New York, January 15, 2026, 10:21 EST — Regular session
- Talen Energy shares surge following $3.45 billion deal to acquire 2.6 GW of gas-fired power plants
- The deal expands Talen’s presence in PJM, a U.S. power market driven by strong data-center demand
- Company aims to finance the cash portion with new debt; closing is set for the second half of 2026
Talen Energy’s shares jumped nearly 10% during Thursday morning trading following the announcement that the power producer plans to acquire about 2.6 gigawatts of natural gas-fired generation capacity from private equity firm Energy Capital Partners, in a deal valued at $3.45 billion. (Reuters)
Buyers are targeting dispatchable power—plants ready to run when the grid calls—to handle rising electricity demand from data centers and other big consumers. In PJM, this rush has become a fierce land grab for gas units able to secure capacity auctions and push hard when prices jump.
U.S. power demand is set to hit new records. The Energy Information Administration forecasts consumption will climb to 4,256 billion kilowatt-hours in 2026 and then to 4,364 billion in 2027, surpassing the previous high of 4,198 billion in 2025. (Reuters)
Talen announced plans to acquire the Waterford Energy Center and Darby Generating Station in Ohio, along with the Lawrenceburg Power Plant in Indiana, for approximately $2.55 billion in cash and around $900 million in stock. CEO Mac McFarland highlighted “significant data center tailwinds” in western PJM, while ECP partner Andrew Gilbert emphasized that the portfolio targets the rapid load growth happening in Ohio.
Two plants — Lawrenceburg (1,218 megawatts) and Waterford (869 MW) — use combined-cycle technology, extracting extra power from the same gas with a secondary steam cycle. Talen estimates their average heat rate at roughly 7,000 Btu per kilowatt-hour, indicating fuel efficiency, and reports capacity factors consistently above 80%.
Darby stands apart. This 480-MW unit acts as a peaker, kicking in when demand spikes. Talen also confirmed that all three plants have steady gas supplies from the Marcellus and Utica shale regions.
The company pegged the price at roughly 6.6 times its projected 2027 adjusted EBITDA, a typical metric for cash profit. It said the acquisition will boost adjusted free cash flow per share by over 15% annually through 2030. The firm also anticipates an unlevered free cash flow conversion rate near 85% before factoring in tax benefits.
Talen plans to raise new debt to cover the cash portion and targets reducing net leverage to 3.5 times or below by the end of 2026. ECP will purchase around 2.4 million shares, likely holding about 5% of the pro forma company.
Natural gas continues to set the marginal price for electricity across much of the U.S. It accounts for about 40% of power generation, making it the dominant fuel source. That focus on gas-linked assets persists as demand climbs. (Reuters)
The trade isn’t straightforward. It depends heavily on debt markets and must clear antitrust hurdles, with sign-off needed from several regulators—including the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and Indiana’s utility regulator.
Investors are keeping an eye on how fast Talen can secure financing and if the regulatory timeline holds. The company aims to close the deal early in the second half of 2026.