The world’s AI ambitions are driving a parallel transformation in energy infrastructure, as investors race to secure the renewable power needed for tomorrow’s data centers and semiconductor facilities. KKR is now positioning itself at the center of that shift by taking management control of a new renewable energy platform in South Korea valued at approximately $1.3 billion. The platform, created jointly by KKR and SK Inc., combines renewable energy assets that were previously distributed across multiple SK Group businesses. The integrated portfolio includes wind, solar and fuel cell projects, creating what both companies describe as South Korea’s largest renewable energy platform. KKR will assume initial management control of the venture, while SK Inc. will remain an equity investor and preserve the ability to negotiate future control rights through subsequent discussions.
Renewable Capacity Targets Align With AI Data Center Expansion
The newly formed platform begins operations with approximately 1.7 gigawatts of installed renewable generation capacity. The companies plan to expand that figure to 10 gigawatts over time, significantly increasing the country’s clean electricity supply for high-demand industries. According to the companies, that level of generation would be capable of supplying electricity equivalent to the requirements of 100 large-scale 100-megawatt data centers operating simultaneously. The scale illustrates how renewable energy investment is becoming tightly linked with AI infrastructure planning across Asia. Demand for electricity continues to rise as artificial intelligence models become larger and semiconductor manufacturing expands. Consequently, renewable generation has emerged as an increasingly attractive option for companies seeking both stable energy supply and long-term sustainability objectives.
KKR will oversee the combined renewable portfolio by bringing together assets held by several SK Group subsidiaries, including SK Innovation, SK ecoplant and SK eternix. The structure gives the investment firm operational responsibility while allowing SK to remain financially invested in the platform’s future growth. The arrangement also supports SK Group’s broader business restructuring strategy as it continues streamlining operations and improving capital allocation across its portfolio. The investment will be funded through KKR’s Asia Pacific infrastructure strategy. Since 2011, the firm has invested more than $31 billion globally across energy transition and renewable infrastructure projects. The South Korean platform expands KKR’s regional renewable portfolio, adding to existing investments that include India’s Serentica Renewables as well as Australia’s CleanPeak Energy and Zenith Energy.
South Korea Strengthens Energy Foundations for AI Growth
The announcement follows a broader wave of technology-focused investment initiatives emerging from South Korea. Earlier this week, the government unveiled three major investment programs spanning semiconductor manufacturing, physical AI and AI data center development. At the same time, SK Group announced plans to invest an average of 100 trillion won annually to expand semiconductor production capacity while building AI data center infrastructure that supports future computing demand. Those parallel announcements highlight an important shift in infrastructure planning. AI facilities can only scale when sufficient electricity generation grows alongside computing hardware, making energy investment a central requirement rather than a supporting function. Renewable platforms capable of delivering utility-scale capacity are increasingly becoming foundational assets for national AI strategies. The companies said the platform is intended to support South Korea’s growing requirement for clean electricity across AI data centers, semiconductor production facilities and other energy-intensive industrial operations.
“Korea is one of Asia’s most attractive renewable energy markets, underpinned by strong corporate demand for clean power from the semiconductor, data center, and manufacturing sectors,” said Keith Kim, a KKR partner. The statement reflects a broader investment thesis gaining momentum across Asia. Corporate buyers increasingly seek long-term renewable power supplies to support expanding digital infrastructure, particularly as AI deployments reshape electricity consumption patterns. Meanwhile, infrastructure investors continue identifying renewable energy portfolios as strategic platforms capable of delivering both stable returns and long-term relevance in the AI economy.
SK’s Portfolio Strategy Extends Beyond Renewable Assets
The renewable platform also aligns with SK Group’s ongoing value-up strategy, which has involved asset sales, operational restructuring and efforts to reduce leverage across its businesses. The company said the new venture forms part of a wider initiative designed to sharpen its business portfolio while improving capital efficiency. Rather than treating renewable assets as standalone investments, the strategy positions them within a larger framework supporting South Korea’s industrial and digital transformation. For KKR, the deal strengthens its presence in one of Asia’s fastest-evolving infrastructure markets. For South Korea, it creates another building block in preparing the country’s energy system for rising AI workloads, semiconductor manufacturing and future digital infrastructure expansion. As AI development accelerates globally, access to large-scale renewable power is becoming a competitive advantage that extends well beyond sustainability goals.
