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Clean Energy Soars Amid AI Demand and Shifting Investments: Highlights from the Industry

Clean Energy Soars Amid AI Demand and Shifting Investments: Highlights from the Industry

Published 2 months, 1 week ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the clean energy industry shows steady momentum amid AI-driven demand and shifting investments, though global corporate procurement dipped 10 percent in 2025 per BNEF data released February 19[4][6][10]. Big tech firms like Meta, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft captured 49 percent of 2025 clean energy deals, contracting 20.4 GW including 4.7 GW nuclear, with battery costs plummeting to new lows while most renewables grew pricier[6][10].

Key highlights include AES topping BNEF's rankings as the leading US and Americas seller to corporations for the fifth year, fueled by PPAs with Google and others; corporate deals now form two-thirds of AES backlog, 85 percent of 2025 renewables contracts[4]. Google advanced geothermal via February deals: 150 MW conventional with Ormat Technologies and NV Energy under Clean Transition Tariff, plus ongoing 115 MW enhanced project with Fervo, scaling from 2025 pilots[2]. In India, KPI Green Energy completed a 92.4 MW wind project February 20[11].

Conferences like Intersolar North America recapped on February 18-19 sessions on US solar manufacturing, trade rules under HR1, data center buildouts, and state clean energy blueprints, signaling policy focus[1][3]. Brazil's regulator set high price caps for March auctions—$430,000-$555,000 per MW-year for thermal—positioning batteries as 50 percent cheaper for night deficits[5].

Private equity eyes rebounds after quiet 2025, driven by regulations and returns[8]. Compared to prior weeks, activity accelerates from early February launches like SOLRITE's $20/month Texas VPP (February 14), versus 2025's overall PPA decline[1]. Leaders like AES respond to AI surges by prioritizing fast-track corporate PPAs; no major disruptions noted, but oil gains on US-Iran tensions indirectly boost clean alternatives[7]. Consumer shifts favor hybrids with storage for reliability[6].

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