Lyten, a leader in supermaterial applications and energy storage, announced plans to establish its next Industrial Hub in Gdansk, Poland. Over the course of 2026, the company will complete a feasibility study to assess manufacturing requirements, public and private partnership opportunities, and necessary energy and utility infrastructure. The project will be centered on the existing Lyten Dwa production plant and R&D center, which currently operates Europe’s largest battery energy storage manufacturing facility.
This initiative follows Lyten’s February 2026 debut of its first Industrial Hub in Skelleftea, Sweden, developed on the site of the former Northvolt Ett plant. That facility combines battery production with a 1-gigawatt AI data center campus built by an external partner. Once fully operational, the Swedish hub is expected to attract more than $10 billion in additional infrastructure investment and drive significant job growth.
“We are entering a new era of infrastructure development to support multi-decade growth in power demand, AI data centers, and defense spending,” said Dan Cook, CEO and co-founder of Lyten. “Poland has the right talent, infrastructure, and appetite for public-private partnerships to enable a Lyten Industrial Hub to thrive in Gdansk.”
Lyten’s Gdansk facility manufactures the Voltpack Mobile System (VMS), a modular, AI-enabled power management solution capable of orchestrating seamless energy delivery across solar, wind, generator, battery, and grid sources with millisecond response times. The feasibility study will also evaluate the integration of additional Lyten offerings, including lithium-sulfur batteries for autonomous systems, ultra-high-strength 3D printing filaments and adhesives for defense and aerospace applications, and low-carbon concrete admixtures.
On March 20, Lyten welcomed public and private sector representatives to the Lyten Dwa site, marking the first official event since acquiring the former Northvolt plant in late 2025. Attendees included national and regional government officials from Poland and the European Union, highlighting the collaborative approach to the hub’s development.
Source: Lyten



