Origis Energy advanced its position as a leading U.S. utility-scale renewable energy developer this week, with significant milestones in both Texas and Florida that expand its contracted asset base and reinforce long-term growth prospects. This weekly recap reviews the company’s latest project developments, strategic partnerships, and implications for future performance.
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In West Texas, Origis Energy signed a long-term power purchase agreement (PPA) with Meta for the 303 MWdc (240 MWac) Greyhound A Solar project in West Odessa. Scheduled to reach commercial operations by mid-2026, Greyhound A will supply clean energy to support Meta’s data center load while adding capacity to the local grid. The project is a cornerstone of Origis’s broader West Texas energy infrastructure complex, where roughly 1 GW of solar capacity is already fully subscribed and approximately half is operational. The remaining capacity is expected online in 2026, providing a visible pipeline of near-term asset additions and contracted cash flows.
Origis is further scaling this West Texas hub into a more than 2 GW integrated energy complex that will combine over 1 GW of additional solar and battery storage, with full operation targeted by 2029. The multi-phase buildout represents about $2.5 billion in planned infrastructure investment. Strategically, this expansion diversifies Origis’s revenue streams through long-duration PPAs with an investment-grade offtaker, strengthens its role in serving data center-driven power demand, and aligns the portfolio with U.S. decarbonization and grid reliability trends.
In Florida, Origis Energy, in partnership with the Florida Municipal Power Agency (FMPA), completed and placed into commercial operation the Whistling Duck Solar Energy Center in Levy County. Whistling Duck, which entered commercial service in December 2025, is the fourth facility under the Florida Municipal Solar Project (FMSP) and marks the completion of its 300 MW Phase II expansion. The project adds nearly 75 MWac of solar capacity for four municipal electric systems—Homestead, Key West, Lake Worth Beach, and Winter Park—under long-term arrangements coordinated by FMPA. Origis owns and operates the facility, enhancing its recurring revenue base and reinforcing its build–own–operate model.
Collectively, the Florida municipal projects now provide 300 MW of solar capacity to 13 communities, underscoring Origis’s execution capability on multi-phase, multi-site public power initiatives. The partnership with a public power agency like FMPA also strengthens the company’s competitive positioning in future municipal and utility procurements across the Southeast.
Taken together, the large-scale Texas PPA with Meta and the successful completion of Phase II of the Florida Municipal Solar Project highlight a strong week for Origis Energy, characterized by expanding scale, deepening contracted revenues, and a growing footprint in both corporate and municipal renewable power markets.

