• Alphabet will acquire Intersect for $4.75 billion in cash plus assumed debt, securing long-term clean power capacity for AI driven data centre growth across the US.
• Intersect controls a 10.8 GW pipeline of operating and in-development projects by 2028, highlighting the scale of electricity demand tied to generative AI.
• The deal reinforces Big Tech’s role in reshaping US power markets as grid constraints intensify and corporate demand increasingly drives new clean energy buildout.
Alphabet’s latest energy bet comes as artificial intelligence begins to redraw the economics of electricity.
On Monday, the Google parent said it would acquire US clean energy developer Intersect for $4.75 billion in cash, plus assumed debt, in a move designed to secure the power capacity needed to support rapidly expanding data centre operations. The transaction places Alphabet among a growing group of technology companies investing directly in generation and storage assets as generative AI drives unprecedented electricity demand.
AI And The Power Constraint
Across the United States, utilities and grid operators are struggling to keep pace with the load growth associated with hyperscale data centres. Generative AI training and inference workloads are energy intensive, continuous and geographically concentrated. For technology firms racing to scale AI capabilities, access to reliable power is increasingly a strategic constraint rather than a background operating cost.
Alphabet said the acquisition would bring Intersect’s energy and data centre projects that are either in development or under construction into its orbit. Intersect currently has around $15 billion of assets operating or under construction. By 2028, the company expects projects representing roughly 10.8 gigawatts of power to be online or in development, a level of capacity that dwarfs most single-source power assets in the US and exceeds 20 times the electricity produced by the Hoover Dam.
Deal Structure And Asset Scope
Under the terms announced, Intersect’s operations will remain separate from Alphabet. Certain assets are explicitly excluded from the transaction. Intersect’s existing operating assets in Texas, as well as its operating and in-development assets in California, will not be part of the acquisition and will continue to operate as an independent company backed by existing investors.
Texas remains a focal point for Alphabet’s clean energy strategy. Intersect’s Texas portfolio includes Quantum, a clean energy storage system being built directly alongside a Google data centre campus. Co-locating storage and generation with data centres reflects a broader industry shift toward on-site or near-site power solutions that reduce reliance on congested transmission networks.
Alphabet said Intersect would also explore a range of emerging technologies to increase and diversify energy supply while supporting Google’s US data centre investments.
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Building On Existing Energy Partnerships
The acquisition builds on Alphabet’s recent activity in the energy sector. Earlier this month, utility giant NextEra Energy expanded its partnership with Google Cloud to develop new energy supplies for the company’s operations across the US. That agreement focused on enabling incremental generation capacity tied directly to Google’s growing digital infrastructure footprint.
Alphabet, alongside TPG Rise Climate, had already backed Intersect as part of a funding round of more than $800 million in December last year. That earlier investment included plans to develop industrial parks capable of hosting gigawatts of data centre capacity co-located with new clean energy plants, signalling a long-term strategy to integrate power development with compute infrastructure.
Implications For Policy, Markets And ESG
For policymakers and regulators, the deal underscores the growing influence of corporate buyers in shaping the future of US power systems. As grid expansion lags demand growth, large technology firms are stepping into roles traditionally occupied by utilities and independent power producers.
For investors, the transaction highlights how clean energy assets are being revalued not only for their decarbonisation credentials but for their strategic importance to AI-driven economic growth. Control over generation capacity is becoming a hedge against power price volatility, grid delays and regulatory uncertainty.
From an ESG and climate perspective, Alphabet’s move reinforces the alignment between decarbonisation goals and corporate energy security. By directing capital toward clean generation and storage at scale, technology companies are accelerating buildout timelines that utilities alone may struggle to deliver.
As AI reshapes global energy demand, Alphabet’s Intersect acquisition offers a clear signal of where the balance of power is shifting, toward companies willing to finance, develop and integrate the infrastructure required to keep digital economies running.
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