Qualitative and quantitative insights were obtained by interviewing supply-side and demand-side stakeholders during the primary research process. The supply-side sources comprised CEOs, VPs of Engineering, heads of Product Development, regulatory compliance officers, and commercial directors from UPS system manufacturers (Schneider Electric, Eaton, Vertiv, Emerson, ABB), battery cell manufacturers (EnerSys, Exide Technologies, Samsung SDI, LG Energy Solution, Narada Power), and component suppliers. Demand-side sources included procurement leads from hyperscale data centers, colocation facilities, telecom operators, manufacturing plants, and healthcare systems, as well as data center facility managers, critical infrastructure engineers, IT operations directors, telecom network planners, healthcare facility managers, and industrial automation heads. The primary research validated power rating segmentations, confirmed lithium-ion transition timelines, and collected insights on the dynamics of total cost of ownership (TCO), thermal runaway mitigation strategies, and battery management system (BMS) adoption.
Primary Respondent Breakdown:
By Designation: C-level Primaries (28%), Director Level (32%), Others (40%)
By Region: North America (36%), Europe (26%), Asia-Pacific (29%), Rest of World (9%)
Revenue mapping and installation capacity analysis were implemented to determine global market valuation. The methodology comprised the following:
Identification of over 50 key manufacturers in the lead-acid, lithium-ion, and nickel-cadmium battery chemistries that serve North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and the Middle East and Africa.
Product mapping for offline/standby, line-interactive, and online/double-conversion UPS topologies across power ratings of <5kVA, 5-50kVA, 50-200kVA, and >200kVA
Examination of annual revenues that are specific to UPS battery portfolios, including aftermarket and replacement battery sales, as reported and modeled
Manufacturers that account for 72-78% of the global market share in 2024 are included in the coverage.
For data centers, telecommunications, industrial automation, healthcare, and commercial applications, segment-specific valuations are derived through extrapolation using bottom-up (installation volume × average selling price by application and region) and top-down (manufacturer revenue validation and supply chain verification) approaches.