Alphabet (aka Google) (NASDAQ:GOOG) has announced the acquisition of Intersect, a firm that provides data and energy infrastructure. The company said the purchase price was $4.75 billion in cash plus the assumption of debt. The deal is expected to close in the first half of 2026
Google had previously participated in a funding round and thus already held an equity stake in the firm.
The acquisition is representative of the growing need to support developments in artificial intelligence. Google’s Gemini AI service has emerged as a top offering in the product category. At the same time, the need for massive amounts of energy as well as computing power means that to scale and grow in the competitive space, Intersect’s services are in high demand.
Beyond the energy and data center projects, the team at Intersect will join Google.
Intersect’s operations are expected to remain separate from Alphabet and Google under the Intersect brand and will be led by founder and CEO, Sheldon Kimber.
Intersect’s existing operating assets in Texas, and its operating and in-development assets in California, will not be part of the acquisition. These assets will continue to operate as an independent company, supported by existing investors TPG Rise Climate, Climate Adaptive Infrastructure, and Greenbelt Capital Partners.
Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and Alphabet, said the purchase will help them reimagine energy solutions while driving US innovation.
Kimber described infrastructure as the linchpin of American competitiveness in AI.
Google said it is committed to creating new ways to increase energy supply.
Shawn Severson, analyst and CEO at Water Tower Research, said that Google was transitioning from a model of tech service to an “infrastructure sovereign model.”
“By purchasing Intersect, Alphabet is creating a physical barrier and gaining exclusive access to energy that rivals who depend on the public grid are unable to match,” said Severson.
He said the market was underestimating the magnitude of the acquisition, noting the 10-gigawatt development pipeline, equivalent to 20 Hoover Dams. The goal is to guarantee that external energy shortages never impede compute growth.
Severson explained that AI utility is on the rise and that full-stack AI utility is in its infancy.
“This move is a significant change in how capital is allocated. The marginal cost of each AI query is directly reduced by owning the power supply, transforming what was formerly a variable utility cost into a fixed, long-term competitive advantage,” shared Severson.
Grid collapse is the biggest threat to AI scaling, and Google can “avoid the line” and derisk its growth roadmap through this acquisition.
