India’s Pure partners with Charge Power to offer energy storage products in North America

Canadian-based energy storage solutions company Charge Power, and India-based battery technology firm Pure, have announced a partnership to bring its energy storage systems to customers in Canada and the United States.
The collaboration between the two companies will be a co-branded platform, to be called “Charge Power – Powered by Pure,” combining Charge Power’s high-performance energy storage systems with Pure’s battery technology and power electronics expertise.
Pure started as an emobility startup out of the Indian Institutes of Technology Hyderabad, and has a range of electric vehicles in its car vertical. It launched a range of PurePower stationary energy storage products this year as a new vertical.
The initial focus will be on grid scale products in the U.S. market, and in Canada, more focused on commercial and industrial (C&I), and grid scale products.
Nishanth Dongari, founder and managing director of Pure, said the company viewed the partnership as part of its global expansion plans.
“Our partnership with Charge Power ensures we can deliver not only the product, but the execution capability required for mission-critical energy applications,” Dongari said in a statement.
“Together, we’re positioned to meet growing demand from utilities, businesses, and communities seeking resilient and sustainable energy solutions.”
Charge Power founder and managing director Ravi Pinnelli stated that Pure’s vision aligned with its own.
“We’re excited to collaborate with Pure, whose proprietary battery technologies and manufacturing capabilities align with our commitment to delivering durable, high-efficiency energy storage solutions,” Pinnelli said.
Charge Power has deployed more than 4 GWh of energy storage solutions across North America. The company specializes in regional integration, controls, and lifecycle management.
Pure’s technology portfolio includes high energy density lithium-ion batteries, power electronics, cloud-based monitoring using predictive AI, and multi-level thermal management systems.
In the U.S. alone, storage deployment in the United States grew across all segments was forecast to grow 25% in 2025, according to Wood Mackenzie, before tariff uncertainty kicked into its highest gear. The fate of federal energy tax subsidies may also play a key role in growth there.
Canada’s own energy system, both energy and storage markets, are dominated by hydropower, but is vulnerable to ongoing climate change.