Bill Gates-backed solar power firm Heliogen Inc. will merge with a special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC) to go public in a deal that values the combined entity at about $2 billion, the companies said on July 7.

The merger with Athena Technology Acquisition Corp., a women-led SPAC that raised $250 million in its IPO in March, will generate $415 million of proceeds for the combined company.

The proceeds include a $165 million private investment in public equity, or PIPE, from investors such as Morgan Stanley’s investment arm Counterpoint Global, Salient Partners and Saba Capital.

The SPAC is led by CEO Phyllis Newhouse, a retired military officer and cybersecurity veteran, and venture capitalist Isabelle Freidheim, who also co-founded fintech firm Magnifi.

SPACs use the pool of capital they raise through their own IPOs to merge with a private company, in a deal that then takes it public.

Heliogen’s SPAC deal comes at a time when U.S. solar installations are on track for record-breaking growth over the next three years, according to an industry report released last month.

But the solar industry faces challenges from supply chain bottlenecks and a tight labor market that could lead to slower growth, even as governments ramp up their efforts to fight climate change.

Post-merger, the combined company will be listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “HLGN”.