In a recent pilot project at an industrial park in Suzhou, NEPS demonstrated the power of their "Plus" philosophy. They took a facility that paid $2.1 million annually in grid electricity and retrofitted it with a hybrid system of solar, wind, and hydrogen fuel cells. The twist? The system doesn't just power the factory. It trades energy.
NEPS isn't an energy company. It's a technology company that happens to move electrons. And that distinction might make all the difference.
In the bustling world of renewable energy, where giants clash over solar panel efficiency and battery storage capacity, a lesser-known player is taking a radically different approach. New Energy Plus Solutions Co. Ltd. (NEPS) doesn’t just sell you a solar array or a lithium-ion battery. They sell a mathematical promise .
"We don't believe batteries can solve winter," says the company’s CTO in a rare interview. "For three cloudy days in a row, you need molecules, not just electrons."
In a recent pilot project at an industrial park in Suzhou, NEPS demonstrated the power of their "Plus" philosophy. They took a facility that paid $2.1 million annually in grid electricity and retrofitted it with a hybrid system of solar, wind, and hydrogen fuel cells. The twist? The system doesn't just power the factory. It trades energy.
NEPS isn't an energy company. It's a technology company that happens to move electrons. And that distinction might make all the difference.
In the bustling world of renewable energy, where giants clash over solar panel efficiency and battery storage capacity, a lesser-known player is taking a radically different approach. New Energy Plus Solutions Co. Ltd. (NEPS) doesn’t just sell you a solar array or a lithium-ion battery. They sell a mathematical promise .
"We don't believe batteries can solve winter," says the company’s CTO in a rare interview. "For three cloudy days in a row, you need molecules, not just electrons."