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Meta Locks in 250 MW Arkansas Solar Deal, Extends 2025 Clean‑Energy Lead

Meta's new 250 MW Arkansas solar PPA raises its 2025 renewable portfolio to 10.24 GW, keeping it the top corporate clean‑energy buyer.

Elena Voss/3 min/US

Business & Markets Editor

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Meta signed a 250‑MW power purchase agreement for the Cypress Knee Solar project in Arkansas, raising its 2025 clean‑energy procurement to 10.24 GW and keeping it ahead of rivals.

Context Meta, the parent of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, has pledged to match 100 % of the electricity used by its data centers and offices with renewable sources and to reach net‑zero emissions across its value chain by 2030. The company’s clean‑energy strategy relies on long‑term power purchase agreements (PPAs), contracts that lock in a fixed price for electricity generated by a specific project.

Key Facts - Meta entered a PPA with EDP Renewables North America for the 250‑MW Cypress Knee Solar project near Lake Village, Arkansas. The project will cost roughly $400 million and is slated for completion in 2028. - The solar farm will generate enough power for more than 43,400 homes, feeding new renewable capacity into the Arkansas grid. - Amanda Yang, Meta’s Head of Clean and Renewable Energy, said the deal will create local jobs and deliver economic benefits to the community. - The agreement doubles the total capacity Meta has procured from EDP Renewables to 545 MW. - BloombergNEF reports that Meta will be the world’s largest corporate buyer of clean energy in 2025, with 10.24 GW of renewable contracts secured.

What It Means The Arkansas deal reinforces Meta’s position as the leading corporate purchaser of renewable power, a status that gives the company leverage in negotiating future PPAs and signals strong demand for large‑scale solar projects in the United States. By adding 250 MW, Meta pushes its 2025 renewable portfolio past the 10‑GW threshold, a benchmark that few corporations have reached.

For the Arkansas region, the project promises a boost to the local economy through construction jobs and long‑term operations staffing. The infusion of solar capacity also supports grid reliability, a priority for utilities facing increasing demand and climate‑related stress.

Meta’s continued investment in solar aligns with its broader net‑zero goal and demonstrates how tech giants can drive renewable growth through corporate procurement. The partnership with EDP Renewables suggests that future deals may focus on similar utility‑scale projects that combine financial certainty for developers with clean‑energy credits for buyers.

What to watch next Monitor the rollout timeline for Cypress Knee Solar and any additional PPAs Meta announces, as they will indicate how quickly the company can scale its renewable footprint toward the 2030 net‑zero target.

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