Finding an electrical power plant for sale is significantly different from buying traditional real estate. These are considered infrastructure assets or Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) and are sold through institutional M&A (Mergers & Acquisitions) channels rather than public listings.

​As of early 2026, here are the primary opportunities for power plant ownership in Michigan.

​1. Operational Power Plants (Gas & Cogeneration)

​These are cash-flowing assets that sell power to the grid or to nearby industrial users (steam).

  • Ludington Cogeneration Facility: This 125MW gas-fired plant has seen historical trades between private equity groups (like Rockland Capital). It remains a key example of the type of mid-sized asset a private corporation can own.
  • Midland Cogeneration Venture (MCV): While recently securing long-term contracts through 2040, ownership stakes in this massive facility (the largest of its kind in the US) are occasionally traded among institutional infrastructure funds.
  • Kalkaska CT Project: A 55MW simple-cycle natural gas plant. Ownership is currently structured through the Michigan Public Power Agency, but undivided interests in such “peaker” plants are the standard model for corporate energy investments.

​2. “Ready-to-Build” (RTB) Renewable Plants

​In 2026, the most common “sale” is a project that has land, permits, and an interconnection agreement but hasn’t been built yet.

  • Sunfish Solar 2 (Calhoun, MI): A 360MW solar project slated for late 2026 operation. Projects of this scale are often sold by developers (like Invenergy or NextEra) to corporations looking for tax equity investments.
  • Washtenaw Solar Energy Center: A 150MW proposed site. These “project companies” are frequently listed on private energy clearinghouses like Cleanview or EnergyNet.

​3. Decommissioned “Repowering” Sites

​If your goal is to buy a site with existing heavy electrical infrastructure (transformers, grid connection) to build something new, look at retired coal sites.

  • J.H. Campbell Plants (West Olive, MI): Slated for closure by Consumers Energy. These sites are prime for “Power Plant to Parkland” conversions or redevelopment into Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS).
  • Trenton Channel & River Rouge: DTE has historically sold retired sites to brownfield redevelopers (e.g., Commercial Development Company) who then sell parcels to industrial users or data centers.

Where to find the “Private” Listings

​To see actual offering memorandums, you must register with specialized industrial brokers and M&A platforms:

ChannelBest For
EnergyNetOil, gas, and renewable project auctions.
Surplus RecordSmaller power units, turbines, and mobile power plants.
M&A Firms (e.g., Mayer Brown)Large-scale utility divestitures and corporate mergers.
MPSC DocketsWatching public filings for utilities looking to sell “non-core” assets.

Strategic Recommendation

​Since you are interested in crowdfunding and real estate, the most viable path is likely Community Solar or Battery Storage.

  • The Play: Buy 20–40 acres of “worthless” industrial land near a substation.
  • The Value-Add: Get an Interconnection Agreement from DTE or Consumers Energy.
  • The Exit: Sell the “Project” to an institutional fund or keep it and use your 70/30 split to pay investors from the monthly power sales.

Would you like me to help you draft an “Investment Teaser” specifically for a Renewable Energy Project, using the 70/30 model we built earlier?