Microsoft, Iberdrola Sign 150 MW Spain PPAs To Scale Clean Power And AI Deployment
• Microsoft and Iberdrola have signed two long term wind PPAs in Spain covering 150 MW, extending a transatlantic clean power portfolio to around 500 MW.
• The deal links renewable energy procurement with large scale AI deployment, cloud migration and digital resilience across Iberdrola’s global operations.
• The partnership aligns hyperscale electricity demand growth with full decarbonization, offering a model for data driven energy transition strategies in Europe.
Microsoft and Iberdrola have deepened their global partnership with the signing of two long term power purchase agreements in Spain, pairing renewable energy supply with expanded collaboration on artificial intelligence, cloud infrastructure and digital resilience.
The agreements cover 150 MW of wind capacity from the Iglesias wind farm in Burgos and the El Escudo wind farm in Cantabria. They mark the first PPAs signed by the two companies in Europe and extend a relationship that already spans multiple US states and nearly half a gigawatt of contracted renewable capacity.
For Microsoft, the Spanish PPAs directly support its goal of operating on 100 percent renewable energy in Europe, in line with its global decarbonisation commitments. For Iberdrola, the deal reinforces its role as a preferred clean power partner for energy intensive digital infrastructure at a time when electricity demand from data centres and AI workloads is rising sharply.
A Transatlantic Clean Power Portfolio
The new Spanish contracts sit alongside three existing PPAs signed between Microsoft and Avangrid, Iberdrola’s US subsidiary, between 2021 and 2025. Those agreements cover Powell Creek Solar in Ohio, Camino Solar in California and the Juniper Canyon wind farm in Washington.
Taken together, Microsoft and Iberdrola now have PPA contracts totalling around 500 MW across the United States and Europe. The scale matters. Long term PPAs are increasingly central to how large technology companies manage power price risk, meet climate targets and secure additional renewable capacity in competitive markets.
The European dimension is particularly significant. Corporate PPAs remain unevenly developed across the continent, and deals of this size help strengthen market confidence while supporting national and regional renewable build out.
AI, Cloud And Grid Ready Operations
Beyond clean electricity supply, the partnership places AI and cloud infrastructure at the centre of Iberdrola’s operating model. The group will continue expanding its use of Microsoft Azure, alongside data, AI and security solutions, to accelerate the deployment of artificial intelligence across its global businesses.
Iberdrola has already migrated critical systems from multiple business areas to Azure, reflecting a broader push to strengthen operational resilience, regulatory compliance and real time decision making across grids, generation and customer services.
Microsoft Copilot and other AI driven tools are expected to support productivity, predictive maintenance and system optimisation as the utility navigates increasingly complex power systems shaped by renewables, electrification and decentralised assets.
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Beyond Power: Heat, Land And New Technologies
The partnership also opens the door to collaboration beyond PPAs. The companies will explore opportunities linked to waste heat recovery in Spain, including the use of heat from data centres in Zaragoza, as well as electrified land use, carbon credits and emerging technologies such as hydrogen and battery storage.
These initiatives could extend across Iberdrola’s footprint in Europe, the United States, Brazil and Australia, reflecting a shared interest in integrated energy solutions rather than standalone power contracts.
Executive Perspective And Strategic Signal
“This partnership with Iberdrola is a strong commitment to speeding up the energy transition and digital transformation in the industry,” said Samer Abu-Ltaif, President of Microsoft for Europe, the Middle East and Africa. “By combining Iberdrola’s leadership in renewable energy with Microsoft’s cutting edge cloud and AI technologies, we’re not only advancing our sustainability goals, we’re also driving innovation and resilience for our customers and communities. Together, we’re setting a new standard for how technology and energy can drive positive change at scale.”

Aitor Moso, director of Iberdrola’s global customer business, framed the agreement as a response to rising electricity demand tied to digital growth. “This partnership will accelerate the adoption of AI across the Iberdrola Group to strengthen our leading digital capabilities and expand our renewable PPA portfolio with Microsoft, in line with both companies’ strong commitment to combining major growth in electricity consumption with full decarbonisation,” he said. “We’re pleased to announce today the signing of our first two PPAs in Europe, expanding our global partnership.”

What Leaders Should Take Away
For C suite executives and investors, the deal illustrates how clean power procurement, digital infrastructure and AI strategy are converging. As data centres reshape electricity demand profiles, partnerships that align renewable supply, grid readiness and advanced analytics are becoming a core element of corporate climate and risk strategies.
Microsoft and Iberdrola’s expanded alliance offers a blueprint for how energy and technology leaders can scale growth while keeping decarbonisation firmly intact, with Europe now firmly part of that equation.
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