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Clean Energy Surge: Nuclear Breakthroughs, Tech Giants Lock Power Deals, Canada Leads
Published 2 months ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, Canada's clean energy sector shows robust momentum, particularly in nuclear and renewables, amid global tech-driven demand surges. Ontario Power Generation completed the Darlington Nuclear Generating Station refurbishment ahead of schedule, securing 3,500 megawatts of non-emitting power, while Bruce Power finished Unit 3 replacement on budget, extending fleet life.[1] OPG signed a memorandum for up to 10 gigawatts potential at Wesleyville, and the Nuclear Waste Management Organization advanced its deep geological repository.[1]
Corporate deals dominate: Mars secured 70 percent of Sweden's 277-megawatt Kolvallen Wind Farm's output, yielding 670 gigawatt-hours yearly under its Renewable Acceleration program.[2] Google inked agreements with AES for a Texas data center and Xcel for Minnesota's, adding 1,900 megawatts including 1,400 megawatts wind, 200 megawatts solar, and 300 megawatts storage; Google invests 50 million dollars in batteries.[6] Microsoft hit 100 percent renewable electricity with a 40-gigawatt portfolio via long-term power purchase agreements.[8] Canada-Germany pact boosts EV, battery, and minerals collaboration.[5]
The EU leads high-readiness clean tech like photovoltaics and carbon capture, per a February 25 report, though China dominates volume; solar projects surge in 2026 despite tax shifts.[3][7] UK's Market-wide Half-Hourly Settlement ushers flexible tariffs for greener grids.[4]
Leaders respond to data center booms and electrification by locking PPAs, as seen with Google and Microsoft, outpacing prior weeks' focus on isolated projects. No major disruptions noted, but falling German auto supply chain demand squeezes suppliers.[9] Consumer shifts favor flexible pricing; supply chains strengthen via hyperscaler investments. Compared to early 2026 reports, deal scale has doubled, signaling accelerated clean transitions.[1][2][6] (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
Corporate deals dominate: Mars secured 70 percent of Sweden's 277-megawatt Kolvallen Wind Farm's output, yielding 670 gigawatt-hours yearly under its Renewable Acceleration program.[2] Google inked agreements with AES for a Texas data center and Xcel for Minnesota's, adding 1,900 megawatts including 1,400 megawatts wind, 200 megawatts solar, and 300 megawatts storage; Google invests 50 million dollars in batteries.[6] Microsoft hit 100 percent renewable electricity with a 40-gigawatt portfolio via long-term power purchase agreements.[8] Canada-Germany pact boosts EV, battery, and minerals collaboration.[5]
The EU leads high-readiness clean tech like photovoltaics and carbon capture, per a February 25 report, though China dominates volume; solar projects surge in 2026 despite tax shifts.[3][7] UK's Market-wide Half-Hourly Settlement ushers flexible tariffs for greener grids.[4]
Leaders respond to data center booms and electrification by locking PPAs, as seen with Google and Microsoft, outpacing prior weeks' focus on isolated projects. No major disruptions noted, but falling German auto supply chain demand squeezes suppliers.[9] Consumer shifts favor flexible pricing; supply chains strengthen via hyperscaler investments. Compared to early 2026 reports, deal scale has doubled, signaling accelerated clean transitions.[1][2][6] (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