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Brookfield Makes $1.7 Billion Renewables Bet on Increasing AI, Data Power Needs


These translations are done via Google Translate

Announces deal to buy National Grid’s U.S. onshore renewables business including solar parks and onshore wind farms

By Rachel Morison and William Mathis

Brookfield Asset Management Ltd. agreed to spend US$1.7 billion in a deal to expand its U.S. onshore renewables business as the company bets there will be increasing demand for electricity from data centres and artificial intelligence.

The transaction with the United Kingdom’s National Grid PLC indicates investors are still confident in robust power consumption growth from technology companies, despite concerns that computing needs may be lower than some expect and that AI such as China’s DeepSeek requires less energy.

The agreement with National Grid gives Brookfield a portfolio of operating projects and others in advanced stages of development. It follows a record-setting deal last year to provide clean energy to Microsoft Corp.

“We’ve gone through earnings announcements for the large U.S. tech companies, and this is post the DeepSeek announcement, and all of them have reaffirmed their data centre strategy,” Jeh Vevaina, global chief investment officer of Brookfield’s renewable power and transition group, said in an interview. “That demand is not slowing down. In fact, it’s ramping up quite significantly.”

The transaction is expected to be completed in the first half of the financial year ending March 31, 2026, according to Monday’s statement. It’s part of a £6.8 billion (US$8.6 billion) capital raise program announced by National Grid last year to fund investments in the Britain’s power network.

National Grid shares rose two per cent in London.

The deal also comes as developers wait for news about the durability of tax incentives enshrined in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) passed by former president Joe Biden.

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So far, President Donald Trump’s actions have mainly targeted offshore wind. The executive branch has less ability to unilaterally affect facilities that are mostly built on private land and supported by leaders in both major political parties.

While amendments to Biden’s landmark climate law may affect early-stage developments, Brookfield’s Vevaina doesn’t expect it to have an impact on returns of the National Grid Renewables investment. Rather, it’s a moment in green investing that benefits players with scale and conviction.

“Renewables is not driven by government policy any longer,” he said. “It’s driven by corporate demand.”

The valuation for National Grid’s U.S. renewables portfolio was at the low end of comparable transactions, likely reflecting overhang from Trump’s targeting of the IRA, said Patricio Alvarez, a utilities analyst for Bloomberg Intelligence.

The deal is the latest major investment by Brookfield in renewable power, following its ÂŁ1.75 billion stake in U.K. offshore wind farms last year.

National Grid’s renewables division develops, constructs, owns and operates large solar parks, onshore wind farms and battery storage assets in the U.S. It has 1.8 gigawatts in operation and another 1.3 gigawatts under construction.

The British firm is keeping other parts of its business, including the power and natural gas networks it owns in New York and Massachusetts that serve more than 20 million people.

It also has a joint venture with Germany’s RWE AG to develop offshore wind in the U.S. Northeast.

—With assistance from Josh Saul.

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