects management company with 180 people and serious on-the-ground experience in mining, metals, energy, chemicals, and transportation. No price disclosed, as is customary for these things.
Verum does something specific and genuinely difficult. It takes the kind of industrial megaproject that routinely runs over budget and behind schedule and tries to make it not do that. Accenture’s own research puts the failure rate of large infrastructure projects at around 90% against original targets. That number is staggering every time you read it. Verum’s value is that it has people who actually go to the site, coordinate across contractors, and solve problems where the problems are. Accenture’s value is that it can layer AI and digital infrastructure on top of that. Together, the pitch is: faster, more predictable, less wasteful delivery of very large, very complex projects.
It is a good pitch. Brazil’s investment cycle is accelerating right now across mining expansion, grid modernization, transportation, and energy transition. There is a lot to build and a long history of it taking longer and costing more than anyone planned. This acquisition makes sense.
Belo Horizonte is an interesting place to anchor this. The name of the state it sits in, Minas Gerais, means General Mines, and that is not a historical footnote so much as an active description. The region is one of the most resource-rich in the Southern Hemisphere and has been the site of some of the most consequential infrastructure decisions Brazil has made, good and otherwise.
The announcement stays focused on the opportunity, which is fair. Efficiency, productivity, faster operational handover. These are the terms of the deal and they are real improvements worth making.
What does not make it into the press release, and rarely does in these situations, is the question of what sits alongside all this building. The Cerrado, the enormous biodiverse savanna that borders much of this industrial activity, is under significant pressure from exactly the kind of expansion this acquisition is designed to support. Brazil’s environmental licensing process is stretched. These are not Accenture’s problems to solve and the announcement was never going to raise them.
But they are the backdrop. And the companies whose projects Verum will now help deliver faster are operating inside that backdrop every day.
We are not saying do not build. Infrastructure matters, energy transition is real, and poorly managed projects have their own costs. We are just noting that “efficient” is a description of how something happens, not whether it should, and those two questions tend to travel separately in announcements like this one.
The Verum team built something worth acquiring. That much is clear.


