The energy storage project includes 42 energy storage warehouses and 21 machines integrating energy boosters and converters, using large-capacity sodium-ion batteries of 185 ampere-hours, with a 110-kilovolt booster station as a supporting facility, according to information HiNa Battery Technology, which provides it with sodium-ion batteries, released today.
What is the largest sodium ion battery storage system in the world?
This project opened on June 30, 2024, with battery cells supplied by Zhongke Haina, making it the largest sodium-ion battery energy storage system in the world. The storage system consists of 42 battery containers and 21 integrated booster and conversion machines, in addition to a 110 kV booster station.
What is Datang Hubei sodium ion new energy storage power station?
The project represents the first phase of the Datang Hubei Sodium Ion New Energy Storage Power Station, which consists of 42 battery energy storage containers and 21 sets of boost converters. It uses 185 ampere-hour large-capacity sodium-ion batteries supplied by China's HiNa Battery Technology and is equipped with a 110 kV transformer station.
Where is China's 10 MWh sodium-ion battery storage station located?
The 10-MWh sodium-ion battery storage station was put into operation on May 11 in Nanning, Guangxi in southwestern China, China Southern Power Grid Energy Storage, the energy storage division of China Southern Power Grid, said on May 11.
What is a sodium ion battery?
The sodium ion cells used in the project were provided by Sino-Science Sodium and the project marks a new stage in the commercial operation of sodium ion battery energy storage, the company said. Sodium ion batteries are cheap, recyclable, environmentally friendly, safe and are already showing impressive increases in power.
Sodium-ion batteries represent a breakthrough in productivity, solving problems associated with the limited and uneven distribution of lithium resources, which in China represent only 6.3% of the world's reserves.
Energy-Storage.news has been told anecdotally that one reason China is investing so heavily on sodium-ion technology is because of fears that, long-term, it could start to be cut out of the lithium supply chain.