LCOE

LCOE (Levelized Cost of Energy) expresses the total lifetime cost of a storage or generation system, divided by the total energy it delivers, producing a single comparable figure per unit of delivered energy. A lower LCOE means cheaper energy from that system over its operating life.(Source: IEA, 2020)

Why LCOE matters for storage investment decisions

LCOE transforms an upfront capital cost into a long-run cost of delivered energy, making it the standard lens for comparing technologies that have different lifespans and efficiencies. Two battery systems at the same purchase price can carry very different LCOEs if one completes 6000 cycles while the other manages 2000, or if one loses 20 percent of each kWh as heat while the other loses only 10 percent.

Four variables drive LCOE for a battery storage system: capital expenditure (purchase and installation), cycle life (cycles before capacity drops to 80 percent of rated), round-trip efficiency (the fraction of invested energy returned as usable power), and utilization (cycles per year the system actually completes). Improve any one without raising cost and LCOE falls.

LCOE in practice

Key numbers

The calculation is straightforward: total capital and operating costs over the battery’s service life, divided by total energy delivered. A system rated for 6000+ cycles used once daily delivers far more lifetime energy than one rated for 2000 cycles, spreading the same capital outlay over proportionally more kWh. At 90 percent round-trip efficiency, a cycle that charges 10 kWh returns about 9 kWh as useful power; a less efficient system shrinks that return, raising effective cost per delivered kWh even when hardware costs are identical. Tariff rates and capital costs vary by site and financing structure, so calculate your specific LCOE with your own data.

Technology and LCOE

The chemistry with the highest energy density is not always the one with the lowest LCOE. A technology that sustains 6000+ cycles and holds high round-trip efficiency across those cycles delivers more total energy per unit of capital: that is why LiFePO4 wins on LCOE in most stationary storage applications despite a modest energy density disadvantage. For commercial BESS deployments, small longevity and efficiency differences multiply across larger asset bases and longer contract periods, making LCOE the standard procurement criterion.

How Genixgreen uses LCOE

Genixgreen has built LiFePO4 storage in its own factory since 2011 and ships to 100+ countries, with local stock in Odesa for delivery across Ukraine. Genixgreen systems are rated for 6000+ cycles at a nominal 51.2 V, with about 90 percent round-trip efficiency: both figures directly compress LCOE by spreading capital cost across more delivered kWh and recovering more energy per cycle. For any specific installation, the final LCOE also depends on local energy prices, financing terms, and cycle frequency, so model the number with your site data and a qualified installer.

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