1GWh+ of BESS Progressed Across EU by Re:cap, Flower, Goldbeck, Tavion, LONGi, Teos and SPP

1GWh+ of BESS Progressed Across EU by Re:cap, Flower, Goldbeck, Tavion, LONGi, Teos and SPP

Energy Storage News
Energy Storage NewsMay 1, 2026

Why It Matters

The wave of new BESS projects accelerates Europe’s transition to a renewable‑heavy grid and creates fresh investment opportunities for EPC firms and technology suppliers. Scaling storage capacity is critical for meeting EU decarbonisation targets and stabilising intermittent solar and wind output.

Key Takeaways

  • re:cap launches 95 MW/220 MWh Finland BESS, commissioning H2 2027
  • Goldbeck Solar gets NTP for two 100 MW/300 MWh German BESS projects
  • Flower advances 110 MW/420 MWh of German BESS to RTB
  • SPP invests €1 million in 2 MW/4 MWh Huawei BESS for grid services
  • Tavion raises $62 million, 300 MW ready‑to‑build pipeline in Poland

Pulse Analysis

Europe’s battery‑energy‑storage market is hitting a new inflection point as more than 1 GWh of capacity entered the build or financing stage this week. Policy incentives, tighter grid reliability standards, and the need to absorb ever‑larger shares of wind and solar are driving utilities and investors to lock in projects across Finland, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Slovakia and Poland. The geographic spread reflects a maturing market where storage is no longer a niche add‑on but a core component of national energy strategies.

Financing structures and EPC models are evolving in tandem with the hardware rollout. Global investor re:cap is deploying its FP Lux European Battery Storage Fund to fund a 95 MW/220 MWh Finnish park, while Swedish platform Tavion secured $62 million in equity and debt to fast‑track a 300 MW ready‑to‑build pipeline in Poland. EPC specialists such as Goldbeck Solar and Teos are winning notice‑to‑proceed contracts that bundle design, construction and long‑term service agreements, reducing developer risk. Meanwhile, optimisation firm Flower is moving its own projects to ready‑to‑build status, signaling confidence that advanced control software can unlock higher value from storage assets.

The surge also underscores the growing role of Chinese technology in European storage. LONGi’s solar‑plus‑storage plant in Italy, Sungrow’s BESS supply for re:cap’s German project, and Huawei’s 2 MW/4 MWh unit for Slovakia’s SPP illustrate a competitive supply chain where European developers increasingly rely on Chinese manufacturers for inverters and battery modules. As capacity scales, these partnerships will shape cost trajectories, performance standards, and ultimately the speed at which Europe can meet its 2030 net‑zero objectives.

1GWh+ of BESS progressed across EU by re:cap, Flower, Goldbeck, Tavion, LONGi, Teos and SPP

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