Allye Energy is accelerating the push of its mobile battery storage systems into the UK’s film and TV sector after securing new contracts with Afanti Media in Wales and Film & TV Services (FTVS), the Aggreko-owned supplier to global productions. The company has also delivered a second MAX300 mobile battery unit to OnBio, following more than a year of successful use on sets across the country.
The deals land as BAFTA albert’s SPARK roadmap warns that UK productions burned over three million litres of fossil fuels in 2024, with more than half relying almost entirely on diesel generators. A coalition of major broadcasters and studios incuding BAFTA albert, BBC, BFI, Channel 4, ITV, Netflix, Sky and others has now committed to a shared goal, stating: “The UK film & TV industry faces an imperative: to modernise its operations… We share a unified vision to achieve Clean Temporary Power by 2030.”
Allye CEO Jonathan Carrier said the sector is “at a critical juncture”, adding that clean mobile power is now “commercially proven, operationally reliable, and ready for industry-wide deployment.”
Afanti Media becomes the first Welsh company to adopt an Allye MAX unit, supporting the nation’s growing production hub. OnBio’s repeat order further validates the technology, with its first MAX300 system estimated to have saved more than 27 tonnes of CO2e compared with diesel generators.
The contracts strengthen Allye’s position as demand grows for silent, emissions‑free power solutions capable of supporting large‑scale productions without relying on fossil fuels.
Image Credit: Allye


