Finland is one of the leading European destinations for new electricity demand. Hyperscale data centres, green hydrogen and Power-to-X projects, and industrial electrification are converging on a grid that — despite a large project pipeline — cannot bring new supply online fast enough to keep pace. The result is a Nordic PPA market in which tighter conditions are increasingly the norm.
~4%
Annual electricity demand growth in Finland — among the fastest in Europe
~292B €
Published investment plans relating to green transition in Finland
77%
Forecasted electricity demand growth in Finland, 2025–2035
Demand is structurally rising
Finland’s electricity demand is growing by roughly 4% annually — among the fastest rates in Europe. Three forces are driving this:
- Data centres. Finland’s grid stability, cool climate, and political environment make it one of the leading destinations for hyperscale and AI-driven data centre investment. Reuse of waste heat strengthens the case further.
- Hydrogen and e-fuels. Investment plans for green hydrogen and Power-to-X projects in Finland are growing rapidly, with multi-billion-euro pipelines now under development.
- Industrial electrification. Process heat, steel, and chemicals are pushing electrification programmes that lock in long-term electricity demand.
For Windly, this translates directly into more first-time corporate buyers seeking long-term hedges — and more competition for credible offtake volume.
Supply: large pipeline, structural bottlenecks
On paper, the supply side is strong. Finland has a large pipeline of onshore and offshore wind, with permitting reform under way. The issue is timing: permitting processes and project feasibility temporarily slow the pace of new capacity coming online.
The picture is similar across the Nordics. Sweden’s SE2 region in particular shows promising outlook with significant upside, given rising demand from industry — but new build does not appear overnight.
Tight supply and growing demand are pushing prices in one direction. The easy part is over.
What this means for buyers
Three takeaways for any corporate buyer planning a PPA in 2026:
- Start earlier than you think. PPA negotiations typically take 3–12 months. Add internal alignment time on top, and a 12–18 month lead is realistic.
- Get serious about counterparty quality. Tight supply means producers can be selective. Buyers with clear governance, credit, and decision-making structures will be prioritised.
- Think in structures, not in spot prices. A small spot-price difference today is worth less than getting the right tenor, profile, and additionality alignment for the next decade.
The Nordic market remains attractive for long-term renewable offtake. But buyers who treat a PPA as a transactional procurement exercise — rather than a strategic, multi-year commitment — will increasingly find themselves competing for the wrong end of the deal.
Considering a PPA? Windly is commercial advisory company focusing on PPA’s. We are representing both energy buyers and renewable energy producers and developers. Contact us to discuss your specific situation.