EQT warns of exit risks as clean energy assets outgrow private buyers
EQT AB, Europe’s largest private equity firm, flagged mounting hurdles in exiting clean-energy investments as assets scale beyond traditional buyer capacity. The April 17, 2026 warning signals structural challenges for PE firms managing $267 billion across energy transition platforms.
Overview
EQT AB identified a critical liquidity constraint in alternative energy exits. Clean-energy developers and operators have grown too large for conventional private or industrial acquirers, complicating traditional exit strategies including sales and initial public offerings. The firm manages over $267 billion in assets globally while expanding its UAE presence with planned Abu Dhabi office operations.
MENA’s renewable energy investment reached $12.9 billion in 2025, supporting a $65 billion solar and wind pipeline through 2027 concentrated in Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Private equity activity in the region hit $5.9 billion in H1 2024. Climate tech fundraising captured $300 million of the $1.2 billion total fintech investments recorded in 2025.
“In many cases, such assets have become too big to be absorbed by the kinds of private or industrial buyers PE firms traditionally turn to when looking for an exit.”
— Alex Darden, Head of Infrastructure Investments for the Americas at EQT
This statement exposes a fundamental mismatch between asset scale and market absorption capacity, threatening capital recycling velocity across the energy transition sector.
Why this matters
Exit bottlenecks directly impact MENA’s fintech ecosystem through constrained PE capital recycling. As regional hubs Dubai and Riyadh accelerate renewable deployment under Vision 2030 and D33 frameworks, PE firms require liquid exit pathways to redeploy returns into subsequent deals. The $65 billion regional pipeline depends on continuous capital circulation that exit constraints now threaten.
MENA’s fintech platforms increasingly enable climate tech financing, with renewable energy projects requiring digital payment infrastructure and blockchain-enabled carbon credit trading. Stalled PE exits reduce available capital for fintech-renewable convergence opportunities. The region’s $12.9 billion 2025 renewable investment demonstrates scale, but lacks corresponding exit infrastructure.
What’s next
Regulatory initiatives enabling larger IPO listings on regional exchanges, secondary market development for oversized clean energy assets, and sovereign wealth fund appetite for absorbing billion-dollar platforms. Monitor whether MENA’s Public Investment Fund and Mubadala emerge as systematic buyers for PE-held renewable portfolios.
Conclusion
EQT’s warning highlights systemic risks in energy transition financing models. For MENA’s fintech-enabled green economy to achieve 2030 targets, the region must develop innovative exit mechanisms—including specialized infrastructure funds and enhanced public market capacity—to sustain investment momentum.
Sources: Bloomberg, Care for Sustainability, Forbes MENA, Private Equity Wire

