The Energy Storage Report 2024

Now available to download, covering deployments, technology, policy and finance in the energy storage market

Norway’s Morrow in 5.5GWh LFP battery offtake deal for maritime, stationary storage applications

LinkedIn
Twitter
Reddit
Facebook
Email

Morrow Batteries, one of several startups committed to producing lithium-ion batteries at gigawatt-hour scale from factories in Scandinavia, has secured a 5.5GWh offtake deal.  

The strategic offtake deal will see the Norway-headquartered manufacturer sell lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries over seven years to another startup, Nordic Batteries, which assembles and manufactures portable energy storage systems, battery modules, and racks.

This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription

Enjoy 12 months of exclusive analysis

  • Regular insight and analysis of the industry’s biggest developments
  • In-depth interviews with the industry’s leading figures
  • Annual digital subscription to the PV Tech Power journal
  • Discounts on Solar Media’s portfolio of events, in-person and virtual

Or continue reading this article for free

Nordic Batteries will initially make battery packs and storage systems customised for maritime and “demanding” industrial applications using the first commercial volumes of BEV2 brand LFP batteries Morrow delivers. It will also develop modules based on the cells.  

Meanwhile the pair will also cooperate in sales and marketing, as well as exploring the possibility of joint production of modules. The offtake deal progresses a partnership formed with a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed last year.

Morrow is building its first battery gigafactory in Arendal, Norway. It expects to begin production in the third quarter of this year and send the first cells to customer Nordic before the end of 2024. Nordic expects to have the first pilot line of its automated battery assembly line with 1GWh annual production capacity online in the second quarter of this year.

The company has so fair shipped cells from its Customer Qualification Line (CQL), including samples shipped to customers including Nordic Batteries for testing and validation since late last year.  

Stationary ESS market quicker to access than EV, Morrow COO says

As noted in an Energy-Storage.news Premium interview with Morrow COO Andreas Maier in March, the startup is primarily targeting the stationary energy storage system (ESS) market as part of its go-to-market strategy.

Speaking with ESN Premium at the Benchmark Mineral Intelligence Giga Europe conference held in Sweden, Maier said that the ESS market is much quicker to access, with lower barriers to entry than automotive, with Morrow signing offtakes with system integrators working in the commercial and industrial (C&I) and residential space, such as Eldrift.

Morrow is able, like fellow Scandinavian gigafactory startups Northvolt in Sweden and Freyr in Norway, to harness cheap and abundant renewable energy to decarbonise its production.

In terms of supply chain, it still sources cathode active material (CAM) from China, but according to COO Maier is considering production of CAM for LNMO (lithium nickel manganese oxide) batteries, if those find a place in the market. The supply chain for LNMO is much easier to source within Europe, he said.

Morrow and Nordic Batteries signed their new deal at the Hannover Messe trade fair in Germany this week.

Read Next

May 15, 2024
US asset manager Stonepeak has entered Japan’s energy storage market, forming a partnership with CATL-backed developer CHC.
Sponsored
May 14, 2024
While Norway once aimed to be the ‘battery of Europe’ it has since been overtaken other Nordic countries Sweden and Finland for BESS deployments. Research firm LCP Delta’s Jon Ferris explores the region’s energy storage market dynamics in this long-form article.  
May 8, 2024
Powin has debuted a modular battery storage container platform that enables the system integrator’s utility-scale projects to add 50% more capacity for the same footprint.
Premium
May 8, 2024
Europe appears to be slower and less bold than other markets like the US when it comes to financial support for upstream battery material projects like lithium refining, a company looking to invest half a billion euros in an EU project told Energy-Storage.news.
Premium
May 7, 2024
Battery energy storage system (BESS) integrator and manufacturer Powin Energy will get “priority access” to cells from Rept Battero’s new factory in Indonesia.

Most Popular

Email Newsletter