Business | Charging forward

Clean energy’s next trillion-dollar business

Grid-scale batteries are taking off at last

An illustration showing an enormous battery used in grid storage with a lightning bolt symbol on its side and yellow rays coming out of the top.
Illustration: Rose Wong

Decarbonising the world’s electricity supply will take more than solar panels and wind turbines, which rely on sunshine and a steady breeze to generate power. Grid-scale storage offers a solution to this intermittency problem, but there is too little of it about. The International Energy Agency (IEA), an official forecaster, reckons that the global installed capacity of battery storage will need to rise from less than 200 gigawatts (GW) last year to more than a terawatt (TW) by the end of the decade, and nearly 5TW by 2050, if the world is to reach net-zero emissions (see chart 1 ). Fortunately, though, the business of storing energy on the grid is at last being turbocharged.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Charging forward”

From the September 7th 2024 edition

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