Kyoto shares the technology that brings the importance of decarbonizing the industry - this technology is Heatcube. Heatcube is the missing link between renewable energy and Industrial process Heat. The Thermal Battery for our future; providing high volume, stable, electrified heat to industry – the missing link between renewable energy and heat demand.
Renewable energy sources, like wind and solar, are intermittent suppliers. Heatcube is the solution to stabilizing this supply to meet mass industrial demand.
Simultaneous charging and discharging: the molten salt circulation system is designed for separate charging (electrical heating) and discharging (steam generation).
The world is getting warmer and you're still playing with fire. The gas is making steam sick. It's time to make steam clean. We at Kyoto Group enable industry with clean steam in a world powered by nature.
On 27 May 2025, over 200 participants attended the webinar on the "EASE Guidelines on Safety Best Practices for Battery Energy Storage Systems". The Guidelines are designed to support the safe deployment of outdoor, utility-scale lithium-ion (Li-ion) BESS across Europe.
EASE has prepared a position paper with suggested amendments to the Draft Clean Industrial Deal State Aid Framework (CISAF), initially submitted as a response to the Public Consultation to the Commission seeking the views of relevant stakeholders on a draft for this framework.
The EASE Guidelines on Safety Best Practices for Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) are designed to support the safe deployment of outdoor, utility-scale lithium-ion (Li-ion) BESS across Europe. These guidelines aim to assist developers, manufacturers, service providers, and all stakeholders in the value chain—including relevant authorities, first responders, and permitting bodies—in implementing safety practices that align with regulatory requirements and technical standards.
The ninth edition of the European Market Monitor on Energy Storage (EMMES) by the European Association for Storage of Energy (EASE) and LCP Delta, is now available, highlighting Europe's rapid expansion in energy storage capacity, which reached 89 gigawatts (GW) by the end of 2024. The report also projects continued strong growth through 2030, driven by technological advancements, policy support, and other key factors.