Aspen Power Raises $200 Million to Expand U.S. Distributed Solar, Storage Portfolio
• $200 million strategic capital commitment from Deutsche Bank to Aspen Power
• Financing aimed at accelerating U.S. distributed solar, storage, and community energy deployment
• Backed by Carlyle, Aspen targets rapid growth as investor demand for clean energy infrastructure intensifies
Aspen Power has secured a $200 million strategic capital commitment from Deutsche Bank, in a deal that underscores accelerating demand for distributed clean energy infrastructure across U.S. markets. The financing bolsters the Carlyle backed platform’s balance sheet and expands its capacity to originate, develop, and deploy solar and storage projects as competition for clean energy capital tightens.
The company said the capital will support development activities, vendor partnerships, and project build outs across its national pipeline, with a focus on community solar, commercial and industrial rooftops, small utility scale sites, and co located storage.
Financial Positioning for a Distributed Energy Build Out
Executives positioned the transaction as a step change in Aspen Power’s ability to scale, arguing that the financing provides flexibility at a time when the U.S. market is shifting toward localized energy solutions and greater investor scrutiny of project discipline.
“This financing represents an important milestone for Aspen Power and reflects the strength and maturity of the platform we have built,” said Jorge Vargas, Co Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Aspen Power. “Aspen has consistently earned the trust of leading financial institutions by deploying capital with discipline and executing reliably across a growing national portfolio. We are pleased to welcome Deutsche Bank as a partner alongside other leading financial institutions, and we believe this commitment further strengthens our ability to originate, develop, and deliver high quality distributed solar and storage projects at scale.”

From an institutional lender’s perspective, the transaction points to rising confidence in distributed assets as an investable clean energy class amid improved storage economics, stronger customer demand, and policy incentives under the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act.
“Deutsche Bank recognizes the growing demand for distributed clean energy and the related need for flexible development capital,” said Jeremy Eisman, Head of Infrastructure and Energy Financing at Deutsche Bank. “We believe Aspen Power’s strategy and execution are well aligned with the transition to a low carbon future, and we are proud to join Carlyle in supporting Aspen’s next phase of growth and development.”

Portfolio Expansion and Investor Alignment
Aspen Power has expanded its project footprint over the past year in New York, Illinois, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, markets where state policies and customer interest have strengthened community and commercial solar economics. The company’s model integrates origination, development, construction, and asset ownership, which allows it to capture value across the clean energy chain and appeal to project finance investors seeking stable cash flows.
“Earning the support of an institution like Deutsche Bank speaks to the rigor of Aspen Power’s financial framework and execution capabilities,” said Bill DeLong, Chief Financial Officer of Aspen Power. “This capital enhances our ability to manage growth thoughtfully, partner effectively with vendors, and deliver projects that meet the expectations of our investors and lenders.”

Carlyle, a long standing backer of Aspen Power, framed the financing as validation of the platform’s ability to manage risk and scale in competitive markets.
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“Aspen Power has built a strong, resilient, and well capitalized platform positioned to meet growing demand for distributed solar and storage nationwide,” said Saurabh Anand, Managing Director at Carlyle. “Over the past several years, the company has demonstrated disciplined growth, rigorous market selection, and consistent execution across an expanding national footprint. We are pleased to welcome Deutsche Bank as a partner as Aspen enters its next phase of expansion, and we believe this additional scale will strengthen the company’s ability to deliver high quality projects.”

What C Suite and Investors Will Watch
For energy executives and climate focused investors, the transaction highlights several trends. First, distributed solar is moving into mainstream infrastructure allocations as financiers seek assets that offer both climate alignment and predictable returns. Second, corporate demand for behind the meter power and community access models continues to rise, driven by energy price volatility, decarbonization targets, and reliability concerns. Finally, capital structure flexibility is becoming a critical differentiator as developers navigate vendor bottlenecks and supply chain constraints.
Broader Implications for Clean Energy Markets
The deal lands amid sustained growth in U.S. solar deployment and a shift away from centralized generation models. Declining module costs, growing storage integration, and supportive state level policies have allowed distributed platforms to compete with utility scale procurement. The financing also reflects a competitive landscape in which global banks and private equity firms are racing to secure exposure to energy transition assets.
With Deutsche Bank’s commitment in place, Aspen Power is positioned to accelerate deployment and expand customer access across regional markets. The move adds momentum to distributed solar’s broader role in U.S. decarbonization and offers another data point that institutional capital continues to flow toward climate aligned infrastructure.
The global relevance lies in the finance dynamics. Distributed assets are attracting serious lenders as policymakers, corporates, and investors seek durable transition pathways. That shift is strengthening competition among developers and shaping how capital allocators evaluate climate risk and growth potential.
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