TLDR:Bloom Energy posted $751M in Q1 2026 revenue, a 130% year-over-year jump driven by AI data center demand.Bloom deploys fuel cell systems in 90 days versus the two-to-five years a standard grid connection typically requires.Oracle has committed to procure up to 2.8 gigawatts of Bloom’s systems, with 1.2 gigawatts already under contract.Bloom projects 30% of all data center sites will rely on onsite power as a primary energy source by 2030.Bloom Energy is gaining ground as one of the most closely watched names in AI infrastructure. The company posted $751 million in revenue in Q1 2026, a 130% increase year over year. Product revenue alone grew 208% in that single quarter. With full-year 2026 guidance now set at $3.4 billion to $3.8 billion, Bloom Energy is moving well beyond the margins of the AI buildout conversation.Rapid Deployment Solves the AI Power ProblemBloom Energy addresses a bottleneck that is slowing down data center construction across the sector. A traditional utility grid connection for a large data center typically takes two to five years to complete. Bloom can deploy its fuel cell systems in as little as 90 days, scaling from 20 megawatts up to 500 megawatts per site.That speed is one of the key reasons major cloud and infrastructure operators are turning to Bloom. Oracle has committed to procure up to 2.8 gigawatts of Bloom’s fuel cell systems, with 1.2 gigawatts already under contract. Equinix, CoreWeave, and AEP — which supplies power to Amazon Web Services — are also confirmed customers.The reliability figures are also notable. Bloom’s systems operate at up to 99.999% availability. That number exceeds what most utility grid connections can guarantee, making it a compelling option for workloads that cannot tolerate downtime.Milk Road AI, an industry analyst account, described the investment case in a recent post: Bloom solves the single biggest problem in data center development right now — getting power fast.Analysts at Milk Road Pro flagged Bloom Energy early. Their central thesis was that the AI energy bottleneck would become just as large an investment opportunity as the chip bottleneck. That view has since been validated by the company’s financial results and contract pipeline.Bloom Energy is one of the most interesting AI infrastructure plays most people still haven't fully priced in (Save this).Jensen Huang has been saying that we need 1,000 times more energy for compute than we currently produce and he wouldn't be surprised if that estimate is… pic.twitter.com/FJUSFmrJbf— Milk Road AI (@MilkRoadAI) May 22, 2026Institutional Deals and Production Expansion Signal Long-Term GrowthThe scale of Bloom’s commercial agreements suggests this is not a temporary cycle. Bloom has signed a $5 billion strategic AI infrastructure partnership with Brookfield Asset Management. Under that agreement, Bloom becomes the preferred onsite power provider across Brookfield’s $1 trillion infrastructure portfolio.This week, a supplier to Bloom received what it described as the largest single contract in its company’s history. The contract covers switchgear manufacturing in support of a large-scale AI data center project.On the production side, Bloom is on track to double its annual manufacturing capacity to 2 gigawatts by the end of 2026. Further scaling is planned beyond that point. The company’s own research projects that approximately 30% of all data center sites will rely on onsite power as a primary energy source by 2030.That market barely existed three years ago. The shift toward continuous computing — where AI models run around the clock rather than on demand — is what is driving the structural change. Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, has noted that AI computing requires up to 1,000 times more energy than traditional on-demand computing, and has acknowledged that estimate could move in either direction by another order of magnitude.Bloom Energy’s stock has risen 1,231% over the past twelve months and is up more than 130% year to date. Those figures reflect a broader market recognition that the energy layer of AI infrastructure carries just as much value as the hardware layer above it.The post Bloom Energy Powers the AI Revolution With 130% Revenue Surge and $5B Brookfield Deal appeared first on Blockonomi.