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Renewable Energy Surges: Octopus Energy Expands in China, US Wind and Solar Dominate New Capacity
Published 2 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the clean energy industry shows robust momentum driven by major international partnerships and sustained renewable capacity growth, contrasting with earlier 2025 reports of slower solar additions[2][4][5]. On February 2, 2026, UK-based Octopus Energy launched Bitong Energy, a joint venture with China's PCG Power to trade up to 140 TWh of green power annually by 2030 in the world's largest clean energy market, potentially generating 50 million pounds in yearly profits[2]. This deal, announced during a UK Prime Minister visit, highlights exporting British tech to optimize China's spot markets amid 33 percent electricity demand growth over five years[2].
In the US, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission data from November 2025 reveals wind and solar dominated new capacity at 93 percent, with 818 MW wind and 2,879 MW solar added, pushing renewables to 24 percent of total installed capacity year-to-date[5]. Wind surged 71 percent over prior year totals at 5,563 MW through November, outpacing natural gas[5]. Projections forecast 86,130 MW solar and 19,821 MW wind additions by 2028[5].
TotalEnergies and Galp reaffirmed long-term renewable commitments in Namibia on January 30, integrating low-carbon solutions into energy portfolios[4]. Green steel momentum shifts east, per February 2 analysis, as Asia leverages clean transitions[3]. Clean energy stocks like Quanta Services and WEC Energy gained investor attention on February 1[10].
No major regulatory shifts or disruptions emerged, but leaders like Octopus respond to grid challenges by deploying AI-optimized trading software, building on 2025's 87.9 percent US renewable additions[2][5][8]. Compared to late 2025's steady but unspectacular growth, current deals signal accelerated global integration amid rising electrification demand[5][8]. Supply chains remain stable, with no reported price spikes or consumer behavior shifts in the latest data[1][7]. Overall, the sector turbocharges into 2026 with optimistic valuations eyed at 500 million pounds for ventures like Bitong[2]. (298 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
In the US, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission data from November 2025 reveals wind and solar dominated new capacity at 93 percent, with 818 MW wind and 2,879 MW solar added, pushing renewables to 24 percent of total installed capacity year-to-date[5]. Wind surged 71 percent over prior year totals at 5,563 MW through November, outpacing natural gas[5]. Projections forecast 86,130 MW solar and 19,821 MW wind additions by 2028[5].
TotalEnergies and Galp reaffirmed long-term renewable commitments in Namibia on January 30, integrating low-carbon solutions into energy portfolios[4]. Green steel momentum shifts east, per February 2 analysis, as Asia leverages clean transitions[3]. Clean energy stocks like Quanta Services and WEC Energy gained investor attention on February 1[10].
No major regulatory shifts or disruptions emerged, but leaders like Octopus respond to grid challenges by deploying AI-optimized trading software, building on 2025's 87.9 percent US renewable additions[2][5][8]. Compared to late 2025's steady but unspectacular growth, current deals signal accelerated global integration amid rising electrification demand[5][8]. Supply chains remain stable, with no reported price spikes or consumer behavior shifts in the latest data[1][7]. Overall, the sector turbocharges into 2026 with optimistic valuations eyed at 500 million pounds for ventures like Bitong[2]. (298 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI