New battery projects commissioned in 2025 could deliver internal rates of return (IRR) of 17% by operating in power exchanges, owing to falling upfront costs and rising revenue potential

New Delhi, 5 August – Battery energy storage systems (BESS) operating without fixed contracts – known as merchant BESS – turned profitable for the first time in 2024, according to the projections of a new report by energy think tank Ember. Falling battery costs and higher earnings from volatile power markets drove this shift. 

Ember’s analysis finds that battery costs have declined by around 80% over the past decade to INR 1.7 million per megawatt-hour (MWh) in 2025 from INR 7.9 million/MWh in 2015. Parallely, potential revenues from market participation have increased fivefold in the same period to INR 2.4 million/MWh in 2025 from INR 0.5 million/MWh in 2015. As a result, the report estimates that in 2024, merchant BESS revenues surpassed costs for the first time, making it a bankable electricity grid asset.