In November 2024, Honduras made waves with its 75MW/300MWh battery storage tender – the energy equivalent of building a 4-hour power bank for 75,000 Honduran households [1]. Fast forward to March 2025, and China's Windey (运达股份) teamed up with Spain's Equinsa to clinch. .
In November 2024, Honduras made waves with its 75MW/300MWh battery storage tender – the energy equivalent of building a 4-hour power bank for 75,000 Honduran households [1]. Fast forward to March 2025, and China's Windey (运达股份) teamed up with Spain's Equinsa to clinch. .
Last week (7 November) saw bids opened for a 75MW/300MWh BESS tender launched by the government of Honduras, in Central America. The public event marked the opening of bids for the energy storage procurement, called LPI-001-ENEE-UEPER-2024, for the ‘Supply, installation, testing and commissioning. .
The technical cooperation aims to evaluate the viability of producing, storing, transporting and using hydrogen for energy activities in Honduras, including power generation . Six separate companies have submitted bids to build the 4-hour BESS project, and it will be implemented next year after. .
The National Electric Power Company (ENEE) has selected a Chinese-Honduran consortium to design, supply, install, test, and commission a grid-connected battery energy storage system (BESS) at the Amarateca substation in the department of Francisco Morazán. Honduran state-owned utility ENEE has. .
It's 3 PM in Tegucigalpa, the tropical sun is blazing, and suddenly half of Central America's air conditioners cough and sputter like a vintage pickup truck. That's exactly what happened during the March 2025 regional blackout that left Honduras scrambling [4]. This wake-up call revealed why. .
As Honduras works to overhaul its struggling power sector, the Central American nation has taken a bold step toward attracting global investment—particularly from China. In an effort to secure its long-term energy future, the government has unveiled plans for a $1.5 billion public tender that will. .
Recently, Windey, in collaboration with EQUINSA, a local Honduran power company, successfully won the EPC turnkey contract for Honduras’ first energy storage project—the Honduras Energy Storage Project—marking a critical breakthrough of "first bid, first win" in its international energy storage.