Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Clean Energy Momentum Soars: Corporate PPAs, Thermal Storage Breakthroughs, and Surging Battery Storage
Published 2 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the clean energy industry shows robust momentum driven by surging data center demand and major corporate partnerships, with no major disruptions reported. TotalEnergies signed two 15-year Power Purchase Agreements with Google for 1 GW of solar power from Texas projects, delivering 28 TWh of renewable electricity to support AI infrastructure, adding to their 10 GW US portfolio.[2] Amazon inked a 110 MW offshore wind PPA with RWE in Germany for the Nordseecluster B project, powering 139,000 homes annually and bolstering Amazon's 34 GW global renewables as of early 2025.[6]
Thermal energy storage advances quickly: Electrified Thermal Solutions commissioned a 20 MWh unit in Texas capable of 1,500°C heat for industrial processes, targeting 2 GW by 2030 at below natural gas costs, while Rondo Energy broke ground on a 100 MWh battery at Covestro's German plant, slashing 13,000 metric tons of CO2 yearly.[3] Sibanye-Stillwater announced a 220 MW renewables deal, highlighting competitive pricing.[4]
Market data underscores growth: The IEA forecasts 600 TWh annual solar PV additions to 2030, with 448 GW of new renewables installed globally in 2025, led by China.[9] US battery storage hit 18.6 GW new capacity last year, eyeing 20 GW in 2026.[5] SMRs draw 30 GW in data center deals.[5]
Leaders respond to AI-driven demand by prioritizing flexible renewables and storage over paused oil/gas investments.[1] Compared to prior weeks, deal volumes surged—e.g., TotalEnergies' 1 GW dwarfs recent Clearway 1.2 GW pacts—reflecting hyperscaler urgency versus steady but slower nuclear/geothermal ramps.[5][7] Consumer shifts favor corporate PPAs for grid stability, with no notable price hikes or supply issues in the last week.[2][6]
(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
Thermal energy storage advances quickly: Electrified Thermal Solutions commissioned a 20 MWh unit in Texas capable of 1,500°C heat for industrial processes, targeting 2 GW by 2030 at below natural gas costs, while Rondo Energy broke ground on a 100 MWh battery at Covestro's German plant, slashing 13,000 metric tons of CO2 yearly.[3] Sibanye-Stillwater announced a 220 MW renewables deal, highlighting competitive pricing.[4]
Market data underscores growth: The IEA forecasts 600 TWh annual solar PV additions to 2030, with 448 GW of new renewables installed globally in 2025, led by China.[9] US battery storage hit 18.6 GW new capacity last year, eyeing 20 GW in 2026.[5] SMRs draw 30 GW in data center deals.[5]
Leaders respond to AI-driven demand by prioritizing flexible renewables and storage over paused oil/gas investments.[1] Compared to prior weeks, deal volumes surged—e.g., TotalEnergies' 1 GW dwarfs recent Clearway 1.2 GW pacts—reflecting hyperscaler urgency versus steady but slower nuclear/geothermal ramps.[5][7] Consumer shifts favor corporate PPAs for grid stability, with no notable price hikes or supply issues in the last week.[2][6]
(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