SOLV Energy Debuts on U.S. Stock Market with $6 Billion Valuation
SOLV Energy, a U.S.-based solar and battery storage engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) company, debuted on the stock market with a nearly $6 billion valuation, marking the first IPO by a pure-play solar and storage EPC in the country. The company raised more than $500 million, exceeding its initial target, with shares opening at $30, above the planned $25.
The firm has a project backlog of $8 billion, primarily serving utilities and independent power producers, including utility-scale solar for Intel’s new chip facility in Arizona. CEO George Hershman noted the strong demand reflects both rising energy needs from data centers and the reshoring of U.S. manufacturing.
SOLV Energy previously acquired Spartan Infrastructure, a transmission and distribution contractor, in 2025 and may pursue further M&A opportunities. The company faces potential challenges from transformer shortages, projected to last until 2030, and regulatory uncertainties affecting nearly 500 solar and storage projects nationwide, representing 43% of planned new U.S. power capacity.
Industry analysts highlight that clean energy stocks have outperformed broader indexes over the past 18 months, despite political scrutiny and policy rollbacks. SOLV Energy’s IPO demonstrates investor confidence in the long-term growth of renewable energy, particularly solar and storage, as cost-effective and rapidly deployable solutions for the U.S. energy grid.