Cambridge EnerTech’s

Large-Scale Battery Energy Storage Systems

Innovations in Safe, Efficient, and Scalable Energy Storage

December 8, 2025 ALL TIMES PST

 

 

Large-scale energy storage applications have rapidly become critical to the expansion of electrification globally. Advanced battery designs with higher energy density, reduced costs, and increased safety have the potential to offer real energy storage solutions to the grid, utilities, and end users. Cambridge EnerTech's Large-Scale Battery Energy Storage Systems symposium, part of AABC, will provide a platform to address the foremost challenges and provide a window into the innovation driving the buildout of BESS in the US and worldwide.

Monday, December 8

7:00 amRegistration and Morning Coffee

SAFETY & GRID STABILIZATION

7:50 am

Organizer's Remarks

Craig Wohlers, General Manager, Cambridge EnerTech

7:55 am

Chairperson's Remarks

Benjamin Campbell, Manager, Battery Research, E Source

8:00 am

BESS Failures: Risk and Impact

Eula Billaut, Project Engineer, Energy Storage & Distributed Generation Program, Electric Power Research Institute

While the overall rate of BESS failure incidents has continued to decrease, recent BESS failures have received significant media attention. EPRI is conducting research on the risk of BESS failures to better understand the likelihood and impact of failures based on different factors. Collaboration on BESS safety and industry transparency will be essential to safety improvement efforts and reducing the risk of failures.

8:30 am

Battery Safety—Insights on Joint Safety Guidelines Development of Energy Storage Alliances and Manufacturer Solutions

Matthias Vetter, PhD, Energy Storage Chief Expert, Huawei Nuremberg Research Center

This talk will offer insights into the collaborative development of battery safety guidelines, drawing from the joint efforts of energy storage alliances and manufacturer-specific solutions. It will explore how these combined perspectives are shaping comprehensive safety protocols and advancing risk mitigation across the large-scale BESS ecosystem.

9:00 am

Grid Stabilization through BESS Applications

Francisco Guerrero de Leste, Global Product Manager, Power Conversion Systems, Hitachi Energy

BESS are a critical element to enable new data centers, industrial electrification, and EV charging. BESS are also a key technology in the transition to a more flexible, digitalized grid run on power electronics. We will review BESS applications that system integrators, utility customers, and developers can use to solve challenges—whether for market participation, supporting network operators, or behind-the-meter electricity optimization, highlighting key requirements for successful deployment and operation.

9:30 amNetworking Coffee Break

BATTERY INTELLIGENCE

10:00 am

Battery Intelligence Approach for Large-Scale BESS

Wenjiao Huang, Principal Battery Research Data Scientist, Fluence

As transmission-connection energy storage systems regularly top 1 GWh, grids worldwide depend more than ever on reliable performance. Battery intelligence is key: from controls that adapt to state-of-health, to dynamic degradation prediction, to multifaceted balance, and state-of-charge management, to mitigating cyber threats. Learn more about the current state of battery intelligence in large scale energy storage systems from Fluence, a leading global provider.

10:30 am

Energy Storage Battery Modeling: Challenges and New Frontiers

Zahra Nozarijouybari, Senior Battery System Design and Architecture Engineer, Tesla Motors

Grid-scale battery energy storage demands accurate modeling and qualification methods tailored to long lifetime expectations. Stationary cells face partial cycling, prolonged idle periods, temperature gradients, and extended low-rate usage conditions often overlooked in standard test protocols and battery model development. Cell-to-cell variation and evolving characteristics over time complicate lifetime prediction. Robust, purpose-built approaches are essential to capture these factors and ensure reliable forecasting and performance throughout decades of operation.

11:00 am

AI for Advanced BMS Development for Large-Scale BESS

Tedjani Mesbahi, PhD, Full Professor, ICube-CNRS Laboratory, INSA Strasbourg, France

Explainable AI is redefining advanced BMS capabilities for large-scale battery energy storage systems. New approaches in data-driven modeling enable more accurate SoC/SoH estimation, early anomaly detection, and predictive maintenance that enhances system availability. Transparent AI methods also strengthen operator trust, regulatory compliance, and lifecycle traceability. Together, these advancements support safer, more efficient, and more sustainable grid-scale storage while laying the groundwork for emerging digital battery passport requirements.

12:00 pmEnjoy Lunch on Your Own

BATTERY CHEMISTRIES

1:00 pm

Chairperson's Remarks

Ian Smith, Battery Product Manager, Energy & Industrial Automation, UL Solutions

1:05 pm

Navigating Innovation and Investments in Long-Duration Energy Storage: From Technology Landscape to Commercial Reality

Urvi Mehta, Senior Research Associate, Energy Storage, Lux Research

This presentation explores the evolving landscape of long-duration energy storage, highlighting key technological innovations, IP developments, and market trends. Leveraging a comprehensive analysis of companies, investment dynamics, and cost structures, attendees will gain actionable insights into the economic viability and commercialization pathways of emerging energy storage technologies.

1:35 pm

Advancing Sodium-ion for BESS: From NFPP/HC Cell Insights to Grid-Scale Storage

Brandon Kelly, PhD, Chief Scientist, Peak Energy

 

 

Peak Energy will present progress on NFPP/HC sodium-ion cell development for grid-scale storage, highlighting advancements in prismatic-cell testing, electrochemical modeling, and degradation mapping. Early integration work at the module and string level reveals system behavior under grid-relevant duty cycles, with emphasis on thermal dynamics and design flexibility. The presentation will also outline strategic considerations for North American manufacturing and materials sourcing. Attendees will gain insight into upcoming validation activities and explore collaboration opportunities across the sodium-ion value chain.


  • Performance and design updates from large-format NFPP/HC sodium-ion cells
  • System-integration insights from module and string-level evaluations
  • North American scale-up strategy

 

2:30 pmNetworking Refreshment Break

ROADMAP TO 2030

3:00 pm

ESS Market Trends in North America: Safety, Tariff, and Deployment Trends

Benjamin Campbell, Manager, Battery Research, E Source

This session reviews 2025 ESS deployment trends in North America, with a focus on the applications now driving growth, including AI data centers, and fleet electrification. We’ll examine where deployments are rising, how use cases are evolving, and what these shifts mean for storage providers navigating the next phase of the market.

3:30 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:

Roadmap to 2030 and Beyond

PANEL MODERATOR:

Ian Smith, Battery Product Manager, Energy & Industrial Automation, UL Solutions

This panel will discuss the future of large-scale BESS covering all angles—which chemistries may prove dominant (or will there be different ones for different use cases). What does mass expansion of large-scale energy storage look like over the next 5-10 years, taking into account the effect of tariffs on the supply chain? What steps can we take to best facilitate expansion and continue the BESS ecosystem's forward momentum?

PANELISTS:

Francisco Guerrero de Leste, Global Product Manager, Power Conversion Systems, Hitachi Energy

Brandon Kelly, PhD, Chief Scientist, Peak Energy

Eula Billaut, Project Engineer, Energy Storage & Distributed Generation Program, Electric Power Research Institute

4:30 pmClose of Symposium





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