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Energy Gang

Energy storage steps up: the growing role of batteries on the grid, and the challenge from winter storms

Energy Gang

Wood Mackenzie

Tech News, Environment, Sustainability, Innovation, Renewable Energy, Technology, Alternative Energy, Energy, News, Cleantech, Wind Energy, Business, Climate Change, Solar Energy

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 10 February 2026

⏱️ 62 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

It’s the hottest sector in the global energy industry right now, driven by rising power demand, the need to back up variable renewable generation, and escalating threats to grid resilience. It is of course, battery storage. Host Ed Crooks and regular guest Amy Myers Jaffe speak with Julian Nebreda, CEO of energy storage systems company Fluence, about why batteries are becoming essential grid infrastructure.


At peak hours during the bitterly cold weather that has covered much of North America in recent weeks, batteries accounted for about 1% of US power supply. But even a relatively small share of battery capacity can play an outsized role in preventing outages, Julian says. He argues that batteries are best understood not as replacements for fossil fuels, but as system optimisers: delivering fast-response capacity, stabilising grids and allowing generation assets to run more efficiently. With Amy and Ed, he addresses some of the common myths around batteries’ cold-weather performance, multi-peak demand days and reliability compared with traditional generation.


The gang explores the next wave of demand growth for batteries, particularly from new data centres for AI. Julian points to “speed to power” as a major new driver for storage deployment, as the hyperscalers and other tech companies try to bring new data centre capacity online as quickly as they can. Their discussion also covers the geopolitical significance of storage, the attempt to build a battery supply chain in the US, the strengths of distributed versus centralised system designs and examples of operations from Texas to Ukraine. As Amy notes, the industry is still catching up to the full potential of storage, but the potential is enormous.


Let us know what you think. We’re on X, at @theenergygang and Bluesky, at ‪@theenergygang.bsky.social‬. 

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Texas is like a supercharged capital state.

0:04.1

With all the dialogue and all the rhetoric from politicians and so forth,

0:09.0

the bottom line is they have deployed a giant amount of batteries in the last two years.

0:15.0

We're only in a hurry.

0:16.0

And you know, you need, we need as an industry take that cassette out and put the, you know the faster cassette in that's going to drive at a much higher speed.

0:25.6

That's the way we need to work.

0:26.9

Those same companies that are going to space, they need electricity and they need it now.

0:32.1

That's right.

0:32.6

Right?

0:33.0

And so if the utility sector doesn't provide it, they'll figure out a way to provide it for themselves.

0:38.9

How do we want to make the grid so much efficient that nobody will think,

0:44.2

I better disconnect because I can do it by myself.

0:47.0

Because the grid is the best way of providing electricity efficiently, economically, and reliable.

0:53.2

Thank you. providing electricity efficiently economically and reliable.

1:05.6

Hello and welcome to the Energy Gang, a discussion show from Wood McKenzie about the fast-changing world of energy.

1:14.3

I'm Ed Crooks. And on this show we're going to be talking about what is probably the hottest sector in the global energy industry right now, which is battery storage.

1:18.1

To talk about that, it's a pleasure as always to welcome back Amy Myers-Jaffy.

1:22.8

Amy is the director of the Energy, Climate Justice and Sustainability Lab at New York University.

1:23.4

Hi, Amy.

1:23.7

How are you?

1:31.3

I'm great, Ed, and I survived, you know, minus 10 degrees or whatever it was at night here in the New York metro area.

1:33.3

And I just saying, I'm excited to have a show on batteries today because miraculously,

...

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