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Clean Energy Surge: Tech Giants Secure Massive Carbon-Free Power Deals
Published 2 months, 4 weeks ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the clean energy industry shows robust activity driven by surging AI data center demand, with tech giants securing massive carbon-free power deals. Meta signed 20-year PPAs with Vistra for 2,600 MW of nuclear power, including uprates, while Clearway Energy finalized three agreements with Google for 1.2 GW across Missouri, Texas, and West Virginia[1][2][6]. Brookfields 10.5 GW framework with Microsoft and Google went live in January 2026, powering 8 million homes worth of AI clusters through 2030[10].
Key partnerships include Baker Hughes expanding with Hydrostor for up to 1.4 GW in long-duration A-CAES storage to boost grid resilience[8], and Vycarb partnering with Tomco and atdepth after a 5 million funding round backed by Shell for ocean carbon removal scaling[4]. Competitive Power Ventures launched Marylands largest 160 MW solar project, powering 30,000 homes[2].
Regulatory moves feature California approving 92 MW battery storage contracts for SDG&E and 10 solar-plus-storage deals for SCE[3]. G7 nations plan to cut China rare earth reliance, with US taking a 10 percent stake in USA Rare Earth[1].
Pricing faces recalibration in Europe and US due to record deployments and volatility, per Pexapark[7]. Leaders like Constellation secured a 1 billion federal loan to restart a nuclear plant for Microsoft by mid-2027[2].
Compared to prior months, hyperscaler internalization of power via nuclear and storage accelerates, shifting from gas reliance amid 2.4 percent US emissions rise in 2025[1]. No major disruptions reported, but supply chain pacts like CATLs 17.2 billion lithium deal signal stability[1]. Consumer behavior tilts toward resilient, dispatchable clean power as grids strain.
(Word count: 298)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Key partnerships include Baker Hughes expanding with Hydrostor for up to 1.4 GW in long-duration A-CAES storage to boost grid resilience[8], and Vycarb partnering with Tomco and atdepth after a 5 million funding round backed by Shell for ocean carbon removal scaling[4]. Competitive Power Ventures launched Marylands largest 160 MW solar project, powering 30,000 homes[2].
Regulatory moves feature California approving 92 MW battery storage contracts for SDG&E and 10 solar-plus-storage deals for SCE[3]. G7 nations plan to cut China rare earth reliance, with US taking a 10 percent stake in USA Rare Earth[1].
Pricing faces recalibration in Europe and US due to record deployments and volatility, per Pexapark[7]. Leaders like Constellation secured a 1 billion federal loan to restart a nuclear plant for Microsoft by mid-2027[2].
Compared to prior months, hyperscaler internalization of power via nuclear and storage accelerates, shifting from gas reliance amid 2.4 percent US emissions rise in 2025[1]. No major disruptions reported, but supply chain pacts like CATLs 17.2 billion lithium deal signal stability[1]. Consumer behavior tilts toward resilient, dispatchable clean power as grids strain.
(Word count: 298)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI