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Endeavour Energy, LLC launches TurboCell

Endeavour introduced TurboCell, a modular power system intended to shorten time-to-power for Artificial Intelligence (AI) cloud providers and to provide flexible scaling options as AI workloads changed.

The company positioned TurboCell in response to a widening gap between growing AI compute needs and available generation capacity, saying exponential AI growth outpaced utility expansion and constrained where and how quickly AI infrastructure could be powered.

TurboCell combined a high-speed generator with hybrid battery capacity and used a Hybrid Dual Connectivity (DC) architecture to stabilize volatile AI loads at the source, preventing electrical disturbances from propagating into Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) power delivery systems, onsite generation equipment, or the utility grid; the product employed standardized modular units with minimal moving parts to provide redundancy and fault isolation, offered fuel flexibility for natural gas, diesel, and hydrogen, and reported emissions reductions of 94% versus diesel generators and 86% versus natural gas turbines without aftertreatment.

The system was built for the AI Edge Resource Allocator (ERA) to enable faster deployment, support volatile AI workloads, and transition from gigawatt-scale bridging to long-term backup; TurboCell was available exclusively through Edged Infrastructure and the product was described as an Endeavour company offering.

“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,” said TurboCell Chief Executive Officer, Chris Ellis. “When deployed in appropriate configurations, the inherent availability of power from arrays of TurboCell engines exceeds 99.999%.” said Steve Fairfax.

TurboCell was ramping U.S. manufacturing capacity to multi-gigawatt scale, would begin shipping in 2026 and had orders open for 2027 delivery.