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Energy

California Plant Taps Sodium-Ion Tech to Challenge China's Battery Hold

A 183,000-square-foot facility under construction in Sacramento signals a strategic pivot in the American energy landscape. By focusing on grid-scale sodium-ion storage, the plant aims to bypass the geopolitical vulnerabilities of lithium supply chains while addressing the surging electricity demands of an AI-driven economy.

California Plant Taps Sodium-Ion Tech to Challenge China's Battery Hold

Peak Energy is spearheading the project, which is designed to produce 4 gigawatt-hours of battery systems annually—a capacity sufficient to power nearly four million households. The facility distinguishes itself by excluding fans and liquid pumps, relying instead on passive cooling to manage heat. The company claims this design reduces energy storage costs by 20% and ensures 99% uptime, with production and shipping slated for early 2027.

This domestic push arrives as China, led by industry giant CATL, aggressively advances its own sodium-ion initiatives. With lithium prices historically volatile and global supply chains heavily centralized, the shift toward sodium offers a more level playing field for Western manufacturers. The transition is urgent: U.S. data center energy demand is projected to reach 66 gigawatts by 2027, placing unprecedented strain on aging power infrastructure.

Industry leaders view this transition as a matter of national energy security. Kurt Kelty, General Motors’ vice president of batteries and propulsion, noted that the grid-scale storage market is evolving into essential infrastructure. As the U.S. looks to reinforce its grid against the backdrop of rising demand, the ability to manufacture storage solutions locally is becoming a primary economic and security imperative.

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