SAN DIEGO (March 7, 2023) – Smartville, a leading developer of reliable second-life energy storage systems, has deployed its first commercially available product, the Smartville 360 energy storage system, at the University of California San Diego’s Library Annex.
Smartville 360 is the first second-life energy storage system to integrate and control repurposed electric vehicle battery packs from different manufacturers at varying levels of health in one unified system. By giving EV batteries a second life as ultra-low carbon storage with a high value per kilowatt hour and assured reliability, Smartville is bringing the U.S. closer to energy independence and the planet closer to a net-zero future.
UC San Diego uses Smartville’s Smartville 360 system to store solar energy from a 200-kilowatt rooftop solar array to reduce demand on the local utility grid after sunset and avoid peak electricity rates. The 500-kilowatt-hour system also provides 48 hours of emergency backup power.
“Smartville’s technology, which fills a very important role in the clean energy mosaic, is exactly what California needs,” said David Hochschild, chair of the California Energy Commission at the project unveiling. “This new technology category, a subset of energy storage, answers many energy issues facing our state today. Smartville’s solution completes the puzzle, and we look forward to working with them on more projects like this in the near future.”
“This represents our first step in bringing a truly scalable EV battery repurposing solution to market and providing a domestically manufactured energy storage product to meet California’s and the nation’s infrastructure needs,” said Smartville’s CEO and cofounder Antoni Tong. “To accelerate our next commercial milestone, we are now speaking with venture investors interested in advancing profitable, scalable, low-carbon, low-cost solutions to our sustainable future.”
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