NextEra Energy, Inc. has raised its adjusted earnings per share outlook for 2025 and 2026, citing stronger long‑term visibility on electricity demand from artificial intelligence data centres in the United States. The company confirmed that this upward revision is directly tied to contracted volumes secured with technology companies, including Google Cloud (owned by Alphabet Inc.) and Meta Platforms Inc.
Improved forecasts for 2025–2026
The company now expects adjusted earnings per share between $3.62 and $3.70 for 2025, compared with a previous range of $3.45 to $3.70. For 2026, the guidance has been raised to $3.92–$4.02, from a prior range of $3.63–$4.00. The updated figures reflect the strength of the group’s backlog and the integration of additional capacity into its future energy mix.
NextEra stated that these revisions stem from several gigawatts of already‑contracted supply to AI data centres. The agreements were signed days earlier but had not yet been factored into the company’s official financial guidance.
Long‑term contracts backed by nuclear and storage
The contracts include a long‑term partnership with Google to supply electricity to AI campuses using a mix that features the restart of the Duane Arnold nuclear plant in Iowa. In addition, eleven Power Purchase Agreements and two storage contracts signed with Meta represent 2.5 GW of capacity due between 2026 and 2028.
These volumes are complemented by an extension of nuclear supply from the Point Beach plant in Wisconsin for WPPI Energy. Together, the agreements secure long‑term contracted revenue streams that support NextEra’s earnings growth trajectory beyond 2030.
Sector positioning influenced by data centre demand
NextEra Energy is one of the few US power producers capable of providing large‑scale, round‑the‑clock low‑carbon electricity to hyperscalers. This capability is becoming a central competitive advantage as the electricity consumption of AI data centres is expected to rise significantly nationwide.
Industry projections anticipate a possible tripling of US data centre demand by 2030. The company’s revised guidance signals its intention to be valued as a growth‑driven infrastructure player with exposure to the technology sector, rather than as a traditional defensive utility.
Regulatory approvals and cost allocation
The restart of the Duane Arnold nuclear facility requires approval from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), covering safety reviews and operational conditions. NextEra also remains subject to decisions from state public utility commissions regarding cost‑sharing for network upgrades between residential customers and data centre operators.
The group intends to rely on stable regulated revenues via Florida Power & Light, combined with the strong credit profile of its corporate counterparties, to support its investment programme.