Based in Hamburg, MN projects GmbH is developing over 70 renewable energy sites across Germany. The multi-gigawatt portfolio includes solar farms and battery storage projects, with the first ready to build and more set to reach that stage this year and beyond.
Once up and running, these projects can deliver enough solar energy to power 500,000 German homes – around every household in Frankfurt – and unlock battery storage capacity for an additional 150,000 homes.
MN is bringing green energy to coal-heavy regions like Saxony and Lower Saxony, supporting the country’s ambitious target of 80 percent renewable electricity by 2030.
The deal was made through the Octopus Energy Development Partnership (OEDP), a fund that invests in clean energy across Europe to replace costly and polluting fossil fuels. It is Octopus’ ninth investment in Germany in less than three years, bringing it closer to its 1 billion euros investment goal by 2027.
It follows last year’s investment in Lintas Green Energy – a developer building 1 GW of new wind and solar farms across Germany by 2030. That’s alongside the 300 MW of solar, onshore and offshore wind projects Octopus already manages in the country.
In addition to expanding its generation portfolio, Octopus Energy Group is rapidly scaling its energy supply business in Germany, now supplying over 800,000 customers – a 100 percent increase compared to this time last year.
Octopus is also expanding its pioneering ‘Fan Club’ model, which slashes energy bills for people living near wind farms. With two sites live and more coming, this initiative is bringing affordable, locally generated green power to more households across Germany.
“Solar is now the fastest-growing sector in Germany’s renewables mix” said Zoisa North-Bond, CEO of Octopus Energy Generation. “And with Germany racing towards 80 percent renewable electricity by 2030, investments like this are essential to meet this goal. By partnering with MN projects GmbH, we’re accelerating the shift from fossil fuels to solar energy and battery storage. These solutions will power German homes sustainably for years whilst helping to balance the grid, driving a greener future for the country and beyond.”
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