Long-Duration Energy Storage: The Economics, the Hype, and the Hard Truths

At TechConnect 2026’s Energy Storage track, not a single presentation covered lithium-ion. Instead, the spotlight fell entirely on challengers: zinc, sodium, flow batteries, and thermal storage. Beneath the enthusiasm lies a more complicated story about economics, efficiency, and hidden costs.
Li-ion cost per kWh
(daily cycling, 20 yrs)
LDES cost per kWh
(20 cycles/yr, 20 yrs)
LDES delivered cost
vs. comparable Li-ion
The Core Problem
Idle Time Is the Killer
The economics of any storage technology hinge on cost per delivered kWh, which means cycle count matters enormously. LDES systems, by design, cycle rarely. A 100-hour battery may recharge only 20 times per year. Every idle day adds to the cost of the energy it eventually delivers.
Lithium-ion’s advantage is versatility. It earns its keep every day through peak-shaving, grid stabilisation, and energy arbitrage — driving its effective cost per kWh down continuously. LDES technologies lack this daily revenue opportunity.
“The trick is, lithium-ion needs to be kept busy to keep its cost per kWh low — and that busyness is precisely its competitive advantage.”
Hidden Costs
Two Costs Routinely Ignored
1. Round-Trip Efficiency (RTE)
Every charge cycle costs money. A 50% RTE system adds 10 cents per kWh to operating costs at US bulk electricity rates ($0.05/kWh). A 90% RTE lithium-ion BESS adds only 5.5 cents. That 4.5-cent gap — multiplied over thousands of cycles — is enormous, yet rarely prominent in LDES marketing materials.
2. Installation Cost per kWh
A 20-foot container costs roughly the same to install regardless of how much energy it holds. A technology with half the energy density pays twice the installation cost per kWh. EPRI’s bottom-up analysis found EPC costs for leading lithium-ion products below $20/kWh, while some flow battery technologies exceeded $60/kWh.
- → LDES cost comparisons often ignore cycle frequency — a critical oversight
- → Low round-trip efficiency compounds costs with every kWh charged
- → Installation costs scale with energy density — lower density means higher cost per kWh
- → Lithium-ion’s versatility lets it reduce its effective delivered cost through daily use
Policy & Industry
The DOE’s 10/10/10 Challenge
The Department of Energy’s target — LDES at $0.05/kWh by 2030 — is an important north star, but the tracking methodology has weaknesses. LCOS comparisons assume once-daily cycling across all technologies, which misrepresents LDES economics for systems that cycle far less often. The absence of NPV discounting is also a departure from standard power plant levelised cost calculations.
DOE Deputy Director Erik Hsieh offered a more nuanced vision of where storage creates value:
1. Second-order value:
Storage’s greatest impact may come from enabling other grid assets — as in Chile, where storage lets power plants deliver more energy by offloading balancing duties.
2. Energy hedging:
Industrial consumers can buy cheap off-peak energy ahead of time and use storage to shield against intra-period price spikes.
3. Tighter integration:
Future storage will be coupled closely with the loads and generation it serves, rather than acting as a standalone buffer.
Technologies Worth Watching
What Stood Out at the Conference
Flow Batteries
The BESSt Company
Zinc-Polyiodide Flow
Claims 20× the energy density of vanadium redox. RTE of 75–80% is unusually high for a flow system. Zinc plating consistency remains an active challenge.
CMBlu
Organic Solid Flow
DC RTE >80%, 20,000+ cycle life with rejuvenation capability. Targets cost parity with Li-ion at 8+ hour durations.
Quino Energy
Organic Quinone Flow
Harvard spin-out targeting $188/kWh installed. Low energy density (500 kWh per 30’ container) will create installation cost headwinds.
Thermal Storage
Teverra
Geothermal Data Centre Cooling
Boosts cooling COP from 3–4 to 15–40 by using geothermal loops to absorb data centre heat by day and redistribute it overnight.
CO₂ Energy Dome
Compressed CO₂ (EPRI)
~75% RTE by capturing heat of compression during discharge. 60% of energy stored as heat, 40% as liquid CO₂. Google-backed pilot underway.
Zinc Chemistry Breakthrough
West Virginia University found that adding lanthanum nitrate to the electrolyte suppresses the dendrite formation that has long limited zinc battery cycle life — achieving nearly 1,000 stable cycles in tests. If this translates to commercial flow battery anodes, it could reduce the need for full discharge cycles to reset zinc plates, improving both economics and usability across multiple zinc-based technologies.
Summary
The Bottom Line
LDES is not a dead end — multi-day grid storage will be essential as renewable penetration grows. But three recurring flaws distort how technologies are evaluated and marketed:
1. Misapplied cost metrics:
LCOS figures built on daily cycling flatter LDES costs while hiding the true penalty of infrequent use and low efficiency.
2. Cherry-picked safety arguments:
Thermal runaway risks in lithium-ion are real, but hydrogen evolution and chemical hazards in LDES alternatives are routinely minimised.
3. Density blindness:
A system that takes twice the physical space pays twice the installation cost per kWh — a multiplier that must be carried through every economic comparison.
The technologies most likely to succeed will combine high RTE, credible cost road maps, and realistic cycle-use profiles. The LDES National Consortium and PNNL’s testing centre are doing essential work to separate genuine performance from promotional claims — their evaluations will be worth following closely.
