Gravitricity Ltd

BusinessGreen staff
clock • 2 min read

Company Name: Gravitricity Ltd

Headquarters: Edinburgh 

Website: www.gravitricity.com

Headcount: Three people

Profile: Gravitricity Ltd was founded by Charlie Blair, Peter Fraenkel, and Martin Wright.

Charlie, who is the Managing Director, worked in energy technology innovation for over 15 years with the Carbon Trust and Peter and Martin founded Marine Current Turbines Ltd (among other companies) which successfully developed by far the most productive and successful tidal turbine to-date (called SeaGen) and which was bought by Siemens in 2012. At present these three founders are also the Board.

The company so far has just three employees and the Lead Engineer is Miles Franklin formerly a design engineer with Dyson. A number of consultants have worked alongside this small team to make specialised inputs. The University of Edinburgh is also involved.

The company's patented technology is based on a simple principle: raising and lowering a heavy weight to store energy. In practice, it has similar advantages to pumped storage for networks up to 33kV, without the need for a nearby mountain with a lake or loch at the top.

As the world generates more and more electricity from intermittent renewable energy sources, there is a growing need for technologies which can capture and store energy during periods of low demand and release it rapidly when required. Gravitricity is working to develop a novel storage technology which offers some of the best characteristics of lithium batteries and pumped storage.

The business model involves developing a consortium of industrial partners all of whom can benefit from the success of Gravitricity by making up key elements of the supply chain. This process is underway and a number of major companies and some smaller ones are already involved, including Huisman a world leading winch manufacturer, Vinci Energie one of the world's largest EPC contractors, and discussions are in hand with several other potential partners.

More on Technology

 'A great example of a circular economy in action': United Utilities and Levidian explore how to use sewage waste to produce clean hydrogen

'A great example of a circular economy in action': United Utilities and Levidian explore how to use sewage waste to produce clean hydrogen

Partners claim there is potential for UK sewage waste to produce 75,000 tonnes of hydrogen a year - enough to power more than 40 per cent of all bus and coach journeys

clock 17 April 2025 • 3 min read
MiAlgae submits plan for full-scale microalgae production plant in Grangemouth

MiAlgae submits plan for full-scale microalgae production plant in Grangemouth

Biotech firm repurposes by-products from whisky distilleries to produce Omega-3-rich microalgae for fish and pet food markets

Michael Holder
clock 16 April 2025 • 2 min read
Adrian Siegrist: 'We must remove carbon dioxide from our atmosphere'

Adrian Siegrist: 'We must remove carbon dioxide from our atmosphere'

Climeworks' CCO discusses the firm's path to gigaton-scale carbon removal and searching for talent with a strong grasp of sustainability and a 'zest' for thinking big

Stuart Stone
clock 15 April 2025 • 6 min read