Govt. launches global tender for 250 MW battery storage

Wednesday, 15 July 2026 00:25 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}


 

  • 15-year Build, Own and Operate BESS contracts to be awarded through international competitive bidding
  • 250 MW/1000 MWh project spans 25 substations, with developers funding construction and grid connection
  • Battery storage expected to improve renewable integration and strengthen long-term energy security
  • Tender supports Govt.’s 70% renewable electricity target by 2030 and net zero pathway by 2050

The National System Operator Ltd., (NSO), operating under the Energy Ministry, has launched an International Competitive Bidding (ICB) process for the establishment of a 250 MW/1000 MWh Standalone Battery Energy Storage System (BESS), one of the largest grid-connected storage procurements the country has undertaken to date.

Under the tender, reference number TR/REP&PM/ICB/2026/001/C, developers will build 10 MW/40 MWh capacity blocks at 25 grid substations across the island, including Ambalangoda, Ampara, Bolawatta, Chunnakam, Hambantota, Kurunegala, Matara, Galle, and Monaragala, among others. 

Projects will be developed on a Build, Own and Operate (BOO) basis, with successful bidders entering into a 15-year Energy Storage Agreement with the NSO. Connection will take place at the 33kV voltage level.

Proposals are due by 10 a.m. on 14 August 2026. The Request for Proposal (RFP) document is available until 13 August 2026 for a non-refundable fee of Rs. 150,000 for local proponents, or $ 500 for overseas proponents. 

Developers are required to design, finance, construct, commission, operate, and maintain their projects, cover the full cost of grid interconnection, and secure all environmental and statutory approvals before proposals are considered by the Cabinet Appointed Negotiation Committee.

The tender reflects a broader global shift towards battery storage as core power infrastructure. 

According to the International Energy Agency’s (IEA) Global Energy Review 2026, the world added 108 gigawatts of new battery storage capacity in 2025, a 40% increase over the previous year, with installed capacity now around 11 times higher than in 2021. 

The IEA’s Electricity 2026 report projects that global storage capacity will need to grow roughly six-fold, to about 1,500 gigawatts, by 2030 to support the international goal of tripling renewable generation.

Industry observers say the ability to offer investors a stable, storage-backed renewable grid has become an increasingly important factor in attracting foreign direct investment (FDI), particularly from export-oriented manufacturers. 

Data from the RE100 initiative, which tracks major multinational companies committed to sourcing 100% renewable electricity, shows manufacturing now accounts for around 28% of member companies’ total electricity demand, the second-highest share of any sector. Companies including Apple, Google, Infosys, Tata Motors, and TSMC have built renewable energy procurement into their operations and increasingly expect the same from suppliers and host countries.

The BESS tender is aligned with Sri Lanka’s existing energy and climate policy framework. Under the National Energy Policy (2019), the country has committed to developing indigenous renewable resources, diversifying its generation mix, and reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels to below 50% of primary energy supply by 2030. 

The Cabinet of Ministers has approved a target of generating 70% of the country’s electricity from renewable sources by 2030, a commitment reflected in Sri Lanka’s Nationally Determined Contributions under the Paris Agreement.

At the national climate level, the Environment Ministry’s Carbon Net Zero 2050 Roadmap and Strategic Plan sets out a sector-by-sector pathway towards carbon neutrality by 2050, spanning energy, transport, industry, waste, agriculture, and forestry. Sri Lanka reaffirmed this commitment in its third Nationally Determined Contribution, submitted in September 2025, which sets an economy-wide emissions reduction target for the 2026-2035 period. Grid-scale battery storage, officials say, is one of the practical pieces of infrastructure needed to make that renewable-heavy, net-zero-aligned grid a reality rather than a long-term aspiration.

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