A fresh collaboration between a multinational energy corporation and a battery startup utilizing heated bricks could alleviate Europe’s energy crisis and reduce carbon emissions.
Rondo Energy has created a “heat battery” capable of converting renewable energy into high temperatures suitable for industrial operations.
The startup has forged an agreement with Portugal-based energy firm EDP, committing to energize up to 2 gigawatts of heat battery installations by Rondo throughout Europe, commencing in 2025.
The industrial sector poses significant challenges for decarbonization due to its heavy reliance on fossil fuels to generate the high heat necessary for processes like steel and cement production.
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Heat batteries can potentially disrupt this dependency, with Rondo claiming its technology can reduce industrial emissions by 80% while enhancing grid stability by utilising and storing surplus renewable energy.
According to O’Donnell, the company’s batteries can unleash the potential of renewable energy by storing it over time, making an industrial solar project ten times more efficient.
Rondo has garnered support from various entities, including Microsoft Corp., Rio Tinto, and Aramco.
The collaboration with EDP marks the company’s most extensive deployment yet, signifying, as O’Donnell puts it, “bringing this new tool in the toolbox to scale.”