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ADQ and US equity firm ECP to invest $25bn in data center energy projects

The partners will initially invest $5bn. (WAM)
  • Though the partnership’s primary focus will be the USA, a portion of the capital may also be allocated towards opportunities in selected other international markets.
  •  The combined initial capital contribution from the partners is expected to amount to $5 billion.

Dubai, UAE —  Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund ADQ has partnered with the American private equity firm Energy Capital Partners to invest more than $25 billion in 25 GW worth of energy projects to power data centers, mostly in the United States.

ADQ and ECP, the largest private owner of power generation and renewables in the USA, will establish a 50-50 partnership service the growing power needs of data centers, hyperscale cloud companies and other energy-intensive industries, ADQ said in a statement.

As the continuity and quality of power supply is crucial for these high-growth industries, the need for captive power plants that are in proximity is often a pre-requisite. The partnership is focused on meeting these needs over the long-term, with its mandate including greenfield development, new build and expansion opportunity projects that will establish it as a leader in power generation for a growing American economy, the statement said.

Though the partnership’s primary geographic focus of the projects will be the USA, a portion of the capital may also be allocated towards opportunities in selected other international markets, it added.

 The combined initial capital contribution from the partners is expected to amount to $5 billion.

Led by a highly experienced management team with strong expertise in power and infrastructure development and operations, the joint venture is primed to begin pursuing development opportunities immediately. Specialized teams in development and operations will ensure rapid origination and efficient commissioning of relevant projects, the statement said.

Mohamed Hassan Alsuwaidi, Minister of Investment, Managing Director and Group Chief Executive Officer of ADQ, said: “The acceleration of AI and its societal adoption presents attractive opportunities to serve the power and infrastructure needs of data centers and hyperscalers. Meeting these power needs presents evolving challenges for governments worldwide in ensuring secure, stable, and commercially competitive electricity supply. As an active investor with a sharp focus on critical infrastructure and proven capability in building long-term partnerships, we are in a prime position to help address these shifting structural dynamics. Our partnership with ECP allows us to invest meaningfully in generation and related infrastructure assets that support accelerating demand for power, promoting the progress of these industries and helping to future-proof economies.”

Doug Kimmelman, ECP’s Founder and Executive Chairman, commented: “AI will be a major driver of US economic and job growth over the coming decade, but not unless ample new electricity supplies are developed. We are honored to build an investing partnership with ADQ to provide the electricity resources demanded by the rapidly growing AI data center sector where the build out of new power generation resources or ‘additionality’ in the US will require significant, patient capital with a long-term horizon. Given the tightening supply/demand dynamics in US power markets, new generation capacity will be needed and our focus in this partnership will therefore primarily be on new build natural gas fired power generation assets in scale to meet the needs of hyperscalers on a timely basis.”

ADQ manages over 25 portfolio companies across more than 130 countries, operating across key sectors of Abu Dhabi’s rapidly transforming economy, including energy and utilities, food and agriculture, healthcare and life sciences, and transport and logistics. Infrastructure investments have been at the core of ADQ’s mandate since it received its first asset transfers from the Government of Abu Dhabi, which included major power and water companies.