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Home»Technology
Cloover energy fintech platform concept with solar panels and financing icons over Berlin skyline

Cloover secures €1.04B to build the Shopify of energy

21 January 2026 Technology No Comments5 Mins Read
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Berlin’s Cloover lands €1.04 billion to reinvent how Europe buys energy

Berlin-based climate fintech startup Cloover has secured a landmark €1.04 billion financing commitment, a move that could significantly accelerate its ambition to become the so‑called “Shopify of energy”. By combining embedded finance, digital tools and energy hardware, the company aims to make it radically easier for installers, retailers and households to adopt and finance clean energy solutions.

The fresh commitment, which is structured primarily as a debt and asset-backed financing facility, will allow Cloover to fund a large pipeline of residential and small business energy projects across Europe. Rather than acting as a traditional lender, the startup positions itself as an infrastructure layer that connects energy installers, equipment manufacturers, and end customers through a unified digital platform.

Building the “Shopify of energy” for installers and retailers

Cloover describes its platform as the equivalent of Shopify for the energy sector: a white-label, plug-and-play toolkit that enables local installers and retailers to sell, finance and manage clean energy systems under their own brands. Instead of developing their own complex software or negotiating with multiple banks, partners can integrate Cloover’s embedded finance and energy management tools directly into their sales process.

Embedded finance for solar, heat pumps and batteries

At the core of the model is a suite of embedded finance products tailored for solar panels, heat pumps, home batteries and other distributed energy resources. Customers can access long-term financing or energy-as-a-service contracts at the point of sale, often with minimal friction and fully digital onboarding.

By leveraging data-driven risk assessment and standardized contracts, Cloover aims to reduce barriers that typically slow down residential energy upgrades: complex paperwork, fragmented offerings and inconsistent access to credit. This is particularly relevant in markets where traditional banks are still cautious about financing small-scale green infrastructure.

Digital tools for a fragmented installer ecosystem

Europe’s energy transition relies heavily on thousands of small and mid-sized installers who often lack advanced software and customer management tools. Cloover provides these businesses with a digital backbone that covers quoting, contracting, financing and lifecycle management of installed systems.

By integrating financing into the workflow, installers can offer end-to-end solutions rather than just hardware. This approach is designed to increase conversion rates, improve customer experience and ultimately accelerate the deployment of decentralized energy systems.

Financing structure: scaling capital for the energy transition

The headline €1.04 billion financing commitment is expected to be deployed over several years, backing thousands of individual projects. While detailed terms have not been fully disclosed, the structure typically involves special purpose vehicles (SPVs) that hold the financed energy assets and associated cash flows, allowing institutional investors to gain exposure to clean energy loans at scale.

Such structures are increasingly common in European climate fintech, where startups act as originators and technology enablers, while large funds and banks provide the bulk of the capital. This model allows companies like Cloover to grow rapidly without excessively diluting equity, while also giving investors access to a diversified portfolio of energy transition assets.

Why this level of capital matters

Residential energy upgrades – from rooftop solar to high-efficiency heat pumps – are capital intensive but generate long-term, relatively predictable cash flows. Unlocking over €1 billion of dedicated financing enables Cloover to support tens of thousands of households and small businesses, especially in markets where public subsidies and decarbonisation incentives are already in place.

By aggregating these projects on a single platform, the company can also collect granular performance data on installations, helping refine credit models, optimize pricing and demonstrate the reliability of the underlying assets to future capital providers.

Positioning within Europe’s climate fintech landscape

The raise places Cloover among a growing cohort of European climate fintech players that sit at the intersection of energy technology and financial services. Rather than building hardware, these companies focus on removing financing and coordination bottlenecks that slow down the adoption of proven clean technologies.

As governments tighten climate targets and introduce stricter building efficiency standards, the need for scalable, private-sector capital is becoming more urgent. Platforms like Cloover are positioning themselves as essential infrastructure for channeling funds from institutional investors to the fragmented, last-mile ecosystem of installers and homeowners.

Competitive edge through software and partnerships

Beyond capital, Cloover is betting that its software platform and partnership model will differentiate it from conventional lenders. By embedding its tools directly into the workflows of installers and retailers, it aims to become the default operating system for selling and managing distributed energy systems.

This strategy echoes the rise of embedded finance in other industries, where platforms quietly power payments, lending and subscriptions behind the scenes, while end customers primarily interact with trusted local brands. In energy, this could mean that a household experiences a seamless, branded journey with a local installer, while Cloover orchestrates the financing and data layer in the background.

Implications for households, installers and the grid

For households, easier access to financing could lower the upfront barrier to adopting solar, storage and electrified heating. That, in turn, can reduce energy bills, increase resilience to price volatility and support the shift away from fossil fuels.

For installers and retailers, partnering with Cloover offers a way to scale without building their own complex fintech infrastructure. They can offer subscription-style or pay‑as‑you‑save models that align monthly payments with expected energy savings, an approach that has proven effective in other markets.

At system level, a faster rollout of distributed energy resources supports grid stability and the integration of more renewable energy. As more homes and businesses become prosumers – both producing and consuming electricity – platforms that can coordinate financing, data and performance monitoring will play an increasingly critical role.

With its new €1.04 billion financing commitment, Cloover is positioning itself as one of the key digital and financial enablers of Europe’s energy transition, aiming to turn the complex world of clean energy into a simple, Shopify-like experience for every installer and household it touches.

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Kyle Kelley
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