Berlin’s Heating Transition Secures a Decade‑Defining Loan In late April 2026, a quiet but decisive milestone was reached in Berlin’s energy landscape. Behind the scenes of the city’s vast district heating network—the largest in Western Europe—a consortium of nine banks finalised a syndicated loan of roughly one billion euros. The transaction, structured with a twenty‑year maturity and backed by a creative blend of public and private financing, effectively unlocks the financial foundation for Berlin’s most ambitious decarbonisation projects to date. This is not simply another infrastructure loan. It is a testament to how a city‑owned utility, a supportive state government, and a broad coalition of financial institutions can align around a common goal: transforming a fossil‑fuel‑dependent heating system into a climate‑neutral powerhouse by 2045. The deal also signals a new benchmark for energy infrastructure financing in Germany, potentially reshaping how similar projects are funded acr...
Next-generation geothermal can overcome its economic hurdles, but the path depends on reducing drilling risk, standardizing project design, securing patient capital, and using policy or offtake structures to bridge the early costs. By: Robert Buluma Next-generation geothermal energy is often described as a clean firm power resource with the potential to scale beyond the geography of traditional hydrothermal fields . It includes technologies such as enhanced geothermal systems, advanced closed-loop systems, and other approaches that try to extract heat from hot rock where conventional geothermal reservoirs do not exist or are not economically recoverable . The core promise is compelling: instead of waiting for rare natural reservoirs, operators can create or access heat resources across far more locations, expanding geothermal from a niche resource into a potentially major pillar of power systems . The economic challenge is equally clear. Next-generation geothermal stil...