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"Chile's largest PV plant to add 1.7 GWh of battery storage". Energy Storage. ^ a b c Ini, Luis (9 April 2025). "Another 2.2 GWh of batteries advance in Chile". Energy Storage. ^ a b Ini, Luis (7 August 2025). "Chile: AES Andes begins construction on co-located energy storage-backed plants with 2,380 MWh". Energy Storage.
By August 2025, Chile had 4.6 GWh of battery energy capacity. During 2024, 5.9 TWh of electricity was curtailed (mainly solar in the north) due to insufficient transmission, an increase from 2.7 TWh in 2023. Oasis de Atacama is a multi-site project with up to 2 GW of solar power and 11 GWh of storage.
With that, Solarpack raised its total operating capacity in Chile at the time to 181 MW. In 2013 the Atacama 1 solar complex was proposed as a 110 MW solar thermal electric plant (the first in Latin America) and a 100 MW photovoltaic plant. The solar thermal plant will include 17.5 hours of thermal storage.
Because of its good solar resource several international companies have bid record low prices for solar thermal power plants in Chile, including the Copiapó Solar Project bid at $63/MWh by SolarReserve in 2017. If realized this would have been the lowest ever price for a CSP project in the world.
El Salvador 's energy sector is largerly focused on renewables. El Salvador is the largest producer of geothermal energy in Central America. Except for hydroelectric generation, which is almost totally owned and operated by the public company CEL (Comisión Hidroeléctrica del Río Lempa), the rest of the generation capacity is in private hands.
Currently (November 2007), there are three registered CDM projects in the electricity sector in El Salvador, with overall estimated emission reductions of 385,553 tCO 2 e per year. One of the projects is a landfill gas project, another one a bagasse cogeneration project and the third one a geothermal plant project.
Gross electricity generation in 2006 was 5,195 GWh, of which 40% came from traditional thermal sources, 38% from hydroelectricity, 20% from geothermal sources, and 2% from biomass. In 2006, total electricity sold in El Salvador was 4,794 GWh, which corresponds to 702kWh annual per capita consumption.
The public company CEL (Comisión Hidroeléctrica del Río Lempa) owns and operates 97% of the capacity. The four hydroelectric plants in El Salvador are: 5 de Noviembre (81.4 MW), Guajoyo (15MW), Cerrón Grande (135 MW), and 15 de Septiembre (156.3 MW), all of them on the Lempa River.
Earlier this year, Huawei filed another patent for composite cathode material, signaling its ongoing commitment to investing in sodium battery technology. Marija has years of experience in a news agency environment and writing for print and online publications.
BYD and Huawei are not far behind. Both firms are heavily investing in sodium-ion technology improvements. They recognize the importance of developing efficient, cost-effective alternatives to Lithium-ion batteries. Thus, their R&D efforts are promising for the future energy storage landscape. Sodium-ion technology offers numerous benefits.
Huawei’s engagement in solid-state battery research reflects a wider trend among Chinese technology and automotive companies. Although Huawei does not manufacture power batteries directly, its growing interest in upstream battery materials is notable.
With constant innovation and expanding applications, sodium-ion batteries could redefine how we approach energy storage. The continuous collaboration among tech giants only speeds up this process. Transitioning from traditional energy storage solutions to sodium-ion is not just an innovative leap, but a strategic move.
The power station will be built in phases, with the first phase of 25 megawatts capacity followed by the second phase of equal magnitude. The energy from this solar plant will be integrated into the Beninese national electricity grid, during the 25 years of the solar farm's expected lifespan.
The solar farm is under development by the Government of Benin, with funding from the European Union (EU), the French Development Agency (AFD) and the Beninese Electricity Company (SBEE). The power station will be built in phases, with the first phase of 25 megawatts capacity followed by the second phase of equal magnitude.
The Beninese government selected the French engineering and construction conglomerate Eiffage to design, construct, operate, maintain the solar farm for the first three years of commercial operation, then transfer it to SBEE. Eiffage in turn, tasked two of its subsidiaries, Eiffage Énergie Systèmes and RMT to carry out the task.