Nuvve and Omnia Deploy 60 MW Battery Energy Storage System in Brașov, Romania
2026-03-23 10:18
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en.Wedoany.com Report on Mar 23rd, American company Nuvve Holding and Swiss firm Omnia Global announced they will construct a 60 MW battery energy storage system in the central Romanian city of Brașov. This is the third project the two companies have advanced in Europe since their collaboration began and is expected to commence commercial operation in 2026, aiming to enhance grid stability and optimize energy management.Battery Energy Storage System

According to information from Nuvve Holding, the project is being developed through SPV Braşov 60, bringing the total capacity of battery energy storage systems deployed by the two companies in Europe to over 150 MW. Previous projects include a 50 MW facility in Sweden and a 40 MW facility in Austria. All projects have signed Engineering, Procurement, and Construction agreements, securing site and grid connection rights.

Omnia Global brings mature project resources to the partnership. When the strategic collaboration was announced earlier this month, the Swiss company's development pipeline already included 16 projects in Austria, Romania, and Bulgaria, with a total capacity exceeding 700 MW, at various stages of development and due diligence.

The Brașov project will serve Romania's balancing and ancillary services markets, with the commercial operation target set for the fourth quarter of 2026. Revenue optimization will be managed through Nuvve's GIVe™ platform, covering Frequency Control Reserve, Automatic Frequency Restoration Reserve, and balancing market mechanisms.

Gregory Poilasne, Co-founder and CEO of Nuvve Holding Corp., stated: "It's not just about the size—it's about the economics. With revenues of $250,000 to $500,000 per MW per year, Nuvve is building a European energy platform that will generate high-margin recurring revenue from day one of operations. Given its yield profile, Romania is a particularly attractive market, and we expect it to be one of the strongest contributors to our European fee-based revenue base."

Daniel Hansen, CEO of Omnia, noted that the company prioritizes development work—securing grid connections, completing due diligence, and signing EPC contracts—before any asset is introduced to the partnership. He emphasized: "Romania is a market we know well, and the revenue dynamics there are excellent for grid-scale storage operators."

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