Polar Night Energy’s Project Manager Liisa Naskali and CTO Markku Ylönen with Ilmatar’s Project Developer Samuel Heino and New Business Development Manager Katja Koponen (from left to right) at Ilmatar’s Humppila-Urjala wind farm in December 2023. Ylönen and Koponen are shaking hands. Photo by Marjaana Malkamäki.
Polar Night Energy has teamed up with Ilmatar, a Nordic energy company and independent power producer (IPP), to start a new era of clean energy production. Their collaboration focuses on addressing critical challenges in wind and solar power generation, ultimately enhancing profitability and grid stability.
Text & images by Polar Night Energy
Polar Night Energy is developing the world-renowned Sand Battery towards Power-to-Heat-to-Power (P2H2P) capabilities – a cutting-edge system that converts excess renewable energy into heat, then back into electricity. The company will start a two-year program of development and commercialization of its electricity production capabilities.
Collaboration to advance development
Ilmatar, one of the leading IPPs in the Nordics, will participate in the development and will be among the first to be offered these state-of-the-art large-scale P2H2P systems. Ilmatar will provide Polar Night Energy with commercial piloting opportunities on their wind farms when the technology reaches an advanced stage. This will mark a significant step toward the practical deployment of this innovative solution.
“Renewable energy production business has finally reached the volume level where we can focus more on the cost-efficient, large-scale and flexible energy storage”, says Ilmatar’s New Business Development Manager Katja Koponen.
The collaboration aims to boost wind and solar power profitability and, at the same time, promote innovation in the energy storage sector.
Solution to energy storage problem
A well-known challenge of weather-dependent energy production is that electricity market prices are often low when production is at its peak. By developing new high-capacity energy storage solutions, the companies are building fl exible and decentralised energy system of the future while also creating new business opportunities and addressing bottlenecks in electricity transmission.
“Installing energy storage behind the meter at a wind farm makes controlling electricity output to the national grid easier. Similar advancements will follow with solar power as its grid presence grows. These large-scale storage solutions are crucial in our long-term strategy for cleaner energy,” says Markku Ylönen, CTO of Polar Night Energy. “We highly respect Ilmatar and are thrilled to collaborate. Ilmatar’s exclusive focus on wind and solar, without any history of combustion-based production, aligns with our vision. Being acknowledged as a key technology partner by Ilmatar, who are one of the leading players of future energy companies, is an honour,” he adds.
For more information, see the article published in Heat Exchanger World September 2022 ‘Polar Night Energy: How a sand battery could solve green energy’s biggest challenge’ available here: https://heat-exchanger-world.com/energy-storage-polar-night-energy-how-a-sand-battery-could-solve-green-energys-biggest-challenge/
About the companies
Ilmatar is a Nordic energy company and Independent Power Producer (IPP) founded in 2011, focusing solely on renewable energy and independent power production. Its business areas include renewable energy production and project development, construction, and maintenance.
Ilmatar owns its projects throughout their lifecycle, which can extend up to
40 years. The combined production capacity of Ilmatar’s various wind and solar projects in different phases in the Nordic countries is in excess of 20GW.
Polar Night Energy is a Finnish startup that designs and manufactures high temperature thermal energy storages for wind and solar energy. The Sand Battery developed by the company enables a significant increase in wind and solar energy production while reducing the use of fossil fuels. The company was founded in 2018.
About this Featured Story
This Featured Story was first published in Heat Exchanger World Magazine in March 2024. To read more Featured Stories and many other articles, subscribe to our print magazine.
Featured Stories are regularly shared with our Heat Exchanger World community. Join us and share your own Featured Story on Heat Exchanger World online and in print.