The parent company of data center firm Edged has launched a new power offering that integrates generator and energy storage functions into one system.
Endeavour this week announced the launch of TurboCell, a rapidly deployable, scalable power system.
The company said the TurboCell hybrid DC power system “dramatically reduces time-to-compute with rapidly deployable and scalable on-site generation purpose-built for AI.”
Developed in strategic partnership with BorgWarner, the modular multi-fuel system (capable of running natural gas, diesel, or hydrogen) can reportedly deliver prime, bridging and backup power in one integrated unit. Each unit offers 334kW and is designed to smooth the power fluctuations associated with large-scale AI systems.
“With AI clusters scaling from tens of megawatts to gigawatt levels, we are seeing firsthand how the grid and legacy power systems are pushed to their limits,” says TurboCell CEO Chris Ellis. “TurboCell is our answer: A rapidly deployable high-speed generator and hybrid battery system that delivers gigawatt-scale power with the real-time stabilization needed to absorb large AI power swings.”
TurboCell includes a standard two-year warranty with a five-year option and 24/7 support. The company said it can deliver non-disruptive maintenance and a minimum of 80,000-hour product life.
Endeavour said TurboCell is currently ramping US manufacturing capacity and will begin shipping in 2026, with orders open now for 2027 delivery.
Endeavour was set up by Aligned founder Jakob Carnemark. Its Edged unit has data centers either operating or in development in Bilbao, Madrid, and Barcelona in Spain; Lisbon, Portugal; and across the US, including Missouri, Arizona, Texas, Georgia, Iowa, Ohio, and Illinois.
Endeavour’s ThermalWorks waterless cooling system can reportedly support rack densities of up to 70kW with air cooling and 200kW with liquid cooling. The company also has partnerships or investments in batteries in partnership with Tiamat, EV infrastructure, water, and energy.
Endeavour partnered with manufacturing firm Jabil last year to deliver “modular, just-in-time (JIT) AI-ready infrastructure.”
On the TurboCell website, the company said work on the new power system started in 2019 when Endeavour started funding development of a Brayton-cycle power system built around mass-produced automotive turbochargers.
BorgWarner Inc. is an American automotive and e-mobility supplier based in Michigan. It develops and manufactures products for conventional gas, hybrid, and electric vehicles, including drive modules, battery management systems, and turbochargers.
In its own release, the company said it worked with TurboCell for more than three years to bring the turbine generator system to market.
“We believe this product innovation is a powerful representation of the BorgWarner team proactively identifying and seizing growth opportunities,” said Joseph Fadool, president and CEO, BorgWarner.
“With capabilities that we expect will address the power quality and energy needs of the data center market across hyperscalers and colocators, as well as other microgrid applications, we anticipate that the turbine generator system will open avenues for further profitable growth. We believe this solution provides many advantages to conventional power solutions, including superior transient response and fuel flexibility as well as a lower emissions footprint, while meeting the behind the meter power market demands of both bridging power and backup power.”
BorgWarner expects production to begin in Hendersonville, North Carolina, in 2027, with an initial 2GW of capacity installed.
Read the orginal article: https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/jakob-carnemarks-endeavour-launches-new-power-system-offering/








