T1 Energy agreed to acquire KORE Power in a transaction valued at about $32 million, expanding into battery energy storage and data center infrastructure markets, the company said Wednesday.
The purchase price includes equity, cash, and assumed debt, while T1 expects to complete the transaction during the second quarter of 2026, subject to customary closing conditions and shareholder approval.
Through the acquisition, T1 will gain access to KORE's NRI division, which designs, installs, and operates utility-scale battery energy storage systems and software solutions, according to the company.
Over more than 50 years, NRI has supported government, utility, and industrial customers and deployed about 1,100 battery energy storage projects globally, T1 said.
Following the closing, T1 plans to rename KORE Power as T1 NRI and use the business to broaden its customer base for solar and storage solutions.
Rystad Energy projects that US utility-scale battery energy storage capacity will increase to 143 gigawatt-hours by 2035, up from an installed base of 45 GWh today, highlighting growth opportunities in the sector.
T1 expects the acquisition to generate positive EBITDA in 2026 and contribute about $15 million to $20 million of EBITDA in 2027, while the agreement also includes a potential equity-based earnout of up to $9.6 million tied to fiscal 2026 and 2027 performance.
Chief Executive Officer Dan Barcelo said NRI's experience, customer relationships and focus on battery energy storage systems align with T1's strategy to strengthen domestic solar and battery supply chains.
KORE Power Chief Executive Officer Jay Bellows said the combination will offer customers a single provider for power generation, energy storage, system design and ongoing operations.