SAN JOSE, Calif. & GDAŃSK, Poland, March 20 — Lyten, the supermaterial applications company and global leader in an energy storage, has announced its interest in establishing a Lyten Industrial Hub in Poland. In 2026, Lyten will conduct a feasibility study to assess manufacturing requirements for Lyten products, potential private and public partnerships, and the necessary energy and utility infrastructure. The industrial hub will be built around Lyten Dwa – the energy storage production plant and R&D center in Gdańsk.
In February 2026, Lyten announced the establishment of its first Industrial Hub in Skellefteå, Sweden, on the site of the former Northvolt Ett plant, which it recently acquired. It will combine battery production with a data center with a capacity of up to 1 GW, being built by EdgeConneX. Once it reaches full production capacity, the Swedish industrial hub is expected to attract over $10 billion in additional infrastructure investment and be an engine for jobs growth.
“We are entering a new era of infrastructure development to support the multi-decade growth in power demand, AI data centers, and defense spending,” said Dan Cook, CEO and co-founder of Lyten. “Lyten is establishing strategically located industrial hubs to combine Lyten’s advanced materials and battery energy storage systems with digital AI infrastructure. We believe that Poland has the right talent, the right infrastructure, and the right appetite for public-private partnerships to enable a Lyten Industrial Hub to thrive in Gdańsk.”
Lyten currently operates Europe’s largest battery energy storage (BESS) manufacturing facility in Gdansk, Poland, where it produces the Voltpack Mobile System (VMS). The VMS is a modular, AI-enabled power management system that utilizes batteries to ensure consistent, reliable power at all times. VMS is pre-integrated to orchestrate power with millisecond response times between any combination of solar, wind, generator, battery and grid power sources.
Additional Lyten products, made from the company’s proprietary supermaterials (Lyten 3D Graphene materials), which will be evaluated for inclusion in the Lyten Industrial Hub, include:
- Lithium-sulfur batteries for autonomous systems, including drones, robots and satellites.
- Ultra-high-strength 3D printing filaments and Lyten adhesives for use in the defense, aerospace and motorsport industries.
- Lyten S Cure concrete admixtures, enabling the production of high-strength concrete with a lower carbon footprint, supporting the development of commercial, industrial and critical infrastructure.
Robert Chryc-Gawrychowski, CEO of Lyten Poland, added: “Manufacturing creates much-needed jobs, but requires significant capital investment. AI data centers bring in huge investment and capital, but do not drive significant employment growth. By combining these two elements in our industrial hubs, we deliver the benefits of both sectors worlds and at the same time future proof the local economy as AI continues its disruptive growth.”
On March 20, Lyten invited leaders from the public and private sectors across Poland and the European Union to a welcome ceremony at its Lyten Dwa facility in Gdańsk. This was the first event of its kind since Lyten acquired the site in the fourth quarter of 2025. Attendees included, amongst others, the Minister of Finance and Economy, Andrzej Domański; the Marshal of the Pomeranian Province, Mieczyslaw Struk; and the Deputy Mayor of Gdańsk, Piotr Grzelak.
