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Supply ChainMarch 24, 2026

Inlyte Energy, Ervin Industries ink deal to strengthen US battery storage supply chain

Summary

Inlyte Energy and Ervin Industries have signed an agreement aimed at reinforcing the domestic battery storage supply chain, with Inlyte currently in final site selection for its first U.S. manufacturing facility. The company anticipates beginning product deliveries by 2027. The partnership signals a deliberate push toward nearshoring critical battery materials production within the United States.

Why It Matters

For manufacturers evaluating long-duration energy storage as a hedge against grid instability and rising utility costs, a domestic supplier coming online in 2027 changes the procurement calculus — but only marginally in the near term. The 2027 delivery timeline means facilities planning capital projects today still face a 2-3 year window of dependence on existing, largely import-heavy supply chains. The Ervin Industries involvement is notable given the company's established metals processing infrastructure, suggesting Inlyte is building on proven domestic manufacturing capacity rather than constructing entirely greenfield capabilities. Operations and supply chain managers should track the facility site selection announcement closely, as regional proximity will determine logistics costs and lead times for potential customers. More broadly, this deal reflects an accelerating pattern of vertical integration and domestic sourcing partnerships in the energy storage sector — driven in part by IRA incentive structures — that will gradually reshape how industrial buyers specify and procure battery systems over the next decade.