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UK Infrastructure Bank backs Bathgate battery producer with £25 million

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UK Infrastructure Bank backs Bathgate battery producer with £25 million

The UK Infrastructure Bank has made a £25m direct equity investment into Invinity Energy Systems, a Bathgate-based manufacturer of vanadium flow batteries, to support the commercial development of longer-duration energy storage.

The financing forms the cornerstone of a £56m fundraise, which also included £3m from Korean Investment Partners through an investment fund, a placing with UK institutional investors to raise a minimum of £22m via an accelerated bookbuild, and an open offer to all qualifying shareholders to raise a further £6.6m.




The investment will support the expansion of Invinity’s footprint in Scotland, with the proposed opening of a new manufacturing site, creating up to 41 new jobs.

The fundraise is subject to the approval of the company’s shareholders at a general meeting to be held later this month.

Durable and easy to deploy at scale, Invinity’s batteries have lower levels of degradation compared to other storage technologies and do not suffer from thermal runaway, making them well suited to a broad range of grid-scale battery applications.

Vanadium flow batteries enable storage between four and 12 hours, making Invinity’s batteries suited to manage energy supply and demand volatility, with a number of advantages over more well-established lithium-ion batteries.

Larry Zulch, chief executive at Invinity Energy Systems, said: “This investment provides Invinity with the opportunity to scale up to help meet the significant global demand for batteries with the characteristics that make our vanadium flow battery unique: high performance, long asset life, compelling total ownership economics, and no propensity to catch fire.

“We are grateful for the support of the UK Infrastructure Bank as we demonstrate the viability of LDES in the UK with battery systems produced in the UK.

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