The first phase of Datang Group’s 100 MW/200 MWh sodium-ion energy storage project in Qianjiang, Hubei Province, was connected to the grid.
China’s state-owned power generation enterprise Datang Group said that it had connected to the grid a 50 MW/100 MWh project in Qianjiang, Hubei Province, making it the world’s largest operating sodium-ion battery energy storage system.
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.
Previously, the largest operational sodium-ion system was China Southern Power Grid’s Fulin 10 MWh BESS project, located in Nanning, southwestern China. The power station, which represents the first phase of a 100 MWh project, also features HiNa Battery’s cells.
According to Datang Group, one of China’s five large-scale power generation companies, the project team has overcome many difficulties to bring the Qianjiang project to fruition.
Tags: Battaery Storage, China, Datang Group
Recent Posts
India charts green shipping path: MEPC 83 outcomes discussed at IMEI-DG tech seminar
IME(I) Mumbai pioneers holistic development for future mariners with emotional resilience workshop
Adani launches India’s first hydrogen-powered truck
MAN Energy Solutions Completes Type Approval Test for Upgraded Dual-Fuel GenSet
Global Shipyards Launch Alliance to Accelerate Maritime Sustainability
Port of Antwerp-Bruges Launches Volta 1, Europe’s First Fully Electric Tugboat
CMA CGM Adds Second Methanol-Powered Vessel ‘Argon’ to Its Fleet
Electric Orkney Project Launches Game-Changing Hydrofoil Vessel ‘Zevi 1’