Battery storage project connected to Medicine Hat receives federal funding boost
Aqua-Cell Energy has received more than $1.5 million in federal funding to advance its salt-water flow battery technology and support a pilot project in Medicine Hat.
The funding comes through Natural Resources Canada’s Energy Innovation Program under the Battery Industry Acceleration Call and will support research focused on improving the performance and efficiency of the company’s long-duration energy storage systems.
Part of the investment will fund Aqua-Cell’s upcoming pilot project with the City of Medicine Hat’s electric utility. The project, part of the Energy Innovation Challenge and co-hosted by Decentralised Energy Canada and the City, will feature the company’s first shipping-container-sized battery system and is intended to demonstrate the technology in a real-world utility setting.
“This support from NRCan represents an important step forward for Aqua-Cell Energy,” co-founder and chief executive officer Keith Cleland said in a statement.

