JPMorgan Chase’s 6,000-employee building at Legacy West will join the ranks of local, clean-energy-reliant campuses, according to a company announcement.

The global banking giant announced Friday all of its nearly 5,500 physical locations will source 100 percent of their energy from renewable sources by 2020.

“This energy commitment is possible, in part, because of a 20-year Power Purchase Agreement with a subsidiary of NRG Energy, Inc.,” company spokesperson Greg Hassell said in a statement.

The purchase will supply over 75 percent of JPMorgan’s energy needs for its Texas locations, Hassell said.

Employees are set to start moving into the Plano campus in September, with 75 percent of the building's energy coming from clean sources "as early as 2017," Hassell said.

JPMorgan is not the only company in the Legacy West area with green goals—Toyota’s recently-unveiled North American headquarters boasts a 400,000-gallon capacity of rainwater storage used for irrigation and receives 33 percent of its energy from on-site solar panels.

JPMorgan has clean energy goals beyond powering their buildings, as it also announced a $200 billion commitment to finance clean energy projects.

“Business must play a leadership role in creating solutions that protect the environment and grow the economy,” company Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon said in a statement. “This global investment leverages the firm’s resources and our people’s expertise to make our operations more energy efficient and provide clients with the resources they need to develop more sustainable products and services.”