| Projects & Applications 
 Ukraine’s largest battery storage project enters commissioning phase
 
 Ukraine’s 400 MWh battery project dwarfs most Eastern European  installations, and is expected to come online in October 2025, ahead of  the winter.
 
 
   
 By
 Tristan Rayner
 
 Jul 11, 2025
 
 Grid-scale
 Projects & Applications
 
 
   Image: DTEK
 
 
 DTEK and Fluence have begun commissioning Ukraine’s largest battery  energy storage system, a 200 MW/400 MWh installation spread across six  sites that represents one of the biggest storage deployments in Eastern  Europe.
 
 The project, valued at €140 million, consists of 698 Fluence  Gridstack cubes distributed across locations with individual capacities  ranging from 20 MW to 50 MW. The system is designed to provide 400 MWh  of storage capacity, which the companies state is sufficient to power  600,000 Ukrainian homes for two hours. Bulgaria has an  operational 124 MW / 496.2 MWh battery energy storage system, beating the coming Ukrainian installation on energy duration but falls short on power output.
 
 Commercial operations are scheduled to begin in October 2025,  coinciding with Ukraine’s winter heating season when grid stability  becomes critical. The storage systems will provide frequency regulation,  power reserves, and balancing services to support the national grid  operated by Ukrenergo.
 
 The project represents the first major energy infrastructure  development delivered since the US-Ukraine Economic Partnership  Agreement was signed in April, announced at the Ukraine Recovery  Conference in Rome.
 
 War conditions have forced Fluence to implement remote commissioning  procedures for the first time. “The remote commissioning approach we  have introduced ensures continuity and operational efficiency amid  travel restrictions and will also enable faster scaling of any future  deployments,” said Julian Nebreda, Fluence’s CEO.
 
 Nebreda added, “The project with DTEK to build a strong and  decentralized energy system for enhanced energy security in Ukraine is  perfectly aligned with our mission to transform the way we power our  world. It is also one of the most impactful projects in our company’s  history.”
 
 To support local operations, 20 Ukrainian engineers and specialists  completed training on Fluence installations in Germany and Finland. The  training program prepared them to independently manage the storage  systems and respond to operational issues.
 
 
   
 “With our partner Fluence we are fast-tracking innovation, building  homegrown technical expertise and showing that even in wartime, progress  is achievable,” said Maxim Timchenko, DTEK’s CEO. “This battery storage  facility is proof of our determination to build back stronger.”
 
 The distributed nature of the six-site configuration aims to provide  resilience against outages while reducing reliance on rolling blackouts  that affect residential and commercial users
 
 ess-news.com
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