ArtIn Energy, a utility-scale renewable energy developer, announced a definitive agreement for a $255 million investment from Agila Investments, a private platform focused on structured capital deployment across energy and infrastructure.
The company focuses on developing utility-scale solar, battery storage, green hydrogen, and e-methanol. The company also partners with industrial offtakers, utilities, and institutional investors to develop long-term contracted infrastructure assets.
According to the company, the investment will be used to fund its U.S. portfolio of utility-scale solar, battery storage, and green fuel projects. In addition, the funding will support late-stage development activities such as interconnection, engineering, procurement, and progress toward construction readiness.
The investment aligns with rapid U.S. renewable expansion driven by solar and battery storage, supported by federal incentives and long-term policy frameworks.
“Agila’s investment validates ArtIn’s institutional platform and disciplined capital strategy,” said Jhon Cohen, CEO of ArtIn Energy. “This partnership accelerates deployment of large-scale renewable infrastructure while maintaining strong governance and risk management.”
The company’s portfolio includes a Texas project with about $1.4 billion CAPEX and a Nebraska project with roughly $2.6 billion CAPEX, together implying an enterprise valuation near $14.5 billion, supported by long-term agreements with investment-grade counterparties ensuring stable cash flows and financing visibility.
The projects are supported by long-term agreements with investment-grade counterparties, providing predictable cash flows and strong financing visibility.
Rachel Lucero, President and CEO of Agila Investments, added, “ArtIn has built a sophisticated platform integrating solar, storage, and renewable fuels, aligned with U.S. energy priorities, grid resilience, and large-scale infrastructure deployment.”
In February 2026, Swift Current Energy, a company that develops, commercializes, owns, and operates utility-scale solar, wind, and energy storage projects, secured tax equity financing and $248 million in project financing for its 122 MWdc (100 MWac) Three Rivers solar project in eastern Maine, located in Hancock County.
Large-scale solar project funding increased by 37% in 2025 compared with the funding raised in 2024, according to Mercom’s recently released Annual and Q4 2025 Solar Funding and M&A report.