| Grid-scale 
 Another 1.4 GWh of US energy storage, $350m of battery-related investment
 
 Utility Georgia Power is forging ahead with plans for battery   energy storage systems (BESS), Canadian Solar-owned Recurrent Energy has   secured $825m for a storage project and a solar site, and developer  and  battery materials firm Redwood Materials has attracted new  investment.
 
 
   
 By
 Max Hall
 
 Oct 24, 2025
 
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 Tende
 
 
 
   Papago, where Recurrent Energy operates an energy  storage site  and is building a solar project, is southwest of Phoenix,  Arizona  (pictured, top right). | Image: Imagery ©2025 NASA, Map data  ©2025  Google, INEGI/Google Maps
 
 
 This week has brought news of at least another 1.4 GWh of battery   energy storage capacity in the United States, with utility Georgia Power   starting construction on an 800 MWh site, Recurrent Energy securing   finance for a 600 MWh project, and Redwood Materials reporting a $350   million funding round.
 
 Atlanta-based Georgia Power yesterday  announced the start of  construction at its 200 MW/800 MWh BESS in  Twiggs County, southeast of  Macon, Georgia.
 
 The utility  will own the BESS, which is being built next to the  Twiggs County Solar  project by North Carolina-based construction company  Crowder  Industrial Construction, LLP.
 
 Georgia Power said the BESS was  selected via a tender as a result of  its Integrated Resource Plan  Update in 2023 and was approved by the  Georgia Public Service  Commission (PSC) last month.
 
 The utility said it  is already  constructing the 49.5 MW Moody BESS  in Lowndes County, near the Moody  Air Force Base solar site, which is  due in May; the 128 MW Robbins  BESS, near the Robbins Air Force Base  solar site in Bibb County, due  June; the 530 MW phases I and II of its  McGrau Ford BESS in Cherokee  County, due October 2026 and September,  respectively; and the 57.5 MW  Hammond BESS on the retired Plant Hammond  coal-fired power station site  in Floyd County, due November next year.
 
 The electric  company is seeking Georgia PSC approval for more than  3.02 GW of energy  storage capacity across 10 BESS and a further 350 MW  of BESS project  capacity at two solar-plus-storage sites and says it  will tender for a  further 500 MW of BESS with at least two hours of  storage capacity.  Bids will be due in that tender in “early 2026” with  the projects to be  delivered before 2032, the utility said.
 
 Arizona
 
 Out west, the Recurrent Energy business owned by Canadian Solar on   Tuesday announced an $825 million finance package for energy storage and   solar projects in Maricopa County, Arizona.
 
 The  construction finance loans and tax equity commitment will fund  the  under-construction, 600 MWh Desert Bloom Storage site and the 150 MW   (AC) Papago Solar project. Recurrent did not separate out funding   details for the separate facilities.
 
 Both sites are due  online before July and are being developed as part  of a multi-project  deal signed by Recurrent and utility Arizona Public  Service (APS). They  follow construction of the 1.2 GWh Papago Storage  site which began  operating in Maricopa County in July, under a 20-year  “tolling  agreement” with APS, by which the utility operates the site for  the  contract term.
 
 Recurrent said German public lender  Norddeutsche Landesbank  Girozentrale; Japan’s Mitsubishi UFJ Financial  Group, Inc.; US rural  banking network CoBank; and Germany’s Siemens  Financial Services  provided the construction finance element of the  funding package. US  banking giant Wells Fargo provided the tax equity  commitment.
 
 Dallas-based Primoris Services Corp. is providing  engineering,  procurement, and construction services for the Desert  Bloom Storage  site, Recurrent said.
 
 More BESS?
 
 And there could be more BESS on the way courtesy of Redwood’s latest funding round.
 
 The Nevada-based company develops BESS, makes battery components,  and  produces critical raw materials cobalt, nickel, copper, lithium and   cathode active material. Announcing the results of the Series E  funding  round yesterday, Redwood said the $350 million would be  injected across  its operations.
 
 Stating its BESS can also be  used to optimize electricity supply from  natural gas turbines and  nuclear, a press release issued by Redwood  about the funding round  said, “By combining deep materials and  manufacturing expertise with  advanced power electronics and software,  Redwood is creating a new  generation of US-made energy storage systems …  reducing reliance on  imported LFP [lithium iron phosphate] batteries.”
 
 The funding  round was led by Californian venture capital (VC) and  private equity  investor Eclipse Ventures and included the NVentures VC  arm of  Californian chipmaker Nvidia
 
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