The AES Alamitos Battery Energy Storage System. How a giant lithium array quietly stabilizes California’s grid
Veröffentlicht: 15.07.2026 um 09:57 Uhr, Redaktion AD HOC NEWS, Redaktionelle Verantwortung: Rafael Müller (Chefredaktion)The AES Alamitos Battery Energy Storage System hums behind a chain-link fence in Long Beach, its white container units lined up like freight cars under the coastal haze. Technicians from AES walk between the rows, listening for the faint buzz of inverters and checking status lights.
Grid-scale battery in detail
The AES Alamitos Battery Energy Storage System is a grid-scale lithium-ion installation that provides up to 100 megawatts of power and 400 megawatt-hours of energy capacity to Southern California Edison. It sits on the site of the existing Alamitos natural gas plant, sharing interconnection infrastructure.
AES describes the system as part of the 1,284 megawatt Alamitos Energy Center portfolio, combining flexible gas capacity with fast-acting battery storage to meet peak demand. In practice, it can discharge at full output for up to four hours, covering the evening ramp when solar generation falls away.
Engineering and operation
The battery system uses thousands of lithium-ion battery modules housed in standardized containers, paired with power conversion systems and control equipment supplied by AES’s Fluence partnership. Cooling systems keep temperatures within tight bands, with fans and liquid circuits working continuously on hot summer days.
Control software monitors each string of batteries, adjusting output in seconds to support frequency regulation and reserve services for the California Independent System Operator. On a typical evening, the facility ramps from standby to tens of megawatts in under a minute when wholesale prices spike.
AES Corp. and battery-backed power
Read more background on AES Corp. and how large battery systems like Alamitos fit into its generation portfolio and earnings mix.
Local impact and project team
The Alamitos battery went online around 2021 as part of a broader procurement by Southern California Edison to replace older coastal gas plants that relied on once-through cooling. AES project manager Carlos Hernández described the facility in a company briefing as "a critical piece of flexible capacity for the Los Angeles basin".
From the neighboring residential streets, the installation is visually quiet: white enclosures, low-profile buildings and fenced-off transformers. Noise measurements in public documents show sound levels near the property boundary comparable to regular urban background, thanks to acoustic design and limited moving parts.
Why batteries matter for AES
AES positions large battery assets such as Alamitos as a way to balance its portfolio of thermal generation and renewables. CEO Andrés Gluski has repeatedly highlighted storage as a strategic focus, stating that AES expects several gigawatts of storage deployments through its Fluence joint venture and own projects.
Commercially, Alamitos participates in California’s capacity markets and energy trading, earning revenue from resource adequacy contracts, ancillary services and price arbitrage. The ability to respond faster than traditional gas peakers gives it a technical edge in certain grid services, even if batteries operate within defined state-of-charge limits.
Technical metrics and configuration
Public filings and trade coverage point to an installed battery capacity of approximately 100 megawatts and 400 megawatt-hours for Alamitos, arranged in modular blocks for easier maintenance and potential upgrades. Each block combines battery racks, power conversion, protection equipment and communication systems.
The system connects to the grid at high voltage through transformers and switchgear shared with the Alamitos Energy Center’s gas units. This co-location reduces land use and interconnection costs, while allowing the battery to operate independently from the gas turbines. Grid operators see it as a dispatchable resource, with charging and discharging schedules coordinated via market bids.
Safety, lifecycle and regulation
Safety engineering plays a central role. The battery uses fire detection, suppression systems and strict ventilation protocols, following National Fire Protection Association guidelines and local California codes. AES and regulators require separation distances between units to limit any potential incident.
Lifecycle plans assume gradual capacity fade of the lithium cells over years of cycling, with replacement or augmentation strategies built into the long-term contracts. Environmental reporting indicates that AES has disposal and recycling pathways for retired modules, reflecting growing policy pressure around battery waste.
Market position and competition
Alamitos competes indirectly with other large California battery sites, such as Moss Landing and Gateway Energy Storage, for ancillary services and capacity payments. These sites, developed by different operators, collectively contribute several gigawatts of storage to the state grid.
For AES, the project demonstrates its ability to deliver complex hybrid plants that integrate thermal and storage. That experience supports bids in other markets, from Arizona to Chile, where regulators and utilities seek alternatives to pure gas peakers and new coal projects.
Context and AES Corp. stock
For retail investors and customers, Alamitos shows how an otherwise abstract term like "battery energy storage" turns into a physical, fenced-off asset with measurable cash flows and operational responsibilities. Its contribution to AES revenue is not broken out in detail, but storage and renewables feature prominently in company presentations and earnings materials.
On the equity side, AES Corp. stock trades in New York in US dollars and reflects the company’s broader mix of thermal generation, renewables and storage, into which projects like the Alamitos Battery Energy Storage System are gradually woven as recurring infrastructure assets.
Key facts AES Alamitos Battery Energy Storage System
- Product: AES Alamitos Battery Energy Storage System
- Manufacturer: AES Corp.
- Category: Accessory/Spare part (utility-scale storage asset in AES generation portfolio)
- Market launch: Around 2021, following Southern California Edison procurement
- MSRP / Price: Not publicly itemized; project-level investment in the hundreds of millions of US dollars for the broader Alamitos Energy Center
- Availability: Operating in Long Beach, California, as part of the Alamitos Energy Center under contract with Southern California Edison
- Target group: Utility customer Southern California Edison, California grid operators and indirectly consumers needing reliable power
- Highlight / USP: Four-hour, 100 megawatt battery capacity co-located with gas units, delivering fast-response grid services and peak support.
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