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China's battery boom shifts from quantity to performance
China's battery storage fleet has grown to over 150 GW capacity by Q1 2026, but efficiency remains poor: co-located batteries complete 100 fewer charge-discharge cycles annually than standalone systems, leaving 23 TWh of potential clean electricity unused. Policy changes ending the co-location mandate and opening capacity markets to standalone storage are shifting the market toward grid-operated systems, requiring further electricity market reforms to unlock value.
This Wire brief sits within Fusion42's coverage of Climate Tech. Wire is Fusion42's founder-focused intelligence feed: each story is connected to the funds and startups it names — every one with a live profile on Raise or Scout — so founders can follow the capital and the momentum behind the headline rather than just the headline itself. Wire analysis is one of the live surfaces Arthur, Fusion42's AI co-founder, reasons over.
The Wire takeaway
If you sell grid-management software, power electronics, or frequency services to China's grid operators, demand for your technology just jumped: the market is moving from co-located batteries (which sit idle) to standalone systems dispatched by grid operators who need tools to squeeze every cycle out of them. The 23 TWh efficiency gap is the size of a country's power system—that's your addressable market.
Read the full story at review-energy.com →
Topics: Climate Tech · battery-storage · grid-integration · market-design · renewable-curtailment · standalone-vs-colocated