Intersect Power has secured $837 million to develop 1 GWh of battery energy storage systems (BESS) in Texas—an award-winning transaction that signals how utility-scale storage is evolving to serve not only grid stability but also the growing energy demands of artificial intelligence infrastructure.
The financing, recognized as Deal of the Year by the 2024 Energy Risk Awards, underscores a broader market shift toward integrated renewables and storage solutions capable of responding to increasingly volatile power markets. Intersect Power’s deal spans three standalone BESS projects and was closed within a six-month window—a pace notably faster than traditional project finance timelines.
While the company has not disclosed project-level specifics, the 1 GWh combined capacity positions the portfolio among the top echelon of U.S. battery deployments. By comparison, total operational BESS capacity in the U.S. reached approximately 14.5 GWh by late 2023, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). Intersect’s portfolio alone would represent nearly 7% of that figure, suggesting a significant near-term contribution to system flexibility in ERCOT, a market increasingly strained by renewable penetration and peaking demand.
Intersect’s BESS assets are designed to function not only as arbitrage instruments—charging during low-price periods and discharging at peak—but as reliability tools that can absorb the operational uncertainty introduced by growing solar and wind penetration. Their co-location with renewables enhances grid response capacity and qualifies them for investment tax credits under the Inflation Reduction Act, a critical driver for deal bankability.
This transaction also serves as a strategic foundation for Intersect’s next phase of growth: a planned build-out of 4 GW of solar PV and 10 GWh of storage beginning in 2025. The company values this pipeline at $9 billion, a figure that underscores the scale of capital formation now required to meet the energy intensity of data-driven applications such as generative AI. According to a 2024 estimate by the International Energy Agency, AI data centers could drive a 160% increase in global electricity demand from data centers by 2030. In this context, grid-connected storage is no longer ancillary—it is becoming integral to power delivery reliability.
Intersect’s rapid project execution stands in contrast to the delays affecting many BESS projects, often due to interconnection bottlenecks, supply chain constraints, or protracted permitting. While the U.S. storage market saw a 50% year-on-year increase in installations in 2023, much of this momentum remains concentrated in a handful of players capable of managing high financial complexity and multi-layered risk.
By securing this deal in under six months, Intersect Power has not only demonstrated capital market confidence in large-scale BESS, but also offered a replicable framework for accelerating grid decarbonization in high-growth zones. The real test, however, will be operational: ensuring that megawatt-hours translate into capacity value at the nodal level—especially in markets like Texas where price spikes, not regulatory support, drive return on investment.
Stay updated on the latest in energy! Follow us on LinkedIn, Facebook, and X for real-time news and insights. Don’t miss out on exclusive interviews and webinars—subscribe to our YouTube channel today! Join our community and be part of the conversation shaping the future of energy.