Driven by growth in renewable energy deployments, combined with high energy costs from natural disasters and increasing concerns around energy security, global demand for energy storage is expected to surpass 100 GWh in 2025.
Will energy storage growth continue through 2025?
With developers continuing to add new capacity, including 9.2 GW of new lithium-ion battery storage capacity in 2024 through November 2024 and comparable levels of growth expected through the fourth quarter of 2024, energy storage investments and M&A activity are expected to continue this trajectory through 2025.
Which countries will see the most solar power installations in 2025?
The US saw record installations and another 20% in growth is forecast for 2025 – though President Trump's re-election has brought policy uncertainty. China held its leading position in terms of capacity growth due rapid adoption of wind and solar energy and required pairing with storage systems.
What will storage be like in 2025?
Europe saw a pivotal moment when the grid-scale segment experienced a significant surge, surpassing the distributed segment for the first time. In Latin America, momentum was built as storage deployments increased by 42%. In 2025, emerging markets for storage will be on the rise.
Which emerging markets will lead the storage industry in 2025?
In Latin America, momentum was built as storage deployments increased by 42%. In 2025, emerging markets for storage will be on the rise. Saudi Arabia will lead the charge, fuelled by its expansion of solar and wind generation.
Mainland China accounts for most of the global energy storage demand, driven in the near term by regional requirements for new utility-scale wind and solar projects to include energy storage capacity. However, the Chinese market is entering an era of change.
Will energy storage development continue to grow in the United States?
Amid ongoing conversations about grid reliability amid growing electricity demand driven in part by booming expansion of data centers and continuing interest in moving away from fossil fuels toward intermittent renewable resources, energy storage development will continue to grow across the United States.