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Chloride Power Protection

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Parent: Emerson Network Power Hop 5
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Chloride Power Protection
NameChloride Power Protection
TypePrivate
IndustryElectrical equipment
Founded19XX
HeadquartersUnknown
ProductsUninterruptible power supplies, battery systems, switchgear

Chloride Power Protection is a manufacturer and service provider in the field of electrical backup and critical power infrastructure. The company develops uninterruptible power supplies, battery systems, and related switchgear for data centers, hospitals, industrial plants, and telecommunication networks. Its offerings intersect with global standards and corporate customers in Europe, Asia, and the Americas.

Overview

Chloride Power Protection operates within sectors served by Schneider Electric, Eaton Corporation, ABB, Siemens, and General Electric, competing for contracts alongside Vertiv, Socomec, Emerson Electric, Mitsubishi Electric, and Huawei. The firm’s product lines address reliability needs similar to those of American Power Conversion, Rittal, Legrand, Hitachi, and Toshiba. Customers include institutions such as NHS, Mayo Clinic, Deutsche Telekom, BT Group, and Amazon (company), with installations in facilities like Heathrow Airport, Changi Airport, JFK Airport, Bank of America Tower, and One World Trade Center. Standards and testing partners involve organizations such as Underwriters Laboratories, European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization, International Electrotechnical Commission, National Institute of Standards and Technology, and Lloyd's Register.

History and Development

The company’s lineage parallels consolidation trends seen with Emerson Network Power and acquisitions by Schneider Electric and Eaton. Early development drew on industrial centers in Birmingham, Manchester, Lyon, Frankfurt, and Milan and collaborations with academic institutions like Imperial College London, ETH Zurich, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Technical University of Munich, and University of Cambridge. Strategic milestones mirror those of Yorkshire Electricity Board privatizations and private equity transactions comparable to deals involving KKR, CVC Capital Partners, The Carlyle Group, 3i Group, and Apax Partners. The business expanded during infrastructure programs associated with events such as Expo 2000, Beijing Olympics, and London 2012.

Products and Technologies

Product families resemble lines produced by Vertiv (company), Schneider Electric SA, and Eaton Corporation plc, including modular uninterruptible power supply systems, static transfer switches, rectifiers, and battery management systems. Technologies integrate components from suppliers like Panasonic, Samsung SDI, Johnson Controls, GS Yuasa, and Saft (company), and use software platforms comparable to offerings by Siemens AG, Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Services, Cisco Systems, and Oracle Corporation for remote monitoring and management. Innovation pathways reflect research trends from Fraunhofer Society, CEA (French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission), CEA-List, and collaborations with standards bodies including IEEE and ISO. The company’s modular approaches are akin to rack-scale systems found in Dell Technologies and Hewlett Packard Enterprise deployments.

Applications and Industries

Chloride Power Protection serves critical infrastructure projects in sectors represented by National Health Service (England), World Bank funded hospitals, Deutsche Bahn rail systems, Siemens Mobility installations, and Arup Group engineered facilities. Key application areas include data center uptime for hyperscalers such as Google, Facebook (Meta Platforms, Inc.), Microsoft, and Apple Inc.; backup power for financial institutions like Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Deutsche Bank; and resiliency for utilities and oil and gas operators like BP, Shell plc, ExxonMobil, and Chevron Corporation. Telecommunications partners include Vodafone, Verizon Communications, AT&T, China Mobile, and NTT. Transportation and defense clients mirror procurement practices of NATO, United Nations, Department of Defense (United States), Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom), and national rail operators.

Safety and Environmental Considerations

Safety regimes follow certifications issued by Underwriters Laboratories, Det Norske Veritas, TUV Rheinland, and compliance frameworks aligned with REACH, RoHS, and WEEE directives. Environmental risk management engages lifecycle analyses similar to reports from Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, International Energy Agency, and corporate sustainability programs modeled after UN Global Compact and Science Based Targets initiative. Battery recycling and hazard controls interact with systems used by Veolia, SUEZ, Umicore, Stena Recycling, and Li-Cycle. Emergency response coordination aligns with standards promulgated by Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Health and Safety Executive, European Chemicals Agency, and International Maritime Organization for transport of hazardous goods.

Market and Corporate Structure

The market positioning resembles competitive dynamics seen with Schneider Electric, Eaton, ABB Ltd, Siemens Energy, and Vertiv Holdings Co. across regions governed by trade bodies such as World Trade Organization, European Commission, U.S. International Trade Commission, and Department for International Trade (UK). Financial and ownership developments parallel transactions involving Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank (Berlin), and private equity firms such as KKR and CVC Capital Partners. Strategic alliances and supply chains tie to manufacturers and logistics firms like DHL, Maersk, DB Schenker, Kuehne + Nagel, and FedEx.

Category:Electrical supply companies