In the global race to decarbonize energy systems, attention tends to focus on the headline technologies like hydrogen, carbon capture, electric vehicles, and massive lithium-ion batteries. Yet behind the scenes, a quieter revolution is taking shape. Across Europe and beyond, heat batteries, or thermal energy storage systems, are emerging as one of the most efficient, scalable, and cost-effective ways to balance renewable energy and decarbonize heat.
They may not look futuristic. They have no moving parts, produce no dramatic chemical reactions, and generate little media buzz. But they solve one of the biggest challenges in the energy transition: how to store energy cheaply and use it where it matters most, as heat.
The forgotten side of energy use
More than half of the world’s final energy consumption is not electricity, but heat. It warms homes, powers industrial furnaces, dries food, and runs chemical processes. Yet when most people think about energy storage, they imagine lithium-ion batteries stabilizing the grid or hydrogen being produced from excess renewables.
Heat batteries offer a much simpler solution. They take surplus renewable electricity, when the wind blows or the sun shines, and convert it into stored heat using resistive elements, heat pumps, or other thermal conversion methods. That heat is then stored in materials such as molten salts, ceramics, sand, or phase-change compounds, ready to be released hours or even days later.
The concept is not new, but the economics have changed dramatically. As renewable generation expands and electricity prices swing wildly from negative to peak levels, the ability to store energy as heat instead of electrons is becoming both attractive and urgent.
How heat batteries work
A heat battery is essentially a thermal reservoir. During periods of low-cost or excess renewable power, the system charges by heating a storage medium. Later, that stored heat can be released directly for space heating, hot water, district heating, or industrial processes.
Small-scale systems for households may look like large insulated cylinders filled with phase-change materials that maintain high temperatures for long periods. At the industrial scale, systems using sand or rock beds can reach several megawatt-hours of capacity, maintaining temperatures of several hundred degrees Celsius.
Related:
The beauty of these systems lies in their simplicity. There is no need for complex chemistry, rare materials, or high-voltage infrastructure. The components are inexpensive, durable, and easily sourced. In most cases, no major grid strengthening is required, since the systems can charge when renewable generation is abundant and discharge off-grid as heat.
Cost, scale, and common sense
Compared to electrochemical batteries, heat batteries are extraordinarily cheap. While large-scale lithium-ion systems typically cost hundreds of dollars per kilowatt-hour of capacity, thermal systems often come in at a fraction of that, sometimes below $20 per kilowatt-hour equivalent.
That price difference changes the logic of energy storage entirely. Instead of investing billions in grid-scale batteries to store and release electricity, many of the same benefits can be achieved by converting surplus power directly into heat and storing it locally.
For households, that means lower bills and greater energy independence. For industries, it means lower exposure to volatile gas prices and carbon costs. And for grid operators, it means a flexible, distributed buffer that can absorb renewable peaks without overloading transmission networks.
Yet despite this enormous potential, heat batteries remain overlooked in policy discussions and investment priorities. They are too simple to seem revolutionary and too unglamorous to fit the narrative of “cutting-edge climate tech.”
Industrial applications already working
In practice, heat batteries are already proving their worth. Across Northern Europe, companies are installing sand-based heat storage systems connected to district heating networks, charging them with wind power when supply is high and releasing the heat during cold nights.
In Denmark and Finland, large-scale thermal storage tanks now operate alongside combined heat and power plants, reducing gas use and improving grid flexibility. Some systems can store heat at 600 degrees Celsius for several days, providing a low-cost alternative to burning fuel for industrial process heat.
In Germany, several pilot projects are integrating heat batteries into industrial processes, replacing gas-fired boilers with resistive heating systems that draw power from renewable surpluses. These are not prototypes or speculative ventures, they are commercial installations showing that thermal storage can scale quickly when economics align.
The policy blind spot
The absence of heat batteries from mainstream policy discussions is one of the more puzzling aspects of the current transition. Governments routinely debate hydrogen roadmaps and CO? pipelines but rarely mention thermal storage in their industrial or residential energy strategies.
Part of the reason is institutional. Energy policy has long been divided between “power” and “heat,” with the latter often treated as secondary. But as electrification expands, the boundaries between the two are dissolving. Heat batteries are precisely the kind of technology that bridges that gap, flexible, local, and directly compatible with renewables.
Another reason is perception. Unlike hydrogen, CCS, or grid batteries, heat storage does not promise dramatic technological leaps. It is an engineering solution rather than a scientific breakthrough. Yet history shows that such practical technologies often end up driving the deepest transformations.
From boring to essential
The quiet rise of heat batteries tells a larger story about the energy transition itself. As the world focuses on grand visions of hydrogen economies and carbon capture hubs, it is often the humble, low-cost solutions that deliver the biggest impact first.
Thermal storage will not replace other decarbonization tools, but it can complement them in powerful ways. It can reduce the need for peak electricity generation, smooth renewable intermittency, and decarbonize heating without overloading the grid.
If policymakers and investors gave it a fraction of the attention devoted to hydrogen or electrochemical storage, it could transform both household energy systems and industrial heating within a decade.
The physics are simple, the economics are strong, and the infrastructure already exists. What is missing is visibility.
A heat revolution waiting to happen
Most of the world’s energy is consumed as heat, yet most of the energy transition debate still revolves around electricity. That mismatch will have to change.
Heat batteries deserve to move from the margins to the mainstream. They represent one of the rare cases where climate logic, economic logic, and engineering practicality all align.
The future of clean energy may well be powered by electrons, but it will be stabilized by heat. And the technology to do it is already here, waiting for the attention it deserves.
By Leon Stille for Oilprice.com
More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

