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Clean Energy Surges Past Policy Headwinds: Renewables Hit 25% of US Power in 2026

Clean Energy Surges Past Policy Headwinds: Renewables Hit 25% of US Power in 2026

Published 4 weeks ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the clean energy industry shows resilient momentum amid policy headwinds. Clean Energy Technologies signed a non-binding Letter of Intent on March 30 with Hoppy Power for its High Temperature Ablative Pyrolysis waste-to-energy tech in Alberta, targeting deployment in Westlock by late 2026 to convert waste into power while tackling local management issues[1]. This builds on broader biogas advances, like Clean Energy Fuels inking nine new renewable natural gas deals across US fleets and German producer TURN2X partnering with AGR Biogas in Spain for e-methane production[4].

US renewables dominated January 2026 data from the Energy Information Administration, supplying 25.1 percent of electricity, up 11.5 percent year-over-year, with solar up 15.3 percent, hydropower surging 30.2 percent, and renewables hitting 36.6 percent of total capacity[3]. Forecasts predict all net new utility-scale capacity through January 2027 from solar (41.5 GW), wind (14 GW), and batteries (22.7 GW), dwarfing fossil fuel declines[3]. Early 2026 saw 11 GW of clean energy power purchase agreements announced by February 23, rebounding from 2025's recalibration due to costs and IRA uncertainties[6].

Deals persist, including Octopus Energy's majority stake in Uplight with Schneider Electric on March 24[2] and Realty Income's 694 million dollar San Diego financing for long-term clean procurement[8]. Globally, 2025 investments hit 2.3 trillion dollars, with renewables at 690 billion, though US projects faced 35 billion in cancellations last year versus the world's surge, linked to Trump-era fossil fuel pushes[5][9].

Leaders like CETY are responding by pursuing federal funding and commercialization milestones[1]. No major price spikes or consumer shifts noted in the last week, but supply chains strengthen via Asia bio-LNG pacts[4]. Compared to prior months, PPA volumes and January output exceed 2025, signaling evolution despite US antagonism[3][6]. Battery storage forecasts rise to 48-70 GWh in 2026[12][13]. Overall, innovation and data affirm clean energy's grid-essential trajectory. (298 words)

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