July 02, 2026
SolaX Targets Thailand with Residential Solar-Storage-Charging Integration and Single-Cabinet C&I Storage
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SolaX Power brought two clear messages to ASIA Sustainable Energy Week in Bangkok. For homes: a complete solar, storage and EV charging package. For businesses: a single-cabinet energy storage system that costs less to install.

Thailand's energy landscape is shifting quickly. The country aims to source half its electricity from renewables by 2037, with solar set to carry much of the load. But what is really driving storage uptake right now is not policy alone. Time-of-use tariffs are climbing. Feed-in payments are falling. Selling surplus solar to the grid makes less sense every year. Storage turns a rooftop system into a tool that works all day and all night.
On the residential side, SolaX put a new bidirectional charger at the front of its offering. The Binary Series Smart AC EV Charger BRY-A22D7 is, according to the company, the industry's first AC-side vehicle-to-home solution. A homeowner can charge an electric vehicle with surplus solar during the day and then pull power back from the car battery in the evening. The unit pairs with the X1-VAST and X3-G4 Pro hybrid inverters. Support for the X3-Ultra is planned.

SolaX complemented the charger with two new lithium iron phosphate batteries, the LD5 and LD16. Both carry an IP65 rating. In Thailand, where monsoon rains and humidity are part of daily life, that level of protection is not a luxury. The batteries can be wall-mounted or floor-stacked, fitting tight urban carports as easily as larger rural properties. The inverters, batteries and charger together form a single home energy loop built to keep bills down and the power on.
For commercial and industrial users, SolaX kept things simple. It showed the TRENE series, a liquid-cooled energy storage system packaged in a single 261 kWh cabinet. No multiple cabinets to wire. No heavy civil works. Installation is faster and the cost per kilowatt-hour drops noticeably. Thai factories, cold storage facilities and retail centers often run on tight budgets and limited space. A lower upfront cost and a compact footprint are exactly what they need.

Thailand's solar journey is entering a new phase. The first chapter belonged to utility-scale farms and attractive buyback rates. The next chapter belongs to distributed energy. Thousands of homes, businesses and electric vehicles that generate, store and dispatch power at the edge of the grid will become the flexibility layer the system desperately needs. SolaX is not just shipping hardware into this market. It is delivering pre-integrated, climate-ready solutions shaped around local realities and honest local budgets. That is the kind of practical support Thailand's energy transition calls for right now.
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