Photoncycle Secures €15M to Tackle Seasonal Energy Gap
Oslo-based startup Photoncycle has raised €15 million in fresh funding to scale a technology that allows households to store surplus summer solar power and use it for heating and electricity during winter months. The investment underscores growing interest in long-duration energy storage as Europe races to decarbonize homes and reduce reliance on fossil fuels.
Turning Summer Sun Into Winter Energy
Photoncycle focuses on solving a fundamental challenge of residential renewables: seasonal mismatch. While rooftop solar energy production peaks in summer, household demand for heat and power often peaks in winter. Conventional batteries can smooth daily fluctuations, but they are too costly and limited for multi-month storage.
The company’s system is designed to capture excess summer solar electricity, convert it into storable energy carriers, and then reconvert it into heat and power when days are shorter and colder. By enabling seasonal storage at the household level, Photoncycle aims to reduce dependence on gas and oil boilers, stabilize household energy costs, and support national decarbonization targets.
Strategic Funding for European Expansion
The €15 million round will be used to accelerate product development, expand pilot projects, and prepare for broader commercial rollout across key European markets where electrification of heat is a priority. The company plans to work closely with installers, utilities, and housing developers to integrate its technology into both existing homes and new-build projects.
Industry observers see long-duration energy storage as a critical missing piece in Europe’s transition to a resilient, renewables-led grid. By targeting individual households rather than large utility-scale projects, Photoncycle is positioning itself at the intersection of clean tech, smart homes, and distributed energy systems.
Implications for Households and the Grid
If deployed at scale, technologies like Photoncycle’s could flatten seasonal demand peaks, ease pressure on national grids, and help households shield themselves from volatile energy prices. The new funding marks a significant step toward demonstrating that seasonal solar storage can move from experimental concept to practical, consumer-ready solution.

