Energy IPOs raise $12.6B in first half of 2026 as AI boom drives unprecedented demand Energy IPOs raised $12.6 billion in the first half of 2026, the highest first-half total on record and nearly triple the $4.3 billion raised in all of 2025, driven by investor demand for companies powering AI data centers. The boom is fueled by projections that global data center electricity consumption will more than double to 945 TWh by 2030, though grid limitations have delayed over $130 billion in AI data center projects in early 2026. The surge is also impacting cryptocurrency miners, who face rising power costs as AI operators lock in long-term contracts. Energy IPOs raise $12.6B in first half of 2026 as AI boom drives unprecedented demand The fastest pace of energy IPOs this century has investors chasing the power-hungry AI data center buildout, with implications for crypto miners competing for the same electrons. Energy companies just had their best IPO window in over a quarter century. Initial public offerings in the energy sector pulled in $12.6 billion during the first half of 2026, according to data firm Dealogic. That is the highest first-half figure on record and the strongest half-year total since the peak of the dotcom bubble in late 1999. To put that number in perspective, it nearly triples the $4.3 billion that energy firms raised across all of 2025. The catalyst is straightforward: investors want exposure to the companies that will power the AI revolution’s insatiable appetite for electricity. The deals driving the boom Two IPOs stood out from the pack. Forgent Power Solutions raised $1.51 billion, making it one of the largest energy listings in recent memory. SOLV Energy secured $512 million. Both companies are positioned to serve the growing infrastructure demands of hyperscale data centers. The underlying math explains the frenzy. Global data center electricity consumption sat at roughly 415 terawatt hours TWh in 2024. The International Energy Agency projects that figure will climb to approximately 945 TWh by 2030. Companies like Constellation Energy and Standard Nuclear are also drawing attention as data center operators increasingly seek clean energy partnerships to meet both power needs and corporate sustainability pledges. Grid reality versus investor enthusiasm Over $130 billion worth of AI data center projects hit delays or outright blocks during the first quarter of 2026 alone, largely due to grid limitations and permitting bottlenecks. Where crypto fits into the energy equation IEA studies have estimated that cryptocurrency mining alone accounts for roughly 160 TWh of electricity consumption. Combined AI and crypto energy demands were projected to double total data center consumption by 2026. Some Bitcoin miners have already pivoted toward this dynamic, converting mining facilities into AI compute centers or offering hybrid operations that can switch between mining and AI workloads depending on which is more profitable at any given moment. Companies like Core Scientific, Hut 8, and others have been pursuing this strategy. Regions like Texas, Virginia, and parts of the Midwest, which have historically been favorable for Bitcoin mining, are seeing power costs rise as AI operators sign long-term contracts at rates miners struggle to match. Some mining operations have already been forced to relocate or scale down. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .