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Updated on 
June 9, 2026
Chint Solar’s Forward COD BESS Sale Signals Germany’s Shift Toward Turnkey Storage M&A
June 9, 2026
3 min read

Germany’s BESS M&A market is moving from pure development-rights trading toward forward COD transactions where buyers acquire advanced assets with construction, EPC delivery, O&M support, and a defined grid-connection timeline already packaged into the deal. Chint Solar Europe’s sale of a 56 MW / 180 MWh standalone battery portfolio to Second Foundation shows that storage investors are no longer only buying pipeline optionality; they are paying for execution visibility, turnkey delivery, and direct exposure to flexibility revenues in Germany’s intraday and ancillary services markets.

The transaction covers five utility-scale BESS projects across Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, and Brandenburg. The assets were fully developed by Chint and are being transferred with project rights, a turnkey EPC solution, and O&M services. The first projects are already under construction, with medium-voltage grid connections scheduled between Q2 2026 and Q3 2027. That makes the portfolio materially different from an early-stage storage pipeline sale. Second Foundation is acquiring projects with a visible path to COD, while Chint remains commercially relevant beyond development through construction delivery and operational support.

The buyer profile matters. Second Foundation is not a passive infrastructure buyer looking only for contracted yield. It is an energy trading and flexibility optimisation platform responsible for around 8% of continuous intraday power trading in Germany, active in more than 30 markets, and already managing 3 GW of renewable energy with 600 MW of BESS under construction. That makes the acquisition a revenue-optimisation play as much as an infrastructure acquisition. The commercial logic is clear: batteries in Germany are increasingly valuable when the owner can actively monetise spreads across intraday volatility, ancillary services, and dispatch flexibility, rather than relying on a single contracted revenue line.

This is consistent with the wider European storage M&A shift tracked by Enerdatics. In Q3 2025, European M&A activity rose as BESS transactions surged 120% year-on-year, with around 18 GW traded across 22 deals. The UK, Germany, and Italy accounted for more than 60% of traded capacity, supported by price volatility and policy frameworks such as Germany’s EEG and Italy’s MACSE. Investors showed rising appetite for solar-plus-storage hybrids and late-stage, shovel-ready BESS portfolios rather than speculative early-stage exposure.

Chint’s deal fits that pattern because it compresses three risks that have constrained storage M&A: development risk, delivery risk, and route-to-market risk. Chint reduces development and construction uncertainty by delivering the portfolio turnkey. Second Foundation reduces market-risk exposure by bringing trading capability in-house. Capcora’s role as exclusive financial adviser also points to the growing sophistication of storage sales processes, where the buyer is not only assessed on capital availability but also on its ability to extract value after COD.

The valuation signal is not disclosed, but the structure itself points to where premiums are emerging. Forward COD transactions sit between a development sale and an operating-asset sale. They allow sellers to capture more value than a plain project-rights disposal because construction readiness, EPC certainty, and O&M continuity reduce buyer execution risk. Enerdatics’ valuation work has shown that integrated delivery capabilities can support stronger premiums because sellers that remain involved through EPC, O&M, or asset management help mitigate delivery risk, while buyers increasingly price execution capability into development-stage deals.

For Chint Solar, the transaction is strategically important because it monetises a first standalone BESS portfolio while reinforcing its shift from solar developer to integrated energy infrastructure provider. Chint has already completed more than 1 GW of solar parks in Europe and has over 15 GW of PV and BESS projects under development. The sale demonstrates that its storage pipeline can be packaged not only as development inventory but as a delivery-led infrastructure product. Chint’s indication that it may offer BESS EPC services to third parties is commercially significant: developers with internal EPC and O&M capability can defend margins even after asset divestment.

For Second Foundation, the benefit is speed and market positioning. Instead of assembling greenfield projects across Germany’s increasingly competitive grid and permitting landscape, it acquires a 180 MWh portfolio with projects already moving into construction and COD windows beginning in 2026. The company can then apply its algorithmic trading and flexibility optimisation capabilities to assets designed for multiple revenue streams. In a market where battery revenues depend heavily on dispatch intelligence, trading platforms can justify paying for advanced portfolios because they control the upside after energisation.

The pressure is now on smaller BESS developers that can offer land, grid applications, or early-stage rights but lack construction capability, trading partnerships, or balance-sheet strength. As more German storage buyers target forward COD or turnkey structures, pure development-stage sellers may face lower upfront valuations, more milestone-based payments, or earn-outs tied to grid connection and COD. Conversely, developers that can combine site control, permits, grid visibility, EPC delivery, and O&M support will be better positioned to capture premium pricing.

Germany’s next wave of BESS M&A is likely to favour assets that are advanced enough for infrastructure capital but still flexible enough for trading-led upside. Chint’s 56 MW / 180 MWh sale shows that the market is not just rewarding battery capacity; it is rewarding batteries that can reach COD on a defined schedule and be monetised by owners with real route-to-market capability. The forward COD model could become a preferred structure for German storage sales as developers seek higher exit value and buyers compete for grid-ready assets before revenue optimisation becomes the main battleground.

Want to track the latest M&A, financings, PPAs, and key developments across the industry? Explore the Enerdatics Insights page.

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