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Updated on 
July 13, 2026

Flower Acquires 112 MW German BESS Portfolio as Buyers Prioritize Grid-Ready Storage

July 12, 2026
3 min read

German battery storage M&A is shifting toward ready-to-build portfolios that combine secured grid access with integrated construction and operating support. Flower’s acquisition of seven standalone battery projects from Chint Solar Europe demonstrates this change: the buyer is not acquiring an early-stage development pipeline, but 112 MW / 332.5 MWh of permitted, grid-connected capacity that can move directly toward financing and construction. Commercially, this reduces development attrition for Flower while allowing Chint Solar Europe to monetize its projects without giving up the downstream EPC and operations revenue.

The portfolio comprises seven ready-to-build BESS projects distributed across Thuringia, Lower Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Saxony and Hesse. Individual projects range from 6 MW to 48 MW, with storage durations of approximately three to four hours. All seven assets have secured the required permits and grid connections, while commissioning is scheduled throughout 2027.

Flower will own, finance, operate and commercialize the projects. Chint Solar Europe will remain responsible for turnkey delivery under EPC contracts and will provide long-term operations and maintenance services. This allocation of responsibilities is an important transaction signal. Flower gains control of the assets and their future trading revenues, while Chint retains construction earnings, operating income and responsibility for delivering the portfolio through commissioning.

The deal therefore represents more than a conventional development-stage asset sale. It transfers ownership and capital requirements to an energy technology company with commercialization capabilities while keeping project execution with the original developer. For Flower, which specializes in optimizing flexible energy assets, the transaction provides a portfolio large enough to support coordinated participation across wholesale, balancing and ancillary-service markets. The acquisition also expands Flower’s publicly announced German development portfolio to approximately 300 MW.

For Chint, the transaction supports its transition from a solar-focused developer into an integrated energy infrastructure provider. Its commercial model increasingly combines project origination, development, EPC delivery and long-term asset services rather than relying exclusively on development premiums at the point of sale. Chint has also reported 168 MW / 513 MWh of battery capacity under construction contracts and more than 1 GW in development across Europe, indicating that the Flower portfolio is part of a broader storage monetization strategy rather than a one-off disposal.

The structure reflects a wider change in European BESS buyer behavior. Enerdatics recorded approximately 18 GW of European battery storage capacity traded across 22 transactions during Q3 2025, representing a 120% year-on-year increase. Germany, the UK and Italy accounted for more than 60% of traded capacity, with investors concentrating on advanced-stage projects that offered grid certainty, near-term construction visibility and exposure to increasingly volatile power markets.

Germany’s valuation signals reinforce why the development stage matters. Enerdatics data indicates that ready-to-build German BESS projects have attracted developer premiums ranging from approximately $50,000/MW to $170,000/MW. Longer-duration systems and projects positioned to capture stronger arbitrage revenues have typically achieved the upper end of that range, while assets in lower-volatility locations have cleared closer to $70,000–$75,000/MW. Projects exceeding two hours of storage duration have generally attracted stronger pricing because buyers can underwrite a broader combination of intraday trading, balancing and grid-support revenues.

Although the transaction value was not disclosed, applying those historical benchmarks to 112 MW would imply a broad indicative developer-premium range of approximately $5.6 million to $19 million. This is not an estimate of the purchase price because the actual consideration may also reflect the EPC package, development expenditure, project-specific revenue forecasts, equipment terms and milestone payments. However, it illustrates the valuation uplift created by taking storage projects through permitting and grid connection rather than selling them earlier in development.

The portfolio’s average duration of almost three hours also separates it from short-duration systems designed primarily around individual ancillary-service products. Flower is acquiring assets that can potentially participate across multiple revenue streams and respond to changing intraday spreads. This flexibility becomes increasingly important as competition compresses returns in individual balancing markets and investors place greater weight on revenue-stack diversification.

The implications for developers are clear. Early-stage German BESS pipelines without secured grid capacity will face a smaller buyer pool and more contingent transaction structures. Developers that can deliver permits, interconnection rights, credible EPC arrangements and longer-duration configurations will retain stronger negotiating leverage. Sellers that remain involved through EPC, O&M or asset management can also protect margins after ownership transfers and provide buyers with greater execution certainty.

For buyers, the competition is moving beyond simply accumulating storage megawatts. The strongest targets will be portfolios that can enter construction within a defined period, use credible equipment and delivery partners, and support sophisticated route-to-market strategies after commissioning. Flower’s acquisition shows that investors are prepared to separate capital ownership from project delivery when the developer can continue mitigating construction and operating risks.

The next phase of German BESS M&A is therefore likely to favor transactions that combine ready-to-build project rights with integrated delivery contracts. As more capital enters the storage market, grid-secured portfolios scheduled for commissioning in 2027 and 2028 should attract the most competitive processes. Early-stage capacity may remain abundant, but projects offering immediate construction visibility and a clear commercialization strategy will continue to command the strongest buyer interest.

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