BESS battery project approved for Al-Mutlaa and Jaber Al-Ahmad
Sources said the services committee of the cabinet approved the designated sites for the BESS battery project in Al-Mutlaa and Jaber Al-Ahmad and recommended handing them to the Ministry of Electricity, Water and Renewable Energy. The committee action follows coordination reports from the Public Authority for Housing Welfare, officials said, and sets the project on a formal path toward implementation.
The decision affects two residential areas in Kuwait and moves responsibility for construction and operation to the ministry, according to sources. The committee also stressed continued coordination to confirm an alternative site for the Public Authority for Youth and Sports in Jaber Al-Ahmad, and to complete related technical and regulatory procedures.
Project scope, capacity and phased delivery
The BESS battery project is slated to store roughly 1,500 megawatts of energy in total, to be delivered in stages, sources indicated. The first phase will provide about 500 megawatts of storage capacity, with subsequent phases expanding the system to the planned full size to support peak demand periods.
Ministry statements and coordination reports suggest the stored capacity will be dispatched to the grid during high-demand hours to relieve pressure on generation and transmission assets. Furthermore, officials said the ministry has progressed substantially in planning and technical preparation for the installations.
Timeline and expected operational date for the BESS battery project
Authorities expect the BESS battery project to begin contributing to grid needs by summer 2027, according to the planning timeline cited by sources. The summer target reflects the project’s role in bolstering available supply during the highest seasonal demand.
Project managers will sequence site preparation, equipment procurement, and grid integration works so that the initial 500-megawatt phase is ready to operate on schedule. However, officials cautioned that final commissioning dates will depend on procurement lead times, construction progress and regulatory approvals.
Coordination, site matters and regulatory steps
The Public Authority for Housing Welfare provided the coordinating input that prompted the committee’s endorsement, sources said, and recommended continued interagency alignment. The services committee emphasized that an alternative location for the sports authority’s facilities in Jaber Al-Ahmad must be finalized before site handover is completed.
Therefore, technical, environmental and zoning clearances remain priorities for the next stage. The ministry and housing authority will need to finalize land transfer agreements, obtain utility connections and complete environmental assessments to meet national regulations and international best practices for energy storage installations.
How the energy storage system will affect the electric grid
Officials expect the energy storage project to improve grid flexibility and resilience by storing excess generation and releasing it during peak hours. Battery energy storage systems can provide fast-response capacity, frequency regulation, and short-term reserve, which supports overall grid stability, experts say.
Additionally, the BESS battery project could help integrate variable renewable energy sources by absorbing fluctuations and smoothing output. Meanwhile, the ministry’s planning documents indicate that reduced peak stress may defer the need for some conventional generation investments and improve service reliability during high-demand periods.
Economic and operational implications
The phased deployment allows planners to evaluate operational performance and scale procurement as technology costs and market conditions evolve. Furthermore, staged construction can limit upfront capital exposure and provide early operational experience for grid operators.
Officials also noted potential benefits in reducing fuel consumption and associated emissions during peak hours, although precise economic and environmental impacts will be assessed in detailed feasibility and cost-benefit studies. The ministry and involved agencies will likely publish further technical and financial data as project milestones are reached.
Stakeholder roles and public oversight
According to committee reports, the Ministry of Electricity, Water and Renewable Energy will lead implementation, while the Public Authority for Housing Welfare will assist with land coordination. Other relevant agencies must complete technical reviews and ensure compliance with safety and land-use regulations.
Therefore, transparent procurement processes and clear reporting on timelines and expenditures will be important for public oversight. Observers said interagency coordination and timely completion of regulatory steps will be key to keeping the project on schedule toward the summer 2027 goal.
Conclusion and next steps
The services committee’s endorsement moves the BESS battery project closer to execution by formalizing the sites and directing handover to the ministry. Next steps include finalizing the alternative site arrangement for the sports authority in Jaber Al-Ahmad, completing technical clearances, and starting procurement for the first 500-megawatt phase.
Officials expect initial operations to begin in summer 2027 if approvals and construction proceed without delay. Readers should watch for formal ministry announcements on contracts, detailed timelines and environmental assessments as the project advances toward deployment.

