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As Africa industrialises, grid resilience becomes the next energy challenge

At Africa Energy Forum 2026, Sungrow highlights the growing role of utility-scale energy storage in supporting resilient, flexible power systems across the continent.

Cape Town, South Africa, 17 June 2026. Africa’s industrial ambitions are increasingly tied to one critical factor: access to reliable, scalable energy.

As policymakers, investors and industry leaders gather in Cape Town this week for the Africa Energy Forum (AEF) 2026, the conversation has shifted beyond simply expanding generation capacity. The focus is now on how South Africa and other African countries can create the energy certainty needed to unlock industrial growth, attract investment and accelerate economic development.

Held under the theme “Building Africa’s Industrialised Future”, this year’s forum comes at a pivotal moment for the continent. While renewable energy deployment continues to gain momentum, many countries are still facing the challenge of ensuring that growing volumes of clean energy can be integrated into power systems without compromising reliability.

As electricity demand continues to rise, utilities and policymakers are under increasing pressure to deliver energy systems that are not only cleaner, but also more resilient and flexible. Achieving this balance will require more than new generation capacity alone; it will depend on technologies that can strengthen grid stability, manage intermittency and support the large-scale integration of renewable energy.

“Africa’s industrial future won’t be built on intermittent power. Whether it’s a mine in Zambia, a smelter in South Africa, or a data centre in Kenya, industry needs energy certainty. Storage is what bridges the gap between what renewables can generate and what industry needs to run reliably.”

Nigel Sun, President of Sungrow Southern Africa Region

Against this backdrop, energy storage is increasingly being recognised as a critical enabler of Africa’s energy transition and industrial future. By enhancing grid resilience and improving the reliability of renewable energy, utility-scale battery storage is helping to build the foundations for sustainable economic growth across the continent.

“What we’re seeing on the ground is a real shift in confidence. Large-scale storage projects are proving that this technology is bankable, scalable and delivering measurable results for grid operators today. The pipeline of projects across the continent tells us this transition has genuine momentum.”

Nigel Sun, President of Sungrow Southern Africa Region

A compelling example of this momentum is Project J, an integrated renewable energy and storage deployment in the mining sector in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The project combines a 90MW PV installation, using Sungrow’s SG350HX-20 string inverters, with an 80MW/320MWh battery energy storage system built on the PowerTitan 2.0 platform. By pairing high-output solar generation with utility-scale storage, the project provides the mining operation with a stable, self-sufficient energy supply; reducing dependence on the grid, cutting diesel costs and ensuring continuous production even during periods of grid instability. It is a practical demonstration of how integrated renewable microgrids can meet the demanding energy requirements of large-scale industrial operations.

Reflecting the growing role of storage in modern power systems, Sungrow will use AEF 2026 to showcase the PowerTitan 3.0 (PT3.0), the latest evolution of its utility-scale battery energy storage solution. Delivering 6.6/6.9/7.1MWh of nominal capacity in a 20-foot containerised design, the PT3.0 features a high-efficiency stacked cell architecture and SiC-based power conversion system, maximising round-trip efficiency and lowering lifetime cost of storage. Pre-installed and pre-commissioned for rapid deployment, it incorporates Sungrow’s most advanced safety features including lithium plating diagnosis, thermal runaway early warning and ArcDefender™ DC arc detection, making it purpose-built for the reliability demands of Africa’s utility and industrial markets.

“Africa’s industrial transformation is underway, and energy reliability is at the heart of it. At Sungrow, we’re not just supplying technology; we’re partnering with developers, utilities and industrial operators to build the energy infrastructure that Africa’s next chapter demands. AEF is exactly the right place to have that conversation.”

Nigel Sun, President of Sungrow Southern Africa Region

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