- Iberdrola (Avangrid) now has 11,000 MW of U.S. generation capacity.
- Nearly 100 facilities across 25 states supply enough electricity for over 7 million Americans annually.
- Five recent projects added 850 MW: True North (321 MW, TX), Camino Solar (57 MW, CA), Daybreak+Bakeoven (269 MW, OR) and Powell Creek (202 MW, OH).
- Group plans €16 billion investment in the U.S. for 2025–2028, split €12 billion for transmission/distribution and €4 billion for new generation.
Capacity milestone
Iberdrola has reached 11,000 MW of installed generation capacity in the United States, operating nearly 100 facilities across 25 states through its Avangrid subsidiary; this capacity exceeds the total installed capacity of nine EU member states and can meet the annual electricity demand of over 7 million Americans.
Recent project additions
Five projects commissioned recently added 850 MW: True North (321 MW, Texas), Camino Solar (57 MW, California), Daybreak and Bakeoven Solar combined (269 MW, Oregon) and Powell Creek (202 MW, Ohio).
Demand and pipeline
Commissioning comes amid rising electricity demand from households, industry and data centres, and the company says it has a project pipeline to continue expanding generation capacity to address that growth.
Investment and operations
The group plans €16 billion of investment in the U.S. for 2025-2028—€12 billion for transmission and distribution networks and €4 billion for new generation; through Avangrid it holds over €50 billion in U.S. assets, supplies energy to nearly 8 million customers, employs about 8,500 people and supports roughly 70,000 supply-chain jobs.