Big tech companies need enormous amounts of clean energy to power their rapidly growing data-center fleets while meeting their climate goals — but it’s increasingly difficult to get that electricity from the grid.
One solution? Start building data centers and solar, wind, and battery farms in close proximity to each other, putting as little pressure on the grid as possible.
On Tuesday, Google unveiled a first-of-its-kind strategic partnership to do exactly that. The tech giant and its partners aim to build $20 billion in renewable-energy and energy-storage assets by 2030 that will be “colocated” with data centers.
Procuring carbon-free energy has become a top priority as Google and other major tech firms like Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta scramble to build the data centers required to achieve their artificial-intelligence visions. Sourcing enough carbon-free power to fuel these energy-intensive facilities is not easy given the country’s tangled and backlogged transmission grids, but it’s a necessity if these firms are to meet their ambitious clean energy targets.
Google’s partners in this effort are TPG Rise Climate, the climate investment arm of TPG, a private equity firm with $239 billion under management, and Intersect Power, an energy developer that’s raised more than $1 billion in equity and $5 billion in project finance with the express purpose of connecting gigawatts of solar, wind, and battery projects directly to massive new electricity loads — including data centers.
Intersect Power is already financing the partnership’s first colocated clean energy project, which is expected to start operating at an undisclosed site in 2026 and be fully complete by 2027. As part of Tuesday’s deal, Intersect Power also announced that it had raised more than $800 million in an equity investment round led by TPG Rise Climate and including Google and other current investors.
“We’re looking at siting next to power generation and creating these industrial parks — still connected to the grid at the substation or interconnection point, but removing the bottlenecks to bringing generation online and also loads online,” Amanda Peterson Corio, Google’s global head of data center energy, told Canary Media. “Where we can implement this strategy, we think it’s a great way to reduce grid stress and make new load as clean as possible.”
That’s the theory at least. To date, Intersect Power’s 2.2 gigawatts of solar and 2.4 gigawatt-hours of battery projects in California and Texas have all been grid-connected. Providing stable, round-the-clock power directly to data centers using solar and wind farms backed up by batteries, fossil-gas generators, and minimal grid power is a largely untested prospect.
But Intersect Power CEO Sheldon Kimber has insisted for years that much more cheap clean power will be needed than is currently being added to the grid because of the massive new electricity loads like data centers, green hydrogen production, direct air capture of carbon dioxide, electrification of industrial thermal loads, and large-scale EV-charging depots.
“We see this as BYOP — bring your own power,” Kimber told Canary Media. “And the more BYOP you can achieve, the lower the impact on the localized grid,” plus there’s “enormous positive impact on rural areas of building billions and billions of dollars of infrastructure.”
“In certain places in the country — the panhandle of Texas, Oklahoma, into Kansas — where the wind resource is good and the solar resource is good enough, with the addition of battery storage, you can get to a place where 80 percent-ish of the hours of the year are powered on-site by clean energy,” he said.
Building the data centers where the clean power is
To date, the challenge for Kimber’s vision has been convincing customers to locate big new projects in the parts of the country where wind and solar are most plentiful. But the boom in electricity demand from data centers has given Intersect Power a chance to put its theory into action.
New data from consultancy Grid Strategies finds that forecasts of new electricity demand on the U.S. grid have skyrocketed in the past two years from 23 gigawatts in 2022 to nearly 128 GW as of December 2024, with data centers driving the lion’s share of expected growth.
This surge is threatening the nation’s decarbonization goals as utilities plan to build gigawatts of new fossil-gas power plants and keep coal plants open longer to support it. It’s near impossible for utilities to add energy capacity at the speed tech firms desire; it can take up to five years to build and connect a new energy project, but only a year or so to bring a new data center online.
In a September report, the Sierra Club called on tech giants and data-center developers to demand cleaner alternatives from utilities and regulators, such as more renewable energy paired with batteries and more transmission lines to share clean power between regions, in order to prevent the data-center buildout from derailing climate goals. But it also called on large power users to site new loads in parts of the country where more clean power is available.
“It’s clear this AI boom is pushing utilities to build really, really fast,” Laurie Williams, director of the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal Campaign and co-author of the September report, told Canary Media. “And if you do want to build really fast” — and keep clean energy commitments, she added — “don’t go to constrained parts of the country.”
For its part, Google has pledged to power its data centers with round-the-clock carbon-free energy by 2030. That target is now threatened by Google’s growing appetite for power to feed its cloud-computing and AI ambitions and by the increasing challenge of getting new clean power built and connected to the grid. The company reported in July that its emissions rose 13 percent in 2023 from the previous year and 48 percent since 2019.