Brussels, 24 June 2026 – The EU’s battery fleet is expected to grow from 37 GW in 2025 to 178 GW by 2030, according to a new Ember report. This fourfold increase, together with smart use of EV charging and heat pumps, could significantly reduce the need for gas in grid balancing and help the EU absorb far more wind and solar power.
“Batteries and smart use of the growing fleet of electric vehicles and heat pumps will become a real alternative to gas for balancing the grid. Batteries are expected to scale fast, storing more renewable power and delivering it in the evening, while AI-enabled automation of EV charging and heat pumps can help shift electricity demand to hours when renewables are abundant,” said Beatrice Petrovich, senior analyst at Ember.
Utility-scale systems drive battery capacity growth
Utility-scale batteries show the greatest growth potential, expanding across the EU both in absolute terms and relative to wind and solar capacity. At the end of 2025, the EU had about 3 GW of utility-scale battery storage for every 100 GW of wind and solar, equivalent to a 3% ratio. By 2030, this ratio is set to rise to 12%. By then, utility-scale batteries could also provide short-term flexibility at around 20% lower cost than new gas-fired power plants.