Meta just signed its eighteenth renewable energy deal this year, committing $100 million to a 100-megawatt solar farm that will power an $800 million AI data center in South Carolina. The move underscores how hyperscalers are racing to secure clean energy for their AI infrastructure boom, with both facilities expected online by 2027.
Meta just turbocharged its AI infrastructure strategy with a $100 million solar commitment that signals how seriously Big Tech is taking the energy crunch. The social media giant signed a deal with renewable developer Silicon Ranch yesterday for a 100-megawatt solar farm in South Carolina, directly powering an $800 million AI data center slated for the same state.
The timing reveals the infrastructure bottleneck plaguing AI expansion. While competitors scramble for power grid connections, Meta is essentially building its own energy supply chain. The solar farm and data center will both come online in 2027, creating a vertically integrated power solution that bypasses traditional utility constraints.
"Most of the equipment for the solar farm will be made in the U.S.," according to the companies, highlighting the domestic manufacturing angle that's become crucial for federal incentives and supply chain security. The deal marks Meta's eighteenth renewable agreement with Silicon Ranch, a partnership that has now driven over $2.5 billion in renewable investments.
The numbers tell the story of AI's energy appetite. Meta has added over 2 gigawatts of solar capacity in 2025 alone. In June, the company signed a deal with developer Invergy for several Ohio projects, while May brought a 650-megawatt agreement with AES spanning Kansas and Texas operations.
Texas has become Meta's renewable energy playground, with nearly 800 megawatts of additional solar capacity under development through partnerships with and . The aggressive expansion reflects two critical business drivers beyond environmental commitments.