{"id":6571,"date":"2026-04-16T00:00:09","date_gmt":"2026-04-15T16:00:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.hitekenergy.com\/?p=6571"},"modified":"2026-04-16T11:01:18","modified_gmt":"2026-04-16T03:01:18","slug":"how-to-read-energy-storage-system-certifications","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.hitekenergy.com\/uk\/news\/how-to-read-energy-storage-system-certifications\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Read Energy Storage System Certifications"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"How<\/p>\n

Buying a battery energy storage system<\/u><\/a> looks simple until the paperwork starts. One supplier says the system is \u201cUL certified.\u201d Another highlights UL 9540A. A third talks about IEC 62619, while the EPC team asks whether the project will meet NFPA 855. For many buyers, that is the point where the process gets muddy.<\/p>\n

The problem is not a lack of certificates. It is that these documents sit at different layers. UL 9540 is a system-level safety standard for energy storage systems and equipment. UL 9540A is a thermal runaway fire propagation test method. IEC 62619 covers the safe operation of secondary lithium cells and batteries for industrial uses, including stationary applications. NFPA 855 sets minimum requirements for mitigating hazards in stationary energy storage system installations. Looking at all four together gives a much clearer picture of energy storage compliance.<\/p>\n

Unlocking Energy Storage System Certifications<\/strong><\/h2>\n

The confusion usually starts because \u201ccertified\u201d sounds like one final yes-or-no answer. In real projects, it is not. A battery energy storage system can involve cell safety, pack safety, full system safety, thermal runaway testing, site layout, fire code review, ventilation, spacing, and local approval. A paper that looks strong in a brochure may only cover one of those layers.<\/p>\n

That is why buyers need to read each standard by purpose, not by logo.<\/p>\n

UL 9540: the system-level check<\/strong><\/h3>\n

Why certification language confuses buyers? UL 9540 is the main system-level safety standard for energy storage systems and equipment. It looks at the full ESS, not just a cell or module. That includes how batteries, controls, communication, charging and discharging functions, and related hardware work together as one system. In North America, it is widely treated as the basic safety gate for stationary ESS projects.<\/p>\n

For a buyer, UL 9540 answers a practical question: has the complete battery energy storage system been reviewed as a system rather than as a stack of separate parts? That matters in residential storage, commercial and industrial energy storage, and utility-scale deployments alike.<\/p>\n

UL 9540A: the thermal runaway test<\/strong><\/h3>\n

UL 9540A is often misunderstood. It is not a product listing. It is a test method used to evaluate thermal runaway fire propagation in battery energy storage systems. In plain English, it asks what happens when one cell fails and whether that failure spreads through the module, unit, or installation. UL states that the method is explicitly cited in NFPA 855 for large-scale fire testing and is used when design or installation conditions go beyond certain code limits.<\/p>\n

This makes UL 9540A highly relevant for projects where fire officials, insurers, or consultants need real failure-behavior data. It is especially important for larger systems, outdoor cabinets, and containerized BESS where layout, separation distance, and suppression strategy can affect approval.<\/p>\n

IEC 62619: the battery safety baseline<\/strong><\/h3>\n

IEC 62619 sits at a different layer. It specifies requirements and tests for the safe operation of secondary lithium cells and batteries used in industrial applications, including stationary applications. That is why IEC 62619 shows up so often in export projects and global procurement discussions.<\/p>\n

For buyers outside North America, IEC 62619 is often one of the first battery safety documents checked. Even in projects where UL standards dominate, IEC 62619 still helps show that the lithium battery side of the product has been tested against a widely recognized industrial safety standard.<\/p>\n

NFPA 855: the installation and fire code layer<\/strong><\/h3>\n

NFPA 855 is not a product certificate. It is the standard for the installation of stationary energy storage systems, and its purpose is hazard mitigation. That means the focus shifts from the battery itself to where and how the system is installed: separation, fire protection, ventilation, occupancy, emergency response, and other site conditions. NFPA says the current edition provides minimum requirements for mitigating hazards associated with ESS.<\/p>\n

For buyers, that changes the conversation. A system can look strong on paper and still face delays if the installation plan does not match the fire code path that local authorities expect.<\/p>\n

A simple way to compare the four standards<\/strong><\/h2>\n

\"\u0421\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0435\u043c\u0430The easiest way to read energy storage certification is to sort each document by the question it answers.<\/p>\n

The summary below is based on the official descriptions of UL 9540, UL 9540A, IEC 62619, and NFPA 855.<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n<\/colgroup>\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
Standard<\/strong><\/th>\nMain focus<\/strong><\/th>\nWhat it tells a buyer<\/strong><\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n
UL 9540<\/td>\nFull energy storage system safety<\/td>\nThe ESS has been reviewed as an integrated system<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
UL 9540A<\/td>\nThermal runaway fire propagation test<\/td>\nThere is test data showing how fire events may spread<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
IEC 62619<\/td>\nIndustrial lithium cell and battery safety<\/td>\nThe battery side meets an international industrial safety baseline<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
NFPA 855<\/td>\nStationary ESS installation safety<\/td>\nThe project must match site, layout, and fire protection rules<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n

Seen this way, the standards stop competing with each other. They fill different roles. UL 9540 says the system is reviewed as a system. UL 9540A shows how it behaves in a worst-case thermal event. IEC 62619 supports battery safety at the industrial level. NFPA 855 governs how the stationary energy storage system can be installed.<\/p>\n

What these certifications mean in real buying situations<\/strong><\/h2>\n

The buyer\u2019s real question is rarely \u201cWhat does this acronym mean?\u201d It is usually \u201cWill this project pass review, get installed, and run safely for years?\u201d<\/p>\n

That is where use case matters.<\/p>\n

Residential energy storage projects<\/strong><\/h3>\n

In residential storage, buyers often focus on backup power, self-consumption, and lower electricity bills. HITEKESS\u2019s solution describe residential applications in terms of self-consumption, weak-grid support, and avoiding peak-rate charges. For this segment, UL 9540 is usually the first system-level filter, while fire and building code review can bring UL 9540A and local residential code requirements into the discussion depending on system size and location.<\/p>\n

Commercial and industrial energy storage projects<\/strong><\/h3>\n

For commercial and industrial energy storage, the buying checklist gets stricter. Peak shaving, backup power, and operating cost control are common business drivers. HITEKESS positions C&I systems around peak shaving, backup, and economic efficiency. In this kind of project, buyers usually need more than a simple certification claim. They need to know whether the system-level listing, thermal runaway test data, and site installation plan will stand up during engineering review.<\/p>\n

A typical example is an outdoor cabinet placed close to a production building. The procurement team may be satisfied with the battery specs, but the fire consultant will still ask how the unit behaves in a thermal event and whether the installation meets the fire code path for that layout.<\/p>\n

Containerized and utility-scale BESS projects<\/strong><\/h3>\n

\u0423 containerized BESS<\/u><\/a> and larger utility-scale storage, the paperwork usually gets deeper. Capacity is larger, fire load is larger, and local authorities tend to ask harder questions. That is where UL 9540A data becomes much more valuable, because the project team may need large-scale fire testing evidence and a clear installation basis under NFPA 855 or related fire code requirements. HITEKESS website presents containerized energy storage and outdoor BESS as part of its solution range for flexible, large-scale applications.<\/p>\n

What documents buyers should ask for before saying yes<\/strong><\/h2>\n

A smart buyer does not stop at \u201cDo you have certification?\u201d The better question is \u201cWhich layer of the project does this document cover?\u201d<\/p>\n

A useful review package often includes the following:<\/p>\n