
Sunwoda has participated in the 2026 edition of Solar Media’s Energy Storage Summit in London, showcasing its latest battery innovations as well as utility-scale and C&I ESS solutions. During the summit, Vicente Aguilar, the company’s Director of Technical Solutions, delivered a keynote presentation titled “Driving Sustainable Compliance: Sunwoda Digital Battery Passport and Supply Chain Compliance Solution,” outlining its approach to compliance under the evolving EU battery regulations.
During his keynote, Aguilar emphasized that, as EU battery requirements move from policy to implementation, compliance is shifting from documentation to systematized data governance. Companies must navigate fragmented cross-enterprise data flows, heightened due diligence and responsible sourcing scrutiny, circular-economy transition pressures and the need for secure, role-based disclosure frameworks.
To address these challenges, he presented an integrated solution combining the Battery Passport with supply-chain compliance management, built around a unique digital identity (UID) and structured lifecycle records. The solution supports compliance execution and lifecycle management in three practical dimensions—compliance readiness and market access, traceability and disclosure, and verification and information security—delivered through the four core modules of a Supply Chain Traceability System, Carbon Footprint Calculation, Due Diligence Management and a Digital Battery Passport.
Sunwoda showcased representative products within its Digital Battery Passport roadmap, including 588Ah and 684Ah battery cells, a 5MWh Liquid Cooled ESS, and a fully integrated 261kWh liquid cooled C&I ESS. The company’s ESS product portfolio entered the pilot phase of the Digital Battery Passport in September 2025, with static data onboarding completed in November 2025 and dynamic data collection now underway, with pilot completion targeted for June 2026. Guided by “Crafting Every Battery with Care” and backed by stringent quality control, Sunwoda continues to advance lifecycle transparency while reinforcing reliable delivery and long-term operational confidence.
As regulatory frameworks and sustainability expectations continue to evolve, digitalization is becoming increasingly important for building trusted supply chains and enabling circular-economy progress, with Sunwoda continuing to strengthen its compliance-focused digital capabilities alongside robust engineering and quality disciplines.
Aguilar concluded: “Verifiable lifecycle transparency and secure digital governance are essential to long-term industry development. We will continue integrating digital compliance capabilities with engineering excellence to support a more sustainable energy storage future.”