TORONTO (Realist English). Brookfield Asset Management has closed a $20bn fund dedicated to energy transition projects, one of the largest private investment vehicles of its kind, as soaring electricity demand from artificial intelligence accelerates global interest in clean power infrastructure.
The Brookfield Global Transition Fund II attracted commitments from both existing and new investors, including $2bn from Alterra, the Abu Dhabi-backed climate fund launched two years ago, and $1.5bn from Norges Bank Investment Management, Norway’s sovereign wealth fund. Brookfield Corporation, the asset manager’s parent company, will contribute roughly one-quarter of the total capital, according to a person familiar with the matter.
More than $5bn from the new fund has already been invested in renewable assets, including last year’s $6.6bn acquisition of French developer Neoen, a leader in solar, wind and battery storage. The Neoen deal drew an additional $3.5bn in co-investments from partners such as Temasek Holdings of Singapore.
Brookfield also purchased the former U.K. National Grid Renewables U.S. onshore business earlier this year, rebranding it as Geronimo Power, and injected new capital into Everen, its joint venture in India developing wind, solar and battery projects alongside Alterra.
The fund will also target longer-term clean technologies such as nuclear power and carbon capture and storage. Brookfield’s previous energy transition fund, which raised $15bn, included a joint investment in U.S. nuclear group Westinghouse with Canadian uranium miner Cameco.
“This second transition fund advances our strategy of investing in technologies that can deliver clean, abundant and low-cost energy to underpin the global economy,” said Connor Teskey, president of Brookfield Asset Management.
Teskey said the surge in energy demand was being driven by “the explosive growth of artificial intelligence” and the electrification of industry and transportation. “We need an ‘any and all’ approach to energy investment that continues to favor low-carbon resources,” he added.
The fund’s launch comes amid a sharp rise in global power consumption, fuelled by construction of data centers to support AI workloads and the shift toward electric vehicles and industrial electrification. The resulting strain on grids has triggered a new wave of investment in generation, transmission and storage infrastructure worldwide.
Brookfield’s move contrasts sharply with the skepticism of U.S. President Donald Trump, who recently called renewable energy a “joke” and a “green scam” in a speech at the United Nations. But for investors, the AI revolution has turned clean power from a climate goal into an economic necessity — and Brookfield is positioning itself at the center of that transformation.














