The first tranche, expected to disburse on June 30, 2026, provides the company with net proceeds of approximately $22 million after financing fees and customary expenses and reserves to support the delivery of five 2.8-megawatt (MW) FuelCell Energy Blocks to Gyeonggi Green Energy (GGE) in South Korea. With nearly 60 MW of installed capacity, GGE’s site is among the largest fuel cell installations in the world and serves as an important example of distributed utility-scale clean energy deployment. A second tranche is expected to be disbursed in October 2026, subject to customary closing conditions.
EXIM structured the financing under its loan guarantee program and arranged with Private Export Funding Corporation (PEFCO), supporting the export of American clean energy technology to international markets. It builds upon FuelCell Energy’s prior EXIM-supported financing completed in 2024 and 2025 and reflects continued support for the company’s export of U.S.-manufactured clean energy technology.
"EXIM’s approval validates the strength of this project, our partnership with Gyeonggi Green Energy, FuelCell Energy’s business plan, and our ability to deliver distributed utility-scale clean power globally," said Michael Bishop, FuelCell Energy’s Chief Financial Officer. "This financing adds non-dilutive capital to support growth and provides added flexibility as we invest in scaling manufacturing capacity, pursuing strategic opportunities in global power markets and mirroring our distributed utility scale solutions to AI factories and data centers."
FuelCell Energy manufactures its clean, baseload fuel cell technology in Torrington, Conn., supporting domestic manufacturing, U.S. supply chains, and skilled American jobs. The transaction aligns with EXIM’s mission to support U.S. manufacturing, exports, and global competitiveness. Approximately 90% of the content in FuelCell Energy Blocks is sourced from the United States.
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