Canadian Solar subsidiary Recurrent has 2.3GWh of US battery storage contracted or in construction

LinkedIn
Twitter
Reddit
Facebook
Email
Rendering of the Slate project in California, which Recurrent Energy broke ground on in January after its sale to Goldman Sachs Renewable Energy. Image: Canadian Solar via Twitter.

Recurrent Energy, the project development subsidiary of vertically-integrated solar PV company Canadian Solar, has claimed that it has 2.3GWh of battery storage projects in “late-stage development”.

Canadian Solar is in the top ‘Solar Module Super League’ rankings created by our colleagues over at solar technology website PV Tech. Over the past few quarters of financial reports, the NASDAQ-listed company’s leadership has emphasised the growing importance of battery energy storage, both to the continuing success of the solar industry and in its own right as a clean energy asset class.

This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription

Enjoy 12 months of exclusive analysis

  • Regular insight and analysis of the industry’s biggest developments
  • In-depth interviews with the industry’s leading figures
  • Annual digital subscription to the PV Tech Power journal
  • Discounts on Solar Media’s portfolio of events, in-person and virtual

Or continue reading this article for free

The 2.3GWh of projects are mostly already in construction and are all in California, but are part of a bigger pipeline of about 11GWh of battery projects around the US that Recurrent Energy is currently hoping it can close contracts on. Canadian Solar CEO Dr Shawn Qu referred in a brief statement to forecasts from analysts that as much as 12GWh of energy storage could be deployed in the country this year, about three times 2020’s installation figures, which he said would double the installed capacity of battery storage.

A large percentage of Recurrent Energy’s projects are in California, and include standalone battery storage projects, retrofits of batteries to existing solar PV sites and new build solar-plus-storage. These include the Crimson 200MW / 800MWh battery energy storage system (BESS) in the desert in Riverside County, which is co-located with large-scale solar but will operate separately and is set to go online in summer 2022.

Recurrent is currently carrying out retrofits of 72MW / 288MWh of storage to the 200MWac Tranquility solar PV project in Fresno County and 88MW / 352MWh at the 200MWac Garland solar PV power plant in Kern County, for power generation group Southern Company. The developer said construction has also already begun at two projects owned by Goldman Sachs Renewable Power, a 75MW / 300MWh BESS retrofit at Mustang, a 100MWac solar project and the new build Slate solar-plus-storage facility which will combine 300MWac solar PV with 140.25MW / 561MWh of battery storage.

In reporting its Q1 2021 financial results in May, Canadian Solar had said that its manufacturing arm, CSI Solar, has like much of the solar industry been affected by recent rises in raw materials and transportation costs. In its Recurrent Energy press release yesterday, the company pointed out that CSI Solar also delivers fully-integrated battery storage solutions and this is likely to soak up at least some of the growing demand.

Read Next

Premium
July 25, 2025
California’s largest electric utility is continuing its push to establish a net-zero energy system by 2040, finalising an offtake agreement for 1.8GWh of battery storage capacity with Aypa Power.
July 23, 2025
Optimiser GridBeyond, over the summer, began operating the 200MW/400MWh Big Rock Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) in El Centro, California, with Gore Street Energy Storage Fund (GSF).
July 23, 2025
Australian renewable energy developer Edify Energy has confirmed that the 185MW/370MWh Koorangie battery energy storage system (BESS) in Victoria is fully operational.
July 22, 2025
The power generation arm of Manila Electric Company (Meralco) is developing its second large-scale battery storage project.
July 16, 2025
London Stock Exchange-listed Gore Street Energy Storage Fund (GSF) has entered into an agreement to sell its investment tax credits (ITCs) for the Big Rock energy storage project in California, US.

Most Popular

Email Newsletter