Tesla will be seeing some competition in the energy storage industry with a team effort by AES and Siemens. They’ve fully launched business operations at a new startup called Fluence Energy at the beginning of the year. A new energy storage project they’ll be working on in Long Beach, California, is hailed to be the biggest in the world.
Fluence was first announced back in July and both companies have a 50 percent stake in it. There’s over 10 years of experience already going into the new startup that’s headquartered in Washington, DC. Other offices will be located worldwide, such as Germany. While they’ll run independently from the two companies backing it, it still brings together the AES Advancion and Siemens Siestorage technology platforms.
Looking at the experience, both companies combine for a capacity of 485 megawatts of battery storage in 15 different countries. That’s among 56 different projects that’s either been deployed or awarded to the company. Among those is the world’s largest battery backup system that will be located at Long Beach, California.
AES was awarded the Southern California Edison project back in 2014. With a capacity of 100 megawatts and 400 megawatt-hours, it would beat out Tesla’s battery facility in South Australia that features 129 megawatt-hours. AES had the previous record with their system in Escondido, California.
“As the energy storage market expands, customers face the challenge of finding a trusted technology partner with an appropriate portfolio and a profound knowledge of the power sector,” Ralf Christian, CEO of Siemens’ Energy Management division said in a press release. “Fluence will fill this major gap in the market.”
While competition between Fluence and Tesla could increase battery storage sizes in the future, it’s not likely that we’ll go too far higher than 100 megawatts. The company’s COO, John Zahurancik, tells Greentech Media that smaller storage facilities could “be a better benefit” than having a large, centralized system.

A new survey of automakers from the leading research group KPMG points to a gloomy future ahead for the electric vehicle market, but the naysayers don’t appear to be taking energy storage breakthroughs into account. In the latest development, new research headed up by Brookhaven National Laboratory points the way to reducing battery charging times, a key obstacle cited by auto industry executives in the survey.
On islanded (or isolated) grids with growing renewable penetrations, grid operators often struggle to maintain system stability. Operators in places as diverse as Ireland, Puerto Rico and Australia frequently rely on inertial response from thermal power plants like coal or gas-fired generators to balance sudden mismatches between supply and demand. However, recent research from Northern Ireland’s Queens University Belfast (QUB) finds that battery-based energy storage can provide inertial response for system reliability much more efficiently, at a lower cost and with substantially reduced emissions than a much larger quantity of thermal generation.
The California Public Utilities Commission
AES and Siemens are combining their efforts to launch new energy storage startup called Fluence Energy and compete with Tesla Energy in the fast-growing, new energy storage industry.
The smart home was supposed to be big business by 2017, especially now that most Americans have smartphones in their pockets and millions of connected home devices like washing machines and thermostats have been sold. There’s been traction in voice-activated devices, but they’re not necessarily used to control smart devices in the home and are really built to be speakers and personal assistants than smart-home hubs. But with names like
NV Energ
Autarsys GmbH is planning to develop an energy storage system and PV project in Mam Rashan, a refugee camp in the Dohuk district of northern Iraq near the Syrian and Turkish borders.