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Judge OKs Brookfield to Use $114.8M Debt as Lead Bid for Solar Firm's Assets

Published Jul 8, 2026
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Summary:
  • A US bankruptcy judge approved Brookfield Corp. as lead bidder and main lender, allowing it to use at least $114.8 million in debt to bid.
  • Asset manager Berenberg opposed the dual role, but Judge Alfredo Perez rejected the argument.
  • GoldenPeaks filed for bankruptcy in May 2026 after its liquidity evaporated quickly.

Brookfield Corp., a private equity firm, is serving as both the bankruptcy lender and lead bidder for GoldenPeaks Poland Holding Ltd., an insolvent solar company. That dual role sparked a court fight.

Judge Allows Dual Role

The judge ruled it was allowed.

GoldenPeaks' Liquidity Crisis

GoldenPeaks Poland Holding Ltd. owns solar-power assets in Poland and Hungary. The company filed for bankruptcy in May 2026 after its finances unraveled fast. In a court filing, Edward Manning, a managing director at restructuring firm Alvarez & Marsal, said: "Some GoldenPeaks units unraveled 'precipitously' and liquidity 'evaporated' within a matter of weeks."

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Acting as both the bankruptcy lender and the lead bidder - a setup often seen in Chapter 11 proceedings - typically sparks complaints from other creditors, who say it provides the lender with a superior informational position. In this case, Berenberg's challenge centered on that concern, but Judge Perez ruled that the arrangement did not violate bankruptcy law.

Brookfield's Broader Decarbonization Strategy

Since 2021, Brookfield has accumulated over $40 billion earmarked for decarbonization investments. In that same year, the firm paid $175 million for a stake in Polenergia, a prominent Polish renewable energy company. That investment aligns with Brookfield's focus on clean-energy infrastructure, and the GoldenPeaks bankruptcy provides an opportunity to expand its solar footprint in Eastern Europe at a discounted price through the debt-bidding auction.

Poland and Hungary have been aggressively expanding solar capacity to meet European Union renewable energy targets, making GoldenPeaks' portfolio particularly attractive. Brookfield's existing presence in Poland through Polenergia gives it local expertise and potential synergies. The bankruptcy sale allows the firm to acquire operational solar assets at a reduced cost, using credit from the debt it is owed rather than fresh cash. This strategy lets Brookfield deploy its $40 billion decarbonization fund efficiently while strengthening its position in a region where solar adoption is accelerating.

Brookfield's $40 billion decarbonization fund, launched in 2021, targets investments in renewable energy, carbon capture, and sustainable infrastructure. The firm's existing stake in Polenergia provides local market knowledge and operational synergies that can be applied to the GoldenPeaks portfolio. By using debt credit instead of new capital, Brookfield can expand its Eastern European solar holdings while conserving cash for other opportunities. This approach is common in bankruptcy auctions where lenders become buyers, reducing the need for outside financing.

What to Watch

The court-supervised auction will proceed with Brookfield as the stalking horse. Typically, such auctions allow other bidders to outbid the lead bidder, but the use of debt credit can deter competition. Berenberg's objection highlights ongoing tensions in bankruptcy sales where lenders also act as bidders, a dynamic that may shape how future cases are structured.

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