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Tech Journal Now > News > Seattle’s LevelTen Energy to lay off workers amid shrinking support for U.S. wind and solar power
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Seattle’s LevelTen Energy to lay off workers amid shrinking support for U.S. wind and solar power

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Last updated: August 4, 2025 8:23 pm
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Pacific Northwest wind turbines. (GeekWire Photo / Kurt Schlosser)

Seattle-based LevelTen Energy, a startup facilitating the deployment of clean energy projects, is laying off 60 workers according to a new Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) released by the Washington state Employment Security Department.

The layoffs take effect beginning Aug. 15, according to the filing. We’ve reached out to the company for more details.

LevelTen describes itself as the world’s largest online marketplace connecting buyers, sellers, advisors and financiers of clean energy projects. Its customers include tech companies and other businesses and institutions looking to support renewable power in order to curb their climate emissions. The company’s platform has been used for transactions totaling more than $14.8 billion.

Clean energy deployments have been on the rise for many years, but Republican leaders in July passed their mega bill, dubbed the One Big Beautiful Bill, which cuts tax incentives for renewable wind and solar power passed during the Biden administration. Those breaks are scuttled in 2028, at which point new installations of onshore wind and solar in the U.S. are expected to plunge 41%, according to BloombergNEF.

The headwinds come just a year after LevelTen raised a $65 million Series D round that included investments from Microsoft and Google, among others.

As of last summer, the company had 130 employees and an optimistic outlook.

“We see a massive opportunity to bring our transaction infrastructure to new, really important adjacent climate technologies and to expand geographically and to add some new customer types to the platform,” LevelTen CEO and founder Bryce Smith told GeekWire in July 2024.

The new funding was meant to help the company spread beyond the 29 countries in North America and Europe in which it was already operating.

But some deals are still being made. In June, the company announced a new clean energy project that it facilitated with Starbucks and the software company Workday to support the construction of a 350 megawatt solar power installation in Central Texas.

Rob Collier, LevelTen’s senior vice president of marketplaces, said that demand for the projects remained high.

“Demand is booming right now for energy, for electricity, for power, particularly clean electrons,” Collier told GeekWire in June. “And that’s driven by a number of pretty strong macroeconomic forcing functions: the need for data centers, and the increased demand due to AI.”

But he did acknowledge that the sector was not attracting new customers for power purchase agreements and that the supply side was getting more difficult, with ongoing challenges with permitting and electrical grid connections, as well as persistent uncertainty around policy and tariffs making it hard to plan and deploy the infrastructure.

LevelTen launched in 2016 and has raised $125 million to date.

Read the full article here

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