Electricity

Global battery storage capacity expands by record 200 GWh in 2024

Global battery storage capacity expands record 200 GWh 2024

Photo: Sig. Chiocciola / https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode.en

Published

May 29, 2025

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

May 29, 2025

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Global installed energy storage is on a steep rise and is expected to increase ninefold by 2040, to over 4 TW, driven by battery energy storage systems (BESS), which saw record growth in 2024, according to a report by Rystad Energy. In recent years, the cost of storing electricity has dropped significantly thanks to the declining cost of battery projects, coupled with technological advancements.

Last year, a record 200 GWh of new BESS projects came online globally, bringing the world’s total operational battery storage capacity to 375 GWh. China maintained its leading position, with over 100 GWh of new capacity, followed by the United States, which added 35 GWh. Germany, Australia, and the United Kingdom were among the top five.

Energy storage will play a key role in integrating renewables as power demand grows

As power demand is expected to continue its strong growth in 2025 and after, the growth rate of low-carbon energy sources is now close to covering the entire demand increase. Energy storage will play a key role in integrating the increasing share of intermittent renewable energy and providing the needed flexibility for the secure operation of the power systems, according to Rystad’s report.

The increasing share of intermittent renewables, combined with low flexibility in supply and load, creates price volatility in the liberalized power markets, making energy trading (arbitrage) a good source of revenue for BESS, according to the report.

Solar energy is projected to grow more than all other energy sources combined between 2025 and 2050, expanding tenfold over the period, Rystad noted.

The cost of BESS projects has fallen below USD 300 per kWh in recent years

The global average cost of BESS projects fell below USD 300 per kWh in 2024. If it were to decline to USD 250 per kWh, the cost of storing electricity could be as low as USD 60 per MWh, allowing BESS operators to retain a larger portion of the price spread as profit, Rystad said.

The lower costs of electricity storage are also driven by technological advancements, as battery manufacturers currently guarantee over 10,000 charge-discharge cycles and more than 80% battery health during that lifespan.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Montenegro sets November 10 deadline for first solar power auction

Montenegro sets November 10 deadline for first solar power auction

14 July 2025 - Legal entities and entrepreneurs in Montenegro are preparing to compete in an auction for market premiums with their solar power projects

Serbia EPS starts trial operation of its Petka PV plant on coal tailings dump

Serbia’s EPS starts trial operation of its Petka PV plant on coal tailings dump

14 July 2025 - EPS connected its first larger solar park, called Petka, to the grid. The new facility is in its coal complex Kostolac.

GGF grows direct lending energy transition energy security

Impact Report 2024: GGF grows direct lending, committed to energy transition, energy security

11 July 2025 - In its Impact Report 2024, Green for Growth Fund outlined powering the green transition across Southeast Europe, the Caucasus and beyond

romania energy storage battery visual fan alview renovation contract

Visual Fan to install BESS facility of 65 MWh for Renovatio Trading

11 July 2025 - Visual Fan was hired to install a 65 MWh battery energy storage system for Renovatio Trading in Toplița in Romania’s Harghita county