Wall Street Green Summit marks 25th year on renewables financing

The 25th annual Wall Street Green Summit, founded by Peter Fusaro, will convene on March 10 and 11 in New York to discuss financing the renewables transition. Global investment in the energy transition hit $2.2 trillion in 2025, a 5% increase despite political challenges. Fusaro highlights infrastructure as the key bottleneck rather than capital availability.

Peter Fusaro, who has dedicated 56 years to sustainability efforts, founded the Wall Street Green Summit a quarter century ago to link capital with climate solutions. The upcoming event arrives amid significant shifts: insurance companies are pulling out of climate-vulnerable states, while AI data centers strain electrical grids. In the U.S., the number of investor-owned utilities has dropped from 110 in 1992 to 40 today, resulting in underinvestment in transmission and distribution infrastructure.

Fusaro points out that data centers accounted for 2% of U.S. energy demand in 2020 and could rise to 10-12% by 2030, making blackouts and brownouts likely. "The energy transition’s bottleneck isn’t capital, it’s infrastructure," he states. Despite these hurdles, he expresses pragmatic optimism, advising focus on capital markets and blue states where climate policies are enshrined in law. Many companies engage in "green hushing," advancing sustainability quietly without public fanfare.

The energy sector operates on 40-year cycles, viewing current political turbulence as temporary. Wall Street, Fusaro argues, treats climate as a systemic risk due to profit opportunities. "Wall Street likes exchanges, likes to trade, likes volatility, and certainly likes uncertainty," he explains. "What people don’t understand about Wall Street, it’s about the edge. What’s the arbitrage opportunity?" The reinsurance sector is actively supporting carbon credits and sustainability initiatives.

Looking ahead, natural gas and renewables are expected to lead for the next 15 years, with geothermal experiencing a revival. Fusaro's confidence stems from younger generations: "I have a tremendous valuation on young people. I’m 75. They’re inheriting this world, and they get the sustainability message globally." The summit will feature practitioners from business and finance, excluding government officials and academics.

Earth911 serves as a media sponsor for the event.

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