| Why Big Tech could outpace utilities in deploying multi-day storage 
 With   hyperscalers searching for clean, round-the-clock power, developers  see  a new market for battery systems that can run for 100 hours or  more.
 
 October 9, 2025                                                Phoebe Skok
 
 
   Image: Wikimedia Commons / Lambtron / CC SA 4.0
 
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 Electric utilities rarely act as the vanguard of new energy technologies—it’s often private industry who makes the first bet.
 
 This time, it’s the hyperscalers and Big  Tech who are set to leapfrog  utilities as the first major customers for  and early adopters of  multi-day energy storage (MDS), which can provide  dozens of hours of  capacity. For data centers, which require 24/7/365  firm power, MDS  could be an attractive offer.
 
 “Data centers are looking for as  much  energy and power as they can get, as quickly as possible,”  explained  Aric Saunders, the executive vice president of  commercialization at  ultra-long-duration storage and carbon battery  start-up Noon Energy. The  company is developing batteries that utilize  reversible solid oxide  fuel cell technology to convert between  electricity and stored chemical  energy.
 
 He told pv magazine USA that   speed to power has   become a critical component of data center development. But, many of   the most common solutions have one thing in common, he said: backlogs in   shipping or technology development.
 
 While long-duration  storage and MDS are  still in their (comparatively) early days vis-a-vis  lithium-ion  batteries, the technologies are scaling fast and are set  to “become a  viable solution in terms of power, speed and costs.”
 
 “We haven’t had load growth for 20 years,”  Saunders said, adding that  the current moment is a turning point.  Coupled with increasing  renewable penetration, the 4-8 hours of storage  capacity provided by  most lithium storage systems just “isn’t  sufficient” to create a  satisfactory level of firm power for data  centers without also needing  diesel generators, which many companies are  trying to move away from.
 
 He sees MDS following a similar path to lithium, which evolved from a niche technology into a dominant industry force.
 
 “It’s not necessarily a new technology,  but a new application of the  technology,” he said. While electric  vehicles helped catapult lithium  batteries to the spotlight, Saunders  believes Big Tech may be the spark  that sets off the long-duration boom.
 
 “This is that push to get  us off the  margins and more mainstream, but it won’t be the final  one,” he said.  While we’re no longer in the earliest days of  long-duration storage,  Saunders expects the industry’s growth to be  “exponential” in the next  few years once the tech reaches bankability.
 
 “There will always be early adopters and  that’s where hyperscalers are  our best allies,” Saunders added, noting  that “utilities will admit it  themselves that they’ll never be that  first mover.”
 
 Noon is  focused more on not only  continuing to derisk their tech, but making  sure that their current  customers, including hyperscalers, understand  how it works and the value  it can bring them.
 
 “Solar or wind plus a long-duration battery? That’s an onsite power plant,” Saunders said
 
 pv-magazine-usa.com
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