NITCO TRADE is a wholesale distributor specializing in concrete production equipment, spare parts, and mining machinery. Founded in 2022 in Ankara, Turkey, the company primarily serves wholesalers and
If you''re reading this, you''re probably one of two people: a solar developer sweating over Turkey''s 30% import tariff on LFP batteries [3], or a coffee-fueled entrepreneur eyeing Ankara''s 80GWh energy storage target by 2030 [4]. Either way, you''re in the right place.
Ankarenerji, an energy solutions provider based in Ankara, offers a wide range of products from transformers to kiosks, panels, cables and accessories. We offer complete energy solutions to our customers with our contracting, maintenance and repair,
The Behind-the-Meter Storage (BTMS) Consortium focuses on energy storage technologies that minimize costs and grid impacts by integrating electric vehicle (EV) charging, solar photovoltaic (PV) generation, and energy-efficient buildings using controllable loads.
Kontrolmatik manufactures its energy storage systems on a turnkey basis in its factory in Ankara. It is planned that the energy storage system solutions will be offered by Pomega Enerji Depolama Teknolojileri A.Ş., a 100% subsidiary of Kontrolmatik after 2022.
A city where ancient Roman temples coexist with cutting-edge power storage facilities. Welcome to Ankara, where 5,000-year-old architecture meets 21st-century energy solutions.
The Pomega Energy Storage factory in Ankara,Turkey will start in Q4 2022. It will eventually have a production capacity of 1GWh by Q1 2025,with an interim ramp-up set for Q2 2024.
Its factory in Ankara can assemble 200 energy storage system enclosures a year, making products for residential, commercial and industrial (C&I) and utility-scale battery storage, equipped with Inovat''''s own energy management system (EMS).
As we head into 2026, Ankara''s storage boom is reshaping energy politics too. Local manufacturers now supply 60% of battery components—up from 18% in 2022. And with Turkey''s new "Flex Power" regulations taking effect, even small businesses can profit by selling stored energy back to the grid.
But hold on - there''s a catch. The import surge has exposed Turkey''s recycling infrastructure gap. Only 12% of spent batteries get properly processed today. Industry experts argue this could become Ankara''s next energy crisis if unaddressed.