
On Wednesday, Tesla announced on X that its Powerwall fleet in Europe has surpassed 1 Gigawatt-hour (GWh), which the company says is enough energy storage to power roughly 41,000 households for 12 hours. The news comes as the latest milestone in Tesla''s continued deployment of energy storage equipment in Europe, North America and elsewhere.
Tesla''s Powerwall systems are used alongside solar panels to store power generated from the sun. That energy can then be used to power user households, charge their electric vehicles (EVs), or be sent back to the electrical grid.
As Tesla has demonstrated in previous uses of its Powerwall systems, groups of homeowners with the hardware can essentially create large, distributed batteries, the power from which can then be sold back to the grid during peak demand or saved to be used during outages.
The distributed battery concept is apparent in Tesla''s Virtual Power Plant (VPP) programs, which have now been piloted in the U.S. in California, Texas, Massachusetts and most recently, the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico. Similar pilots have also been deployed outside of the U.S. in Australia and Japan.
In April, German utility operator TransnetBW announced some results from a pilot program using Tesla''s Powerwalls to test added grid flexibility, with the company''s CFO Dr. Rainer Pflaum saying that the technology could "contribute reliably to grid stability and thus support the transition to 100 percent green electricity in the grid."
The so-called "PV-Shift" project oversaw the installation of Tesla''s Powerwalls, and results from the pilot note high potential savings by adding flexibility to the electrical grid and the company has encouraged the government to begin creating regulations to help deploy the technology.
With Tesla''s milestone of surpassing 1 GWh in its Powerwall fleet in Europe, the infrastructure is already in place and expanding to offer similar VPP pilots across the continent. Tesla hasn''t formally shared plans to debut such a project, but with other VPPs thriving in recent pilots, it''s likely only a matter of time.
Last quarter, Tesla announced that it deployed a record 4 GWh of energy storage. That includes both Powerwalls and Megapacks – with the latter likely accounting for the majority of the capacity as it is used for large utility-scale projects.
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