AI-powered energy storage in Ontario, Canada

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 Stem, a provider of AI-driven energy storage services, is deploying an intelligent energy storage system for Solvay’s plant in Welland, Ontario. With Stem’s services, Solvay will reduce their Global Adjustment and energy costs automatically—without changing plant operations or making a capital investment.

Based in Belgium, Solvay manufactures advanced materials and specialty chemicals for a wide range of industries, including the renewable energy and energy storage industries. Stem’s AI-driven energy storage system will be over 3 MWh and sited at Solvay’s Welland manufacturing plant located in Niagara Falls, Canada, where the firm manufactures phosphine for use in consumer electronics and other high-end applications.

Stem’s Global Adjustment offering—specifically designed for Ontario—is ideal for large manufacturing plants and other industrial operations that seek improved control over energy costs and a way to make the electric grid more sustainable. Stem’s use of AI is a clear advantage to industrial customers—with the ability to control energy storage charging and dispatching operations around highly-sensitive and high-safety equipment, while providing automated savings. Using predictive analytics and high speed data feeds from the buildings, weather services, and the wholesale market to anticipate IESO grid peak hours, Stem’s AI, Athena, releases stored energy at exactly the right times to help Stem’s customers.

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“Manufacturers and industrial companies typically have intense energy expenses. With a growing Ontario-based team and world-leading artificial intelligence, Stem has everything an Ontario industrial leader needs to reduce their costs and meet their clean energy goals,” said John Carrington, CEO of Stem, Inc. “Moreover, our C$200 million project financing partnership with Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, combined with other leading provincial partners, connects Stem with some of the most important stakeholders in Ontario and with some of the deepest relationships in the province.”