BayWa r.e. Transfers 300-MW Dutch Battery Storage Project to Vopak
- BayWa r.e. has sold a ready-to-build 300-MW battery project in northern Netherlands to Vopak, handing the tank-storage giant its first large-scale foothold in Europe’s energy-storage market.
BayWa r.e. has agreed to sell its largest European battery venture—a 300-megawatt, grid-connected storage project in the northern Netherlands—to Rotterdam-based tank-storage operator Vopak. The deal hands BayWa r.e.’s Dutch subsidiary, GroenLeven, a rapid exit from development risk while giving Vopak a turnkey platform to diversify beyond its traditional oil-and-chemicals portfolio.
A ready-to-build package
The project arrives on Vopak’s desk fully permitted, with land secured and a 300-MW interconnection slot already confirmed by transmission operator TenneT. Vopak will now lead procurement and construction, opting for utility-scale lithium-ion technology capable of dispatching power into the high-voltage grid during peak demand and storing excess wind and solar energy at off-peak hours.
Strategic motives on both sides
For BayWa r.e.—which has been selling assets to shore up its balance sheet—offloading a capital-intensive build allows the Munich-based group to recycle funds into new European developments. “The experience gained on this flagship project will accelerate our next wave of storage sites in the Netherlands and beyond,” the company said in a statement.
Vopak, meanwhile, sees grid-scale batteries as a natural extension of its storage know-how. The firm’s terminals already manage complex safety systems, temperature controls, and high-capacity connections—skills that translate neatly to big-box energy storage. By absorbing the Dutch project, Vopak positions itself as a key player in the continent’s fast-growing flexibility market, where Europe must triple its storage fleet by 2030 to stabilise renewables.
Economic and regional impact
Situated in the country’s wind-rich northern provinces, the facility will ease local congestion and improve frequency response across TenneT’s network. Analysts estimate it could store enough electricity to power more than 300,000 homes for two hours, helping the Netherlands meet EU-mandated carbon-reduction targets. The build-out is also expected to inject millions of euros into regional supply chains and create a swath of engineering and maintenance jobs over the project’s 20-year lifespan.
What comes next?
Financial terms were not disclosed, but industry insiders expect construction to start later this year, with commissioning slated for 2027. As BayWa r.e. redeploys capital into other European markets and Vopak eyes supplementary acquisitions, the transaction underscores a broader trend: legacy infrastructure firms are moving decisively into battery storage, reshaping Europe’s energy landscape one megawatt at a time.
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