
BESS platform Ingrid Capacity has received construction permits for two projects in Sweden’s SE4 electricity region, which it said could start construction as early as this year.
The 100MW/400MWh Vaggeryd project and the 100MW/200MWh Horsaryd project will be among the country’s largest, and will double its portfolio from 650MWh to 1.2GWh when they go online in 2028.
However, the permit for Vaggeryd is only for 200MWh, with a re-application for updated specs including the larger, 400MWh size.
The Vaggeryd project will be the country’s first major 4-hour battery energy storage system (BESS), which Ingrid CEO Axel Holmberg called an ‘exciting’ development. The increase in duration from 2-hours to 4-hours, which appears to have been decided after the initial planning application, likely reflects the Sweden market’s evolution from ancillary services to energy trading.
This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Try Premium for just $1
- Full premium access for the first month at only $1
- Converts to an annual rate after 30 days unless cancelled
- Cancel anytime during the trial period
Premium Benefits
- Expert industry analysis and interviews
- Digital access to PV Tech Power journal
- Exclusive event discounts
Or continue reading this article for free
Read Next
Czech investment group Wood & Company (Wood & Co) has hired construction and optimisation partners for large-scale battery storage projects in Finland and Sweden.
UK energy major Centrica has activated two BESS totalling 40MW in Borlänge, Sweden, expanding its European portfolio to more than 770MW.
What are the merchant opportunities in Germany, where there are almost no capacity schemes or subsidies for energy storage? A panel of expert speakers discussed the opportunities in Europe’s largest energy market on the panel at the Energy Storage Summit 2026 in London in February.
Opportunity is ahead for Europe’s growing fleet of residential battery storage systems in electricity trading, writes Chris Bernkopf, CEO of flexibility and trading platform Podero.