The sector experienced a 20% fall in contract value in July, a month that saw the government send mixed messages regarding infrastructure investment.
Australia's largest electricity grid is back on the block after a decision to reject offers from Chinese bidders.
The firm will use the proceeds to repay loans and re-invest in the Japanese solar market.
The $34bn asset manager is bolstering its San Francisco office after raising nearly $1bn for infrastructure and natural resources in a year.
A tentative agreement with a community organisation could clear the path for the project, which has received interest from the likes of Meridiam, Aberdeen and Axium.
The $110m tie-up, which will target both greenfield and brownfield assets, could recruit minority investors along the way.
Having closed its debut A$100m vehicle in one go, the Australian fund manager is already mulling a successor fund.
The UK firm, which entered the renewables space five years ago, has bought a 30% stake in a German greenfield asset.
The US buyout firm is investing an undisclosed amount in Cricket Valley, a gas-fired facility being developed by Advanced Power in New York.
Too few infrastructure assets are sufficiently prepared against cyber-attacks. For governments and operators, itโs time to plug in.
Law firm says Chinese green bonds are not always what they say on the tin, with 'clean-coal' projects allowed under the initiative.
The $8bn Military Mutual Aid Association looks to increase allocation in overseas infrastructure from the current three percent to five percent.
The Bilbao-based utility plans to disburse a third of the money allocated to its three-year innovation programme into clean energy projects.
The UK's Green Bank, Danish fund manager CIP and renewables firm Low Carbon are among a growing club of investors that have placed bets on the sector.
The UK insurer is helping to fund the $1.34bn expansion of the University of California, Mercedโs campus, which will nearly double in capacity by 2020.
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