Product Code: EP 9576
The compressed air energy storage market is expected to grow from USD 0.48 billion in 2025 to USD 1.88 billion by 2030, at a CAGR of 31.4% during the forecast period.
Scope of the Report |
Years Considered for the Study | 2020-2030 |
Base Year | 2024 |
Forecast Period | 2025-2030 |
Units Considered | Value (USD Million) and Volume (MW, MWh) |
Segments | By Type, Expenditure Type, Capacity, Storage Form, Application, and Region |
Regions covered | Europe, Asia Pacific, North America, RoW |
The market is driven by the growing need for long-duration, emission-free energy storage solutions to support renewable integration and enhance grid reliability. Compressed air energy storage (CAES) systems enable large-scale storage of surplus renewable electricity and provide dispatchable power without direct greenhouse gas emissions, making them a feasible option for reducing reliance on fossil fuels and achieving climate targets. Rising renewable energy adoption directly increases the demand for supporting storage infrastructure such as CAES plants. Market expansion is further reinforced by laws, policies, and investment incentives that favor clean, sustainable energy storage technologies.
"Grid management segment to register highest CAGR from 2025 to 2030"
Compressed air energy storage (CAES) systems enhance operational efficiency by providing long-duration flexibility and balancing supply-demand fluctuations. They mitigate the challenges of renewable intermittency, ensuring stability against underutilized generation during low-demand periods and preventing overburdening of grids during peak loads. The technology supporting grid management through CAES is maturing, reducing development risks and encouraging large-scale investment. Furthermore, CAES systems integrate well into existing transmission and distribution networks, allowing utilities to target regions of moderate to high renewable penetration. Their versatility in scale and siting offers significant deployment opportunities, improving overall grid resilience and accessibility. Additionally, the predicted expansion of renewable capacity is well supported by the economic feasibility of CAES in grid management, particularly in terms of system lifetime, low operating costs, and provision of ancillary services.
"Underground storage form to be the fastest-growing segment during forecast period"
In the underground storage segment, compressed air energy storage (CAES) systems achieve higher efficiency and reliability by utilizing naturally occurring or purpose-built caverns, such as salt domes, aquifers, or hard-rock formations. These geological structures provide large, secure, and cost-effective storage volumes, avoiding the underutilization risks of smaller above-ground tanks and the potential cost intensiveness of alternative storage solutions. The technology for underground CAES is well established and widely proven, which reduces development risks and attracts greater investor confidence. Additionally, underground facilities are strategically suited for deployment in regions with moderate to high renewable penetration, offering long-duration capacity that strengthens grid stability and resilience. Their scalability and adaptability make them ideal for meeting growing market demand, while their economic feasibility in terms of construction, maintenance, and long operational life further reinforces their role in advancing CAES adoption globally.
"Europe to be fastest-growing compressed air energy storage market"
Europe is the fastest-growing market for compressed air energy storage (CAES), supported by several large-scale projects. In Germany, Corre Energy and Eneco are developing a major CAES facility in Ahaus using salt caverns, which is expected to provide over 300 MW of generation capacity by 2027. In the Netherlands, Corre Energy is advancing the Zuidwending project in Groningen, designed as a hydrogen-enabled CAES plant with multi-day storage capability. Alongside these, the EU is supporting innovation projects such as ASTERIx-CAESar, which integrates CAES with solar thermal systems to improve efficiency and flexibility. These initiatives highlight Europe's strong commitment to long-duration storage as part of its energy transition strategy.
In Europe, ambitious climate targets and renewable energy directives are driving strong policy support for long-duration storage solutions such as CAES. The EU's Green Deal, along with funding mechanisms like Horizon Europe and Projects of Common Interest (PCI), provides financial and regulatory backing to accelerate development. National governments in countries like Germany and the Netherlands are further supporting CAES projects through grid modernization incentives and renewable integration programs.
In-depth interviews were conducted with various key industry participants, subject-matter experts, C-level executives of key market players, and industry consultants, among others, to obtain and verify critical qualitative and quantitative information and assess future market prospects. The distribution of primary interviews is as follows:
By Company Type: Tier 1 - 57%, Tier 2 - 29%, and Tier 3 - 14%
By Designation: C-Level Executives - 35%, Directors - 20%, and Others - 45%
By Region: North America - 20%, Europe - 15%, Asia Pacific - 30%, Middle East & Africa - 25%, and South America - 10%
Notes: The tiers of the companies are defined based on their total revenues as of 2024; Tier 1: > USD 1 billion, Tier 2: USD 500 million to USD 1 billion, and Tier 3: < USD 500 million. Others include sales managers, engineers, and regional managers.
Hydrostor (Canada), APEX CAES (US), Storelectric LTD. (UK), Keep Energy Systems (UK), Corre Energy (Netherlands), TerraStor Energy Corporation (US), ALCAES (Switzerland), Augwind (Israel), Enairys Powrtech (Switzerland), Highview Power (UK), Baromar (Israel), Powerphase International (US), Sherwood Power (UK), Brayton Energy, LLC (US), Siemens Energy (Germany), Evellence (Germany), Ingersoll Rand (US), KOBE STEEL, LTD. (Japan), Doosan Skoda Power (Czech Republic), Green-Y Energy AG (Switzerland), Shaangu (China), Atlas Copco Group (Sweden), Harbin turbine company limited (China), and MITSUBISHI HEAVY INDUSTRIES, LTD. (Japan) are some of the key players in the compressed air energy storage market. The study includes an in-depth competitive analysis of these key players in the compressed air energy storage market, with their company profiles, recent developments, and key market strategies.
Study Coverage:
The report defines, describes, and forecasts the compressed air energy storage market by type (Adiabatic, Diabatic, Isothermal), expenditure type (CAPEX, OPEX), storage form (Underground, Underwater, Above ground), capacity (Small (Below 50 MWh), Medium (50-500 MWh), Large (above 500 MWh)), Application (Grid Management, Renewable Energy Integration, Others), and region (North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, RoW). The report's scope covers detailed information regarding the major factors, such as drivers, restraints, challenges, and opportunities, influencing the growth of the compressed air energy storage market. A thorough analysis of the key industry players has provided insights into their business overview, solutions, and services; key strategies such as contracts, partnerships, agreements, expansion, Joint ventures, collaborations, and acquisitions; and recent developments associated with the compressed air energy storage market. This report covers the competitive analysis of upcoming startups in the compressed air energy storage market ecosystem.
Key Benefits of Buying the Report
- The report includes the analysis of key drivers (Growing integration of renewable energy, Enables short-term and long-term storage across diverse applications, Long operational lifespan and reduced maintenance requirements), restraints (Competition from alternative storage technologies, Geological dependency and storage feasibility,) opportunities (Government incentives & regulatory support, Rising need to ensure grid resilience) and challenges (High upfront capital costs, Lower round-trip efficiency).
- Product Development/Innovation: Compressed air energy storage (CAES) market participants are advancing innovations across the value chain-covering storage form, capacity, expenditure models, and applications. In plant design, modular and scalable configurations, optimized turbomachinery, and advanced thermal management systems are enhancing efficiency, flexibility, and reliability. In storage and compression, companies are developing improved cavern engineering techniques, isothermal and adiabatic processes, and hybrid systems with hydrogen or thermal storage to boost round-trip efficiency and reduce emissions. Digital tools, including AI-driven plant optimization, predictive maintenance, real-time monitoring, and smart grid integration, are increasingly being deployed to improve performance, extend asset life, and ensure seamless integration with renewable energy and grid management systems.
- Market Development: In May 2024, BaroMar and RheEnergise signed an agreement to advance long-duration energy storage (LDES) projects in Cyprus and the UK. Under this partnership, BaroMar engaged Jacobs to design a 4 MWh underwater compressed air energy storage (CAES) pilot off Cyprus' coast, using rigid seabed-ballasted tanks to bypass land constraints. Meanwhile, RheEnergise launched a 500 kW high density pumped hydro energy storage (PHES) project at Sibelco's Cornwood mining site near Plymouth, UK, utilizing dense fluids for compact operation. This report provides a detailed analysis of compressed air energy storage solution provider strategies critical for project success, providing stakeholders with actionable insights into trends and opportunities for growth in the compressed air energy storage market.
- Market Diversification: The report offers a comprehensive analysis of the strategies employed by compressed air energy storage solution providers to facilitate market diversification. It outlines innovative products and operating models, as well as new partnership frameworks across various regions, underpinned by technology-driven business lines. The findings emphasize opportunities for expansion beyond traditional operations, identifying geographical areas and customer segments that are currently served but remain underserved and are suitable for strategic entry.
- Competitive Assessment: The report provides in-depth assessment of market shares, growth strategies, and service offerings of leading players such as Hydrostor (Canada), APEX CAES (US), Storelectric LTD. (UK), Keep Energy Systems (UK), Corre Energy (Netherlands), TerraStor Energy Corporation (US), ALCAES (Switzerland), Augwind (Israel), Enairys Powrtech (Switzerland), Highview Power (UK), Baromar (Israel), Powerphase International (US), Sherwood Power (UK), Brayton Energy, LLC (US), Siemens Energy (Germany), and Evellence (Germany), among others, in the compressed air energy storage market.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 INTRODUCTION
- 1.1 STUDY OBJECTIVES
- 1.2 MARKET DEFINITION
- 1.3 STUDY SCOPE
- 1.3.1 MARKETS COVERED
- 1.3.2 INCLUSIONS AND EXCLUSIONS
- 1.3.3 YEARS CONSIDERED
- 1.4 CURRENCY CONSIDERED
- 1.5 LIMITATIONS
- 1.6 STAKEHOLDERS
2 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
- 2.1 RESEARCH DATA
- 2.1.1 SECONDARY DATA
- 2.1.1.1 List of key secondary sources
- 2.1.1.2 Key data from secondary sources
- 2.1.2 PRIMARY DATA
- 2.1.2.1 List of primary interview participants
- 2.1.2.2 Key data from primary sources
- 2.1.2.3 Key industry insights
- 2.1.2.4 Breakdown of primaries
- 2.2 DATA TRIANGULATION
- 2.3 MARKET SIZE ESTIMATION
- 2.3.1 BOTTOM-UP APPROACH
- 2.3.2 TOP-DOWN APPROACH
- 2.3.3 DEMAND-SIDE ANALYSIS
- 2.3.3.1 Demand-side assumptions
- 2.3.3.2 Demand-side calculations
- 2.3.4 SUPPLY-SIDE ANALYSIS
- 2.4 FORECAST
- 2.5 RISK ANALYSIS
3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
4 PREMIUM INSIGHTS
- 4.1 ATTRACTIVE OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYERS IN COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET
- 4.2 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY MARKET IN ASIA PACIFIC, BY EXPENDITURE TYPE AND COUNTRY
- 4.3 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY TYPE
- 4.4 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY EXPENDITURE TYPE
- 4.5 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY STORAGE FORM
- 4.6 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY APPLICATION
- 4.7 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY REGION
5 MARKET OVERVIEW
- 5.1 INTRODUCTION
- 5.2 MARKET DYNAMICS
- 5.2.1 DRIVERS
- 5.2.1.1 Strong focus on renewable energy generation
- 5.2.1.2 Significant demand for technologies supporting hybrid energy ecosystems
- 5.2.1.3 Long operational lifespan and low maintenance requirements
- 5.2.2 RESTRAINTS
- 5.2.2.1 Competitive pressure due to presence of alternative storage technologies
- 5.2.2.2 Dependence on geological formations to store compressed air at high pressures
- 5.2.3 OPPORTUNITIES
- 5.2.3.1 Government incentives and regulatory support for CAES projects
- 5.2.3.2 Global clean energy transition
- 5.2.4 CHALLENGES
- 5.2.4.1 High upfront costs
- 5.2.4.2 Lower round-trip efficiency than substitutes
- 5.3 TRENDS/DISRUPTIONS IMPACTING CUSTOMER BUSINESS
- 5.4 SUPPLY CHAIN ANALYSIS
- 5.5 ECOSYSTEM ANALYSIS
- 5.6 TECHNOLOGY ANALYSIS
- 5.6.1 KEY TECHNOLOGIES
- 5.6.1.1 Adiabatic compressed air energy storage (A-CAES)
- 5.6.1.2 Liquid air energy storage (LAES)
- 5.6.2 COMPLEMENTARY TECHNOLOGIES
- 5.6.2.1 Carbon capture and storage (CCS)
- 5.6.2.2 Hydrogen CAES integration
- 5.6.3 ADJACENT TECHNOLOGIES
- 5.6.3.1 Battery energy storage
- 5.6.3.2 Pumped-storage hydropower
- 5.7 CASE STUDY ANALYSIS
- 5.7.1 UNDERWATER CAES SYSTEM PROVIDES SICILY WITH YEAR-ROUND RENEWABLE POWER BY CONVERTING SURPLUS WIND AND SOLAR ENERGY
- 5.7.2 WIND FARMS IN IRAN INTEGRATE CAES TO STABILIZE GENERATION AND MAXIMIZE CONSISTENT SUPPLY OF ENERGY
- 5.8 PATENT ANALYSIS
- 5.9 TRADE ANALYSIS
- 5.9.1 IMPORT SCENARIO (HS CODE 841490)
- 5.9.2 EXPORT SCENARIO (HS CODE 841490)
- 5.10 KEY CONFERENCES AND EVENTS, 2025-2026
- 5.11 REGULATORY LANDSCAPE
- 5.11.1 REGULATORY BODIES, GOVERNMENT AGENCIES, AND OTHER ORGANIZATIONS
- 5.11.2 REGULATIONS
- 5.12 PORTER'S FIVE FORCES ANALYSIS
- 5.12.1 THREAT OF SUBSTITUTES
- 5.12.2 BARGAINING POWER OF SUPPLIERS
- 5.12.3 BARGAINING POWER OF BUYERS
- 5.12.4 THREAT OF NEW ENTRANTS
- 5.12.5 INTENSITY OF COMPETITIVE RIVALRY
- 5.13 KEY STAKEHOLDERS AND BUYING CRITERIA
- 5.13.1 KEY STAKEHOLDERS IN BUYING PROCESS
- 5.13.2 BUYING CRITERIA
- 5.14 INVESTMENT AND FUNDING SCENARIO
- 5.15 IMPACT OF AI/GEN AI ON COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET
- 5.15.1 AI FOR SYSTEM MODELING AND OPTIMIZATION
- 5.15.2 AI-DRIVEN PREDICTIVE MAINTENANCE
- 5.15.3 AI FOR RENEWABLE INTEGRATION AND GRID MANAGEMENT
- 5.16 GLOBAL MACROECONOMIC OUTLOOK
- 5.16.1 INTRODUCTION
- 5.16.2 GOVERNMENT POLICIES AND SUBSIDIES
- 5.16.3 ENERGY TRANSITION AND DECARBONIZATION GOALS
- 5.16.4 CAPITAL EXPENDITURE (CAPEX) TRENDS
- 5.16.5 ENERGY SECURITY AND GEOPOLITICS
- 5.16.6 TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION
6 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY EXPENDITURE TYPE
- 6.1 INTRODUCTION
- 6.2 CAPEX
- 6.2.1 ONGOING LONG-DURATION ENERGY STORAGE PROJECTS TO CREATE GROWTH OPPORTUNITIES
- 6.3 OPEX
- 6.3.1 RISING ADOPTION OF SERVICE-BASED AND PERFORMANCE-LINKED CONTRACTS BY UTILITIES TO SUPPORT MARKET GROWTH
7 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY TYPE
- 7.1 INTRODUCTION
- 7.2 DIABATIC
- 7.2.1 CAPACITY TO STORE ENERGY IN BULK TO ENCOURAGE DEPLOYMENT
- 7.3 ADIABATIC
- 7.3.1 CARBON-FREE OPERATIONS, SUSTAINABILITY, AND ABILITY TO REUSE STORED HEAT TO PROMOTE DEMAND
- 7.4 ISOTHERMAL
- 7.4.1 HIGH ROUND-TRIP EFFICIENCY AND REDUCED TECHNICAL COMPLEXITY TO ENCOURAGE DEPLOYMENT
8 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY STORAGE FORM
- 8.1 INTRODUCTION
- 8.2 UNDERGROUND
- 8.2.1 SCALABILITY AND LONG-DURATION STORAGE CAPACITY NECESSARY FOR GRID-SCALE APPLICATIONS TO BOOST ADOPTION
- 8.3 ABOVE GROUND
- 8.3.1 SIMPLIFIED PERMITTING PROCESSES AND SUITABILITY FOR DISTRIBUTED AND MICROGRID APPLICATIONS TO SUPPORT SEGMENTAL GROWTH
- 8.4 UNDERWATER
- 8.4.1 NEED TO EXPAND STORAGE OPTIONS IN COASTAL AND LAKESIDE REGIONS TO DRIVE MARKET
9 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY CAPACITY
- 9.1 INTRODUCTION
- 9.2 SMALL-SCALE
- 9.2.1 INCREASING EFFICIENCY AND FAVORABLE POLICIES FOR ABOVE GROUND STORAGE SOLUTIONS TO DRIVE MARKET
- 9.3 MEDIUM-SCALE
- 9.3.1 POTENTIAL TO OFFER SCALABILITY AND COST EFFICIENCY TO SPIKE DEMAND
- 9.4 LARGE-SCALE
- 9.4.1 ABILITY TO SUPPORT BULK RENEWABLE INTEGRATION DURING PEAK DEMAND FOR EXTENDED OUTAGE TO SPUR DEMAND
10 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY APPLICATION
- 10.1 INTRODUCTION
- 10.2 GRID MANAGEMENT
- 10.2.1 GROWING NEED FOR FLEXIBLE AND RELIABLE POWER STORAGE SYSTEMS TO ACCELERATE SEGMENTAL GROWTH
- 10.3 RENEWABLE ENERGY INTEGRATION
- 10.3.1 INCREASING RENEWABLE DEPLOYMENT AMID ENERGY CRISIS TO FOSTER SEGMENTAL GROWTH
- 10.4 OTHER APPLICATIONS
11 COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE MARKET, BY REGION
- 11.1 INTRODUCTION
- 11.2 NORTH AMERICA
- 11.2.1 US
- 11.2.1.1 Emerging CAES projects supported by private and institutional investors to fuel market growth
- 11.2.2 CANADA
- 11.2.2.1 Rising renewable penetration and decarbonization targets to boost demand
- 11.3 ASIA PACIFIC
- 11.3.1 CHINA
- 11.3.1.1 Abundance of salt-cavern resources to accelerate CAES deployment
- 11.3.2 AUSTRALIA
- 11.3.2.1 Supportive policies backing dispatchable energy technologies to drive market
- 11.3.3 REST OF ASIA PACIFIC
- 11.4 EUROPE
- 11.4.1 GERMANY
- 11.4.1.1 Rise of long-duration energy storage to drive market
- 11.4.2 UK
- 11.4.2.1 Government-backed decarbonization targets to boost demand
- 11.4.3 NETHERLANDS
- 11.4.3.1 Transition toward low-carbon, renewables-dominated energy system to contribute to market growth
- 11.4.4 SWITZERLAND
- 11.4.4.1 Adoption of innovative CAES research and pilot projects to create opportunities
- 11.4.5 REST OF EUROPE
- 11.5 ROW
- 11.5.1 MIDDLE EAST & AFRICA
- 11.5.1.1 Expanding renewable-linked storage infrastructure to drive demand
- 11.5.2 SOUTH AMERICA
- 11.5.2.1 Investments in renewable-integrated storage solutions to propel demand
12 COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE
- 12.1 OVERVIEW
- 12.2 KEY PLAYER STRATEGIES/RIGHT TO WIN, 2020-2025
- 12.3 MARKET RANKING OF KEY PLAYERS, 2024
- 12.4 BRAND COMPARISON
- 12.5 COMPANY EVALUATION MATRIX: KEY PLAYERS (COMPRESSED AIR ENERGY STORAGE TECHNOLOGY PROVIDERS), 2024
- 12.5.1 STARS
- 12.5.2 EMERGING LEADERS
- 12.5.3 PERVASIVE PLAYERS
- 12.5.4 PARTICIPANTS
- 12.5.5 COMPANY FOOTPRINT: KEY PLAYERS, 2024
- 12.5.5.1 Company footprint
- 12.5.5.2 Region footprint
- 12.5.5.3 Type footprint
- 12.5.5.4 Storage form footprint
- 12.5.5.5 Capacity footprint
- 12.5.5.6 Application footprint
- 12.6 COMPETITIVE SCENARIO
- 12.6.1 DEALS
- 12.6.2 EXPANSIONS
- 12.6.3 OTHER DEVELOPMENTS
13 COMPANY PROFILES
- 13.1 TECHNOLOGY PROVIDERS
- 13.1.1 HYDROSTOR
- 13.1.1.1 Business overview
- 13.1.1.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.1.1.3 Recent developments
- 13.1.1.3.1 Deals
- 13.1.1.3.2 Other developments
- 13.1.1.4 MnM view
- 13.1.1.4.1 Key strengths
- 13.1.1.4.2 Strategic choices
- 13.1.1.4.3 Weaknesses and competitive threats
- 13.1.2 STORELECTRIC LTD
- 13.1.2.1 Business overview
- 13.1.2.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.1.2.3 Recent developments
- 13.1.2.3.1 Deals
- 13.1.2.3.2 Expansions
- 13.1.2.4 MnM view
- 13.1.2.4.1 Key strengths
- 13.1.2.4.2 Strategic choices
- 13.1.2.4.3 Weaknesses and competitive threats
- 13.1.3 CORRE ENERGY
- 13.1.3.1 Business overview
- 13.1.3.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.1.3.3 Recent developments
- 13.1.3.3.1 Deals
- 13.1.3.3.2 Expansions
- 13.1.3.4 MnM view
- 13.1.3.4.1 Key strengths
- 13.1.3.4.2 Strategic choices
- 13.1.3.4.3 Weaknesses and competitive threats
- 13.1.4 APEX CAES
- 13.1.4.1 Business overview
- 13.1.4.2 Products/Services/Solutions offered
- 13.1.4.3 MnM view
- 13.1.4.3.1 Key strengths
- 13.1.4.3.2 Strategic choices
- 13.1.4.3.3 Weaknesses and competitive threats
- 13.1.5 AUGWIND
- 13.1.5.1 Business overview
- 13.1.5.2 Products/Services/Solutions offered
- 13.1.5.3 Recent developments
- 13.1.5.3.1 Deals
- 13.1.5.3.2 Expansions
- 13.1.6 HIGHVIEW POWER
- 13.1.6.1 Business overview
- 13.1.6.2 Products/Services/Solutions offered
- 13.1.6.3 Recent developments
- 13.1.6.3.1 Deals
- 13.1.6.3.2 Expansions
- 13.1.6.3.3 Other developments
- 13.1.7 KEEP ENERGY SYSTEMS
- 13.1.7.1 Business overview
- 13.1.7.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.1.8 BAROMAR
- 13.1.8.1 Business overview
- 13.1.8.2 Products/Services/Solutions offered
- 13.1.8.3 Recent developments
- 13.1.9 SHERWOOD POWER
- 13.1.9.1 Business overview
- 13.1.9.2 Products/Services/Solutions offered
- 13.1.9.3 Recent developments
- 13.2 OTHER TECHNOLOGY PROVIDERS
- 13.2.1 TERRASTOR ENERGY CORPORATION
- 13.2.2 ALACAES
- 13.2.3 ENAIRYS POWERTECH
- 13.2.4 POWERPHASE INTERNATIONAL
- 13.2.5 BRAYTON ENERGY, LLC
- 13.3 CAES SYSTEM PROVIDERS
- 13.3.1 SIEMENS ENERGY
- 13.3.1.1 Business overview
- 13.3.1.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.3.1.3 Recent developments
- 13.3.2 EVERLLENCE
- 13.3.2.1 Business overview
- 13.3.2.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.3.2.3 Recent developments
- 13.3.3 INGERSOLL RAND
- 13.3.3.1 Business overview
- 13.3.3.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.3.3.3 Recent developments
- 13.3.4 KOBE STEEL, LTD.
- 13.3.4.1 Business overview
- 13.3.4.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.3.5 DOOSAN SKODA POWER
- 13.3.5.1 Business overview
- 13.3.5.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.3.6 GREEN-Y ENERGY AG
- 13.3.6.1 Business overview
- 13.3.6.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.3.6.3 Recent developments
- 13.3.7 SHAANGU
- 13.3.7.1 Business overview
- 13.3.7.2 Products/Solutions/Services offered
- 13.3.7.3 Recent developments
- 13.3.7.3.1 Deals
- 13.3.7.3.2 Other developments
- 13.4 OTHER CAES SYSTEM PROVIDERS
- 13.4.1 HARBIN TURBINE COMPANY LIMITED
- 13.4.2 ATLAS COPCO GROUP
- 13.4.3 MITSUBISHI HEAVY INDUSTRIES, LTD.
14 APPENDIX
- 14.1 INSIGHTS FROM INDUSTRY EXPERTS
- 14.2 DISCUSSION GUIDE
- 14.3 KNOWLEDGESTORE: MARKETSANDMARKETS' SUBSCRIPTION PORTAL
- 14.4 CUSTOMIZATION OPTIONS
- 14.5 RELATED REPORTS
- 14.6 AUTHOR DETAILS