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Baker Hughes Agrees 500 MW Geothermal Deal in North America, Backed by EnCap

The agreement with Mantle Reach Power aims to create a bankable clean baseload energy model over the next five years.

Por REDACCIÓN THE WATT · 26 jun 2026 · 2 MIN READ
Geothermal power plant with cooling towers and steam plumes in a desert landscape at sunset
Imagen generada con inteligencia artificial

Baker Hughes (NASDAQ: BKR) and Mantle Reach Power announced on June 24, 2026 a strategic agreement to deploy up to 500 megawatts (MW) of geothermal capacity across North America over the next five years. Mantle Reach, backed by EnCap Energy Transition Fund III, leads project financing and development; Baker Hughes contributes subsurface technology and digital solutions drawn from the oil and gas sector.

The deal sends a clear capital signal from Houston: the Texas oil, gas, and private equity ecosystem is formally pivoting toward large-scale geothermal. EnCap has raised $47 billion across 25 institutional funds and is one of North America's largest energy asset managers. What Baker Hughes and EnCap are assembling is a model designed to solve the sector's longstanding bottleneck: pre-construction bankability, meaning the ability to attract debt and equity before the geothermal resource is fully characterized. Until now, that development risk had kept geothermal off the radar of institutional capital.

The timeline envisions phased execution over five years, though neither party has disclosed the location of initial projects. Baker Hughes will supply its integrated portfolio of subsurface technologies, surface generation equipment, and digital platforms; Mantle Reach will structure ownership, funding, and operations as an independent power producer. Lorenzo Simonelli, chairman and CEO of Baker Hughes, stated that "geothermal is a clean energy solution that is proving to be a vital contributor to sustainable energy development," according to the company's official release. Nick Karambelas, CEO of Mantle Reach, added that the structure provides the certainty needed to access conventional project financing.

The announcement includes no Mexican projects, but the model (Texas capital combined with oil and gas technology applied to the subsurface) is directly relevant to Mexico, the world's fourth-largest geothermal producer, with fields operated by the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) at Cerro Prieto, Los Azufres, Los Humeros, and Domo de San Pedro. The question now is whether the Energy Regulatory Commission (CRE) will enable mechanisms to replicate this financial architecture across the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt.

This article was drafted with the assistance of artificial intelligence from verified sources and reviewed by a human editor before publication.

This article was drafted with AI assistance from verified sources and reviewed by a human editor before publication.

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