Primus Power strikes deal with Apple manufacturer Foxconn to target Chinese market

August 3, 2017
LinkedIn
Twitter
Reddit
Facebook
Email
Primus Power EnergyPod 2. Image: Primus Power.

Primus Power, a flow battery maker which claims its systems can cost less than half the price of lithium-ion energy storage over its lifetime, is establishing manufacturing lines in China.

Yesterday, Primus announced that it has struck up a deal with a subsidiary of Foxconn Group, the Taiwan-headquartered OEM that assembles a lot of Apple’s consumer electronics products and iphones. The subsidiary, Foxsemicon, supplies commercial manufacturing services to the semiconductor industry and for thin-film-transistor LCDs.

One among a small handful of redox flow-based energy storage system providers crossing the line from pilot phase into commercial deployment that includes the likes of VIZn, Redflow and RedT, Primus Power released its latest range of storage systems, EnergyPod 2, in February this year. The devices use zinc bromide battery chemistry generally targeting energy storage duration of around five hours.

The company received a US$32 million funding boost in March when it garnered investment from groups including Matador Capital from Saudi Arabia. That cash injection made Primus the chief recipient of venture capital funding in energy storage in the first quarter of this year, according to VC funding and M&A reports from Mercom Capital.

This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription

Try Premium for just $1

  • Full premium access for the first month at only $1
  • Converts to an annual rate after 30 days unless cancelled
  • Cancel anytime during the trial period

Premium Benefits

  • Expert industry analysis and interviews
  • Digital access to PV Tech Power journal
  • Exclusive event discounts

Or get the full Premium subscription right away

Or continue reading this article for free

In a recent interview with Energy-Storage.News, Nancy Pfund of social impact investing firm DBL Partners also pointed out that one of Primus Power’s energy storage systems has been installed on a pilot basis at Microsoft’s HQ. Pfund said it demonstrated the commercial potential of the technology.

Pfund, who was one of the earliest VC investors in Tesla before it floated on the stock exchange called that project “very significant in terms of signalling that part of the toolkit for corporations to reduce costs by going renewable and achieve their sustainability goals – a big part of that toolkit – is the battery or the storage architecture”.

Chinese market proximity

The manufacturing services agreement (MSA) announced between Foxsemicon and Primus Power will be for the assembly and testing of the EnergyPod batteries, which are intended to have a 20-year lifespan and are often used to provide peak shaving services for commercial and industrial (C&I) customers.

Primus said this would help “accelerate customer shipments” to markets like China and its neighbours by reducing its manufacturing lead times. The flow battery maker also said its new partner’s “engineering capability, global purchasing power and in-house fabrication, assembly and testing” on a large scale would help bring down manufacturing costs overall.

Also touted as an advantage of the EnergyPod technology particularly in comparison to lithium-ion rivals is the fact that “common” manufacturing processes are used in its production, from welding to injection molding to the assembly stages. This is a production advantage also claimed by other makers of flow energy storage like RedT and Redflow. The latter, an Australian company, uses a lot of easily replaceable plastic parts in its systems, for example and claimed to have been the first flow battery maker to arrive at mass production, through a deal with Flextronics. Primus also said its manufacturing lines require less specialisation than is needed for lithium-ion battery production.

VP of business development for Foxsemicon, Jackson Hwang, said that “the energy storage market is exploding, particularly in China”.

“We look forward to using our manufacturing prowess to help Primus deliver their industry-leading battery systems to China and global customers.”

Meanwhile, Primus Power VP Mark Collins said the arrangement would help his company accelerate production and shipping to meet “strong customer demand”.

“We are impressed with Foxsemicon’s world-class supply chain management, global manufacturing capability, attention to detail, and strong intellectual property protection,” Collins said.

Read Next

Sponsored
November 25, 2025
In the rapidly evolving US energy storage sector, companies must navigate a complex web of policy changes, supply chain challenges, and evolving customer needs.
November 24, 2025
Developer Akaysha Energy has confirmed that the 850MW Waratah Super Battery will undergo a planned balance of plant shutdown from 20 November to 2 December 2025.
November 21, 2025
In a major week for European BESS deal-making, project acquisition and financing deals have been done in the Poland, Germany, Finland, the UK and Romania for grid-scale projects totalling well over 1GW of capacity.
November 20, 2025
A year since the implementation of the initial steps in EU Batteries Regulation went into effect and the impacts are already being seen, writes Nicholas Bellini of TÜV SÜD.
November 18, 2025
The quarterly financial results of US non-lithium battery storage startups ESS Inc and Eos highlight their commercialisation strategies.