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Brookfield Secures $20B for Record-Breaking Energy Transition Fund

Brookfield Secures $20B for Record-Breaking Energy Transition Fund

Brookfield Secures $20B for Record-Breaking Energy Transition Fund


• Brookfield Global Transition Fund II closes at $20 billion, the largest private climate transition fund to date.
• Additional $3.5 billion in co-investment brings total raised to $23.5 billion.
• Over $5 billion already deployed across global renewable, battery, and clean technology projects.

Brookfield’s Record Fund Targets Global Decarbonization Push

Toronto-based Brookfield Asset Management has closed its second Global Transition Fund (BGTF II) with $20 billion in institutional commitments—making it the largest private fund ever dedicated to financing the global energy transition. The fund surpassed its predecessor’s $15 billion record, reinforcing investor demand for scalable, low-carbon infrastructure in an era of accelerating industrial electrification and energy demand.

The firm said the new capital came from a mix of returning and first-time institutional investors, including sovereign wealth funds and major asset owners. Among them are ALTÉRRA with a $2 billion commitment and Norges Bank Investment Management with $1.5 billion.

In addition to the core fund, Brookfield has secured roughly $3.5 billion in co-investments, bringing total capital raised across the strategy to $23.5 billion.

Investments Already Underway

Brookfield said more than $5 billion from the new fund has already been deployed across projects spanning renewables, storage, and transition technologies. Its portfolio includes:

  • Neoen, a global renewable power and battery storage operator that Brookfield took private earlier this year.
  • Geronimo Power, a U.S.-based large-scale energy developer with significant operations and projects across key domestic power markets.
  • Evren, a joint venture in India aimed at developing more than 10 GW of wind, solar, and storage capacity to support the country’s clean energy buildout.

Connor Teskey, President of Brookfield Asset Management and CEO for Renewable Power & Transition, said growing electricity demand driven by artificial intelligence, manufacturing reshoring, and transport electrification is reshaping global investment priorities.

Energy demand is growing fast, driven by the growth of artificial intelligence as well as electrification in industry and transportation. Against this backdrop we need an ‘any and all’ approach to energy investment that will continue to favor low carbon resources,” Teskey said. “Our strategy will succeed by investing in the technologies that will deliver clean, abundant, and low-cost energy and transition solutions that underpin the global economy.”

Building on Its Predecessor

Brookfield’s first transition fund, BGTF I, raised $15 billion and was deployed across a broad mix of climate-related assets, from renewable power to carbon capture and sustainable aviation fuel. It also invested in nuclear services through its majority stake in Westinghouse Electric, one of the world’s leading nuclear technology providers.

Those investments have positioned Brookfield as one of the most active players in private climate finance, alongside BlackRock, TPG Rise Climate, and EQT. With BGTF II, the firm aims to deepen its global footprint across growth markets such as India, Southeast Asia, and Latin America—regions that are drawing increased investor attention for large-scale decarbonization opportunities.

RELATED ARTICLE: Brookfield Raises $10 Billion for Pioneering Global Transition Fund II

Corporate Demand Driving Capital Flows

Brookfield’s transition strategy is also buoyed by surging corporate demand for clean power. The firm recently signed framework energy supply agreements with Microsoft and Google, which it described as the largest ever in wind, solar, and hydroelectricity procurement. Such deals reflect how tech companies are becoming major anchors for clean energy offtake agreements—essential to accelerating renewable deployment and stabilizing returns for investors.

The company expects industrial energy use to rise sharply over the coming decade as sectors ranging from data centers to transport fleets shift toward electrified and low-emission systems. Brookfield’s approach combines equity ownership, project development, and operational partnerships with utilities, governments, and corporates to de-risk assets and scale infrastructure.

A New Benchmark for Private Climate Capital

BGTF II’s record close signals how investor appetite for transition-focused funds has evolved from niche sustainability plays to core infrastructure allocations. For institutional investors, the strategy offers both yield and exposure to structural growth in clean energy demand.

The fund’s scale also underscores the rising role of private capital in delivering climate finance where public funds and multilateral institutions face constraints. With trillions required annually to meet 2030 net-zero pathways, Brookfield’s latest close sets a new benchmark for private-sector participation in the decarbonization economy.

As policymakers recalibrate energy and industrial strategies to balance affordability, reliability, and climate goals, Brookfield’s platform exemplifies how global asset managers are positioning to finance that transition at scale. The challenge ahead will be ensuring that record capital commitments translate into equally swift and durable deployment.

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