Google completes US$4.75 billion Intersect Power acquisition, initial focus on California & Texas solar-plus-storage

LinkedIn
Twitter
Reddit
Facebook
Email

Google has finalised its acquisition of US renewable energy developer Intersect Power, as part of its plan to power its data centre expansions in the US.

The tech giant has completed its US$4.75 billion purchase of asset manager TPG Rise Climate’s share of Intersect, closing a transaction that began in December 2025.

In tandem with Google’s assumption of Intersect, the company’s lead shareholders, including TPG, Google, Climate Adaptive Infrastructure (CAI), and Greenbelt Capital Partners, have spun off Intersect’s grid-tied power business into a new independent power producer (IPP), IPX Power. The new entity will focus on co-located solar and battery energy storage system (BESS) projects, primarily across Texas and California.

“Google’s recognition of Intersect’s unique capabilities underscores the strength of its platform,” said Jamie Gilbert, business unit partner at TPG Rise Climate.

This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription

Try Premium for just $1

  • Full premium access for the first month at only $1
  • Converts to an annual rate after 30 days unless cancelled
  • Cancel anytime during the trial period

Premium Benefits

  • Expert industry analysis and interviews
  • Digital access to PV Tech Power journal
  • Exclusive event discounts

Or get the full Premium subscription right away

Or continue reading this article for free

The acquisition is a significant step in the role that big tech firms are playing in the US power sector. Big tech companies like Google, Amazon and Meta have been the biggest corporate buyers of power—particularly solar power—in the US over recent years, as they look to secure power for their expansive data centre operations.

The acquisition gives Google a “scalable model for meeting growing compute demand”, TPG said, and will allow the co-location of power sources with data centres. The company has said it will invest US$40 billion in building three data centres in Texas through 2027, and in its earnings call earlier this month CEO Sundar Pichai said the company would spend US$185 billion on AI-related capital expenditure this year.

Last week, big tech bosses gathered at a White House meeting with president Donald Trump where he announced a ‘ratepayer protection pledge’, which will require companies to provide, build or buy their own energy to power data centre development. Google, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, Oracle, OpenAI and xAI have all signed the pledge, which, in principle, will see them coordinate arrangements with grid operators, state governments and utilities.

To read the full version of this story, visit PV Tech.

Read Next

June 12, 2026
Japanese consumer electronics giant Panasonic intends to convert its electric vehicle (EV) battery cell manufacturing facility in Kansas, US, to produce batteries for data centre applications, beginning Q3 of 2029.
Premium
June 12, 2026
Energy-Storage.news Premium speaks with Scott Blalock, general manager, integrated applications engineering, at BESS integrator Wärtsilä Energy Storage.
June 10, 2026
EDP and SRP complete 200MW/800MWh Arizona BESS, Pathway Power closes $150m facility, and B2U secures Waymo supply deal for second-life EV batteries in grid storage.
June 10, 2026
General Motors (GM) has partnered with sodium-ion (Na-ion) battery storage startup Peak Energy to target the grid-scale energy storage market.
Premium
June 9, 2026
ESN Premium speaks with Dr Thomas Sisto, of flow battery developer XL Batteries, about using LDES to combat grid strain from heatwaves and data centres.