With the recent inauguration of Switzerland's largest battery in Kappel and an even bigger facility coming online soon in Gurtnellen, the country is making a significant move into grid-scale energy storage to support its transition to renewable power.

"In future, batteries will take over the day-night balancing."
"This is a purely commercial venture. And thatâs a good thing."
Switzerland is aggressively pivoting toward a high-tech energy future as the era of large-scale battery storage officially dawns. Just last Friday, the nationâs largest battery facility to date was inaugurated in Kappel, boasting a staggering capacity of 80 megawatt-hours. This industrial titan can sustain 30,000 households for two hours, yet its reign as the country's heavyweight champion will be short-lived. By September, a new facility in Gurtnellen will shatter this record, providing enough energy to power nearly 120,000 households. This rapid-fire succession of projects signals a seismic shift in how the Swiss Confederation manages its power grid. While solar panels have long dominated the renewable conversation, these massive lithium-ion arrays are the missing piece of the puzzle, capturing midday sun to illuminate Swiss homes long after the sun sets behind the Alps.
The most striking aspect of this energy boom is that it is happening without a single cent of government subsidies. In a bold departure from traditional infrastructure projects, these batteries are purely commercial ventures. Industry leaders like CĂŠdric Christmann of Primeo Energie are proving that green tech is no longer a charity case; it is a lucrative business model. The strategy is clinical: buy solar power when prices plummet at midday and sell it back to the grid or the national operator Swissgrid when demandâand pricesâsoar in the evening. This market-driven expansion is moving at breakneck speed, with projects jumping from investment decisions to full operation in just one to two years. Unlike controversial wind farms or nuclear plants, these containerized units face almost zero public opposition, allowing developers to bypass the bureaucratic gridlock that often cripples Swiss infrastructure.
Batteries are not merely competing with Switzerlandâs iconic hydroelectric dams; they are saving them. Christian Schaffner of ETH Zurich highlights a critical strategic shift: batteries are now assuming the burden of 'day-night balancing.' By managing the daily fluctuations of solar power, these systems allow the massive pumped-storage plants in the Alps to conserve their water. This synergy is vital for national security. Instead of draining reservoirs to meet evening peaks, Switzerland can now hoard its water for the grueling winter months when solar production dips. This 'battery-hydro' alliance creates a dual-layered defense against energy shortages. While the 150 MWh currently installed across the country represents just the beginning, the integration of these technologies ensures that the Swiss grid remains one of the most resilient and sophisticated in the world.
The current expansion is merely the opening act of a massive infrastructure overhaul. While 280 MWh of capacity will be added by the end of this year alone, the pipeline for 2030 is truly gargantuan. Planned storage capacity is set to explode to at least 4,350 MWh within the next six years. To put that in perspective, this capacity could theoretically power over four million householdsânearly the entire nationâfor two critical hours. This wave of 'front-of-the-meter' storage is finally catching up to the 1,500 MWh already installed in private Swiss homes. As Switzerland marches toward its climate goals, the rapid deployment of these silent, safe, and efficient powerhouses ensures that the transition to renewables is not just a dream, but a functional, profitable reality. The message is clear: the Swiss energy landscape is being rewritten in lithium, and the pace of change is only accelerating.