‘More complex trading strategies’ necessary for BESS to be profitable in the UK – EnergyShiftDaily
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‘More complex trading strategies’ necessary for BESS to be profitable in the UK

“It’s a global issue, but it’s been very predominant in Europe, in countries like Germany, Italy and the UK; we’ve seen very large grid connection queues, where a large portion of the queues are made up of storage projects,” she explained. “This directly eats into your project margins as your project is sitting there idle until it’s actually able to get connected.”

The diminishing of these delays, alongside a 31% year-on-year decline in turnkey BESS costs, means that developers may be financially incentivised to deploy batteries in the UK at present.

UK reaches BESS saturation

However, Grunenwald noted that the remaining connection queue backlog still exceeds the total volume of batteries that BloombergNEF expects to come online in the next decade, saying: “there’s still about 90GW that’s prioritised by 2035 [which is] still above what we expect to come online by that point.”

The batteries that do come online will also have to contend with complex market dynamics that require a similarly complicated revenue stack in order to turn a profit, not least because of the popularity of deploying new batteries in recent years; figures from Solar Media Market Research show that new utility-scale BESS capacity added in the UK has increased each year since 2017, as shown in the graph below.

Graph from Solar Media Market Research.
The UK installed more than 14,000MWh of new batteries in the first five months of 2026. Image: Solar Media.

The graph also shows how, in the first five months of this year, the UK installed more than 14,000MWh of new batteries, more than was installed in the entirety of 2025, and Grunenwald says that these project operators will have to develop more complex financial mechanisms for their projects.

“A battery cannot really rely on charging during the two lowest-priced hours and then discharging at the two highest-priced hours, and do that day-in, day-out, and expect to break even,” she explained. “That doesn’t work in the UK. However, it doesn’t mean that a battery cannot make economic sense in the country, or else we wouldn’t see that many installations.”

“That’s when we start seeing much more complex trading strategies and aggregation strategies come together,” Grunenwald continued. “When speaking with developers, a lot of these strategies start with aggregating a bunch of different batteries into a portfolio, and starting to trade both in the day-ahead and intraday market, to try to optimise dispatch over that time, reduce how many cycles you’re going to be able to do and, at the end of the day, maximise revenue across the entire portfolio.”

Solar Power Portal publisher Solar Media is hosting the Renewables Procurement & Revenue Summit, this week in London. The event will cover PPA design, tackling high energy prices and more; for more information, including the full agenda and ticket options, visit the event website.