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Distributed batteries for grid resilience Zach Dell (CEO & Founder @ Base Power)
Episode 1
Published 1 year ago
Description
As the energy transition accelerates, batteries are no longer just utility-scale infrastructure - they're moving into homes, neighbourhoods, and communities. Residential storage is emerging as a powerful tool for improving grid reliability, reducing electricity costs, and giving consumers more control over their energy use. This shift is being driven by falling technology costs, growing demand for backup power, and the need for faster, more flexible ways to support an increasingly electrified grid.While most attention in the battery world focuses on utility-scale systems, Base Power is scaling something different: a distributed, behind-the-meter fleet of residential batteries installed across Texas homes.Zach walks us through the business model, the reasons residential deployment is faster and more scalable than many assume, and how Base’s vertically integrated strategy is unlocking both customer trust and capital efficiency. From billing and software to partnerships with utilities, the conversation unpacks what it takes to bring batteries to the grid at speed and at scale.In this episode of Transmission, Quentin is joined by Zach Dell, CEO and founder of Base Power, a fast-growing startup redefining how residential batteries are deployed and monetised in the U.S.Over the course of the conversation, you’ll hear about:
- The story of Base Power and why it is focusing on distributed, behind the meter residential deployment.
- How Base participates in ERCOT markets and plans for ancillary services.
- Zach’s take on cost curves, solar + storage vs nuclear, and the future of distributed energy.
- The role of vertical integration in reducing cost and increasing speed at every step of the process.
- Why more granular price signals in Texas could supercharge DER investment