NetworkNewsBreaks – Correlate Infrastructure Par
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Correlate Infrastructure Partners (OTCQB: CIPI), a technology-enabled energy optimization and clean-energy solutions provider for North America, is spotlighted in the latest episode of the Bell2Bell Podcast, released by InvestorBrandNetwork (“IBN”). Correlate Infrastructure CEO and president Todd Michaels joined host Stuart Smith to discuss the history of the company as well as its business model. The Bell2Bell Podcast delivers informative updates and exclusive interviews with executives operating in fast-moving industries. Michaels noted that CIPI is the parent company for a series of technology and fulfillment subsidiaries in the clean-energy space, with Solar Site Design and Correlate being some of its commercial brands; the company is in the process of adding technologies and companies to its current portfolio, Michaels added. The CIPI executive also observed that regulatory tailwinds are working in Correlate Infrastructure Partners’ favor, with the signing of the Inflation Reduction act, which features the nation’s largest-ever investment of funds — $386 billion — aimed at tackling climate change. “We’re effectively looking at how to scale the business through technology enablement and automation, integrate and verticalize sales, develop projects and, ultimately, fulfill those projects on facilities in North America,” said Correlate Infrastructure Partners president and CEO Todd Michaels in the interview. “The solutions that we deploy through those programs and subsidiaries in different parts of the country are things like solar, [energy] storage, energy efficiency and electric vehicle infrastructure. . . . We do that today in residential, commercial and industrial [applications], along with the burgeoning space of community-scale projects. This is a rapidly growing segment — the energy transition and electrification sector — that has been growing somewhere around 30% year-over-year. Today, these solutions are emerging technologies with light adoption, but things like solar are actually forecast to be somewhere around 40% of the actual overall capacity of energy generation in the U.S. by 2050. There is an opportunity here. It just makes sense. . . . It has never been a better time for our business.”
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