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Clean Energy Boom: Record Solar Growth, Major Deals, and US Power Sector Expansion in 2026

Clean Energy Boom: Record Solar Growth, Major Deals, and US Power Sector Expansion in 2026

Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the clean energy industry shows robust momentum with major deals, investments, and capacity expansions signaling sustained growth amid global decarbonization pushes. The U.S. power sector is set to add a record 86 gigawatts of utility-scale capacity in 2026, led by solar at 43.4 gigawatts or 51 percent and battery storage at 24.3 gigawatts or 28 percent, per the U.S. Energy Information Administration.[1] This builds on 2025 trends where utility-scale solar surged nationwide, overtaking California as Texas claimed the top spot, with renewables up 9.5 percent overall despite natural gas dips.[5]

Key transactions include Brookfield, BCI, and NBIM launching Northview Energy, a 2.6 billion dollar renewable platform seeded with 2.3 gigawatts of U.S. assets and up to 1.5 billion for further buys.[1] Svante Technologies acquired Carbon Alpha on March 4 to boost carbon capture projects,[1] while Clean Energy Fuels announced new renewable natural gas deals with U.S. trucking and transit fleets on March 4.[3] Anthem and Reatile Renewables hit financial close on South Africas Notsi Solar Project,[4] and the European Investment Bank pledged 1.1 billion dollars for Sub-Saharan African renewables.[6]

Emerging players like Zelestra broke ground on two Texas solar plants totaling 441 megawatts, part of a 1.2 gigawatt Meta PPA portfolio, creating 400 jobs.[7] Atlas Renewable sealed a landmark 3 billion dollar refinancing for Latin American assets.[8] Funding highlights Rebound Technologies 10.8 million Series A for thermal storage[1] and AirMyne investment from ENEOS.[1]

Leaders respond aggressively: Amazon, Google, and JPMorgan committed 100 million dollars through 2030 for superpollutant cuts,[1] while the American Clean Power Association backed White House ratepayer protections, stressing affordable clean power amid forecasts of U.S. residential prices hitting 18 cents per kilowatt-hour in 2026, up 37 percent from 2020.[9][13]

Compared to last week, deal volume accelerates from late February fundings like SHINEs 240 million,[1] with no major disruptions but heightened focus on PPAs amid volatile fossil prices from Iran tensions.[5] Supply chains stabilize via Canada-Australia partnerships.[10] Consumer shifts favor firm carbon-free deals like Fervo Energys expanded geothermal PPA with Shell.[2] Overall, the sector advances decisively toward reliability and scale. (348 words)

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