Invenergy is toasting a milestone of having developed over 30GW of renewable energy and thermal generation projects over its 20-year history.
Invenergy’s 30GW-plus portfolio comprises nearly 200 contracted, constructed and operating clean energy projects spread across four continents.
These projects include some of the world’s largest solar and wind farms, energy storage, transmission infrastructure and also modern thermal generation power plants.
Invenergy’s 30GW-plus of projects includes the 998MW Traverse Wind Energy Center, in Oklahoma, the largest wind farm constructed in a single phase in the US.
Traverse is one of three Invenergy-developed and built wind projects that make up the North Central Energy Facilities, with a combined capacity of 1484MW.
Others include the largest solar project in the US, the 1310MW Samson Solar Energy Center, in north-east Texas, which is under construction.
Invenergy is behind the only American-led offshore wind lease in the New York Bight, the 2GW Leading Light Wind project.
“Two decades ago, we set out to change the landscape of the energy industry and we have continued to lead the transition by combining deep technical expertise, strong partnerships, and a dedicated team with a clear vision,” said Michael Polsky, Invenergy founder and CEO.
Invenergy’s portfolio is broken down as 17GW of wind (110 projects), 6GW of solar (50 projects), over 1GW of energy storage (18 projects) as well as 6GW of thermal generation (18 projects).
Invenergy Services, a subsidiary, now operates 16GW across diverse technologies and markets across 92 projects.
Invenergy has raised more than $50bn of private capital to support its growth.
“We’ve pushed the boundaries of clean and renewable energy and leveraged decades of development, financing, and engineering experience to achieve this historic milestone,” said Jim Murphy, Invenergy president and corporate business leader.
“We’ve taken educated risks where others have held back, and over the last two decades our efforts, and those of our strategic partners, have accelerated the transition to a cleaner energy economy in ways no one could have imagined.
“As we look to the next 20 years, we see an unprecedented level of attention, focus, and investment in this space.”


