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Clean Energy Deal Surge: BlackRock Acquires AES, Data Centers Drive Renewable Demand Growth
Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the clean energy industry shows robust deal-making and market transparency efforts amid rising power demand from data centers and policy shifts. On March 3, 2026, S&P Global Energy launched the first daily Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) price assessments for North American renewable markets, powered by REsurety's CleanTrade platform, covering nine solar and wind indices across ERCOT hubs. This enhances pricing visibility as PPAs surge for risk management in volatile conditions.[1]
Major transactions dominate: A BlackRock-led consortium, including EQT, agreed to acquire AES Corporation for USD10.7 billion, targeting its 32.1 GW portfolio (64 percent renewables) and 11.8 GW in corporate PPAs with Google, Microsoft, and Amazon. Closure is eyed for late 2026.[2] Enel signed for an 830 MW US wind-solar portfolio, RWE doubled Italian construction to 235 MW, and Avangrid extended a 150 MW Midwest PPA with Xcel Energy.[3]
Battery and solar projects advance, with Portland General Electric securing over 1,000 MW of clean energy and storage, MN8 Energy supporting Meta's 80 MW Pennsylvania solar, and Sunrun enabling PG&E grid relief via home-dispatched energy.[3] Canada announced CAD165 million for 22 critical minerals projects, boosting cleantech supply chains.[5][7]
Compared to prior weeks, activity accelerates from September 2025's AES backlog growth and October's REsurety data deals, with US electricity up 2 percent to 4,145 TWh in 2024 amid data center boom.[2] Leaders like AES seek capital for post-2027 expansion, while Platts' tools aid buyers in fluctuating prices. No major disruptions reported, but Europe warns market tampering risks 45 billion euros in 2025 wind investments.[3]
Consumer shifts favor corporate off-takes; no verified price drops noted. Industry leaders respond via acquisitions and transparency to fuel resilient growth.
(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
Major transactions dominate: A BlackRock-led consortium, including EQT, agreed to acquire AES Corporation for USD10.7 billion, targeting its 32.1 GW portfolio (64 percent renewables) and 11.8 GW in corporate PPAs with Google, Microsoft, and Amazon. Closure is eyed for late 2026.[2] Enel signed for an 830 MW US wind-solar portfolio, RWE doubled Italian construction to 235 MW, and Avangrid extended a 150 MW Midwest PPA with Xcel Energy.[3]
Battery and solar projects advance, with Portland General Electric securing over 1,000 MW of clean energy and storage, MN8 Energy supporting Meta's 80 MW Pennsylvania solar, and Sunrun enabling PG&E grid relief via home-dispatched energy.[3] Canada announced CAD165 million for 22 critical minerals projects, boosting cleantech supply chains.[5][7]
Compared to prior weeks, activity accelerates from September 2025's AES backlog growth and October's REsurety data deals, with US electricity up 2 percent to 4,145 TWh in 2024 amid data center boom.[2] Leaders like AES seek capital for post-2027 expansion, while Platts' tools aid buyers in fluctuating prices. No major disruptions reported, but Europe warns market tampering risks 45 billion euros in 2025 wind investments.[3]
Consumer shifts favor corporate off-takes; no verified price drops noted. Industry leaders respond via acquisitions and transparency to fuel resilient growth.
(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