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Lyten Plans Industrial Hub in Poland with Strong Focus on AI Infrastructure

March 26, 2026

Lyten has announced plans to establish its next Industrial Hub in Gdańsk, bringing together advanced manufacturing and digital infrastructure to support energy systems, AI, and the defense sector.

The hub will be built around the company’s existing Lyten Dwa facility, a major battery energy storage production plant and R&D center, forming the foundation of a broader, integrated industrial ecosystem.

About Lyten

Founded in 2015, Lyten is a global leader in lithium-sulfur batteries and 3D graphene materials. The company has raised over $625 million in equity funding and secured additional financing commitments, with backing from major industrial and institutional investors across North America and Europe.

The company holds more than 550 patents and currently manufactures advanced battery systems in the United States, while operating Europe’s largest energy storage systems production facility in Gdańsk, Poland.

The operations of Lyten in Poland started a few years back. Lyten Poland operates the Dwa site, a 25,000-square-metre production and R&D facility specializing in battery energy storage systems. Opened in 2023, the plant has a production capacity of 6 GWh, with potential expansion to 12 GWh.

Following the acquisition of the former Northvolt Dwa plant in October 2025, the facility is set to become Lyten’s primary European production center, playing a central role in the company’s expansion into AI-powered industrial infrastructure.

AI at the Core of the Project

AI is a core focus of the project. Lyten aims to co-locate energy storage manufacturing with AI data center infrastructure, addressing the rapidly growing power demands driven by large-scale computing and machine learning. The company’s strategy reflects a wider industry trend: pairing AI computing capacity directly with dedicated energy systems.

In addition to energy storage systems, the hub may support production of lithium-sulfur batteries for autonomous systems such as drones and robots, technologies heavily reliant on AI. Lyten is also considering expanding its portfolio of advanced materials, including graphene-based products used in defense, aerospace, and high-performance manufacturing sectors increasingly shaped by AI innovation.

Following the Swedish Model

The Polish hub follows Lyten’s earlier announcement in February 2026 of its first Industrial Hub in Skellefteå, Sweden. That project combines battery production with a planned AI data center campus with a capacity of up to 1 GW, developed in partnership with EdgeConneX.

Once fully operational, the Swedish hub is expected to attract over $10 billion in additional infrastructure investment and generate significant economic activity—serving as a blueprint for the development in Gdańsk.

Poland as a Strategic AI Location

The announcement of the new hub was marked by a high-level event held on March 20, 2026, at the Lyten Dwa facility in Gdańsk. The ceremony brought together representatives from Poland and the European Union. This highlights Poland’s growing role in Europe’s technological landscape. With strong industrial capabilities, a skilled workforce, and openness to investment, the country is becoming an attractive destination for AI-related infrastructure.


Read More: www.lyten.com

Main Photo Source: www.lyten.com