Icebreaker Energy builds and installs thermal ice batteries in commercial buildings. We freeze water at night, melt ice when it's hot, and cut cooling bills by avoiding expensive cooling during the hottest hours.
Run chiller overnight to freeze water during off-peak hours.
Lower hottest-hour chiller load by melting stored ice. Passively power HVAC system without losing comfort.
Lower the expensive cooling spikes that drive demand charges. Save more money with cheaper night-time energy.
Commercial electric bills often have two parts: total energy used and the highest power draw during the billing cycle. Cooling spikes on hot afternoons increase both.
You pay for the electricity consumed across the month.
You also pay for the single biggest power draw over any 15-minute period.
Store cold at night, then use stored ice during the hottest hours so the cooling peak is lower.
That single interval often sets a large share of the monthly bill.
Using energy at night (time-of-use pricing) adds additional savings.
The system retrofits around existing chillers instead of replacing them.
This model uses fixed demo assumptions plus your selected building size, demand charge, and electricity price. Every number on the right side is generated from the assumptions below.
Retrofit commercial buildings with ice batteries and lower utility bills by cutting hot-hour cooling peaks.
Later, turn a portfolio of buildings into dispatchable thermal load during grid strain to support city-scale energy needs.
Thermal virtual power plants (VPPs) pre-charge buildings at night, then use stored cooling across the fleet when the grid is under heat-driven strain. They shave hot-hour energy peaks.
Cooling demand clusters on hot afternoons. A thermal VPP cuts load at the same time distribution feeders, substations, and system peaks are under the most strain.
Cooling is recurring, weather-linked, and operationally understandable. That makes dispatch easier to plan and easier for utilities and building owners to trust.
A fleet of buildings can reduce coincident compressor demand, defer grid upgrades, lower peaker-plant use, and make the grid cleaner and more efficient while keeping occupants cool.
Nikko is a mechanical and thermal engineer with experience spanning defense-grade cooling systems, the hottest parts of commercial jet engines, and extensive writing on the grid and how technology can make it cleaner and more efficient.
He has worked as a product leader at a fintech company building AI systems at scale for 150M+ customers. He has a background in systems thinking, heat transfer, and HVAC technologies.
He founded Icebreaker Energy in 2025 with a desire to make cooling smarter. After experiencing a muggy NYC summer, he noticed how much outside heat was produced by our cooling systems and wanted to find a way to make cooling more efficient and less wasteful.
Technical writing on thermal storage, cooling systems, demand charges, and thermal VPPs.
We're currently looking for commercial real estate partners to pilot our ice battery technology and help us build out our financial models with real-world data. If you're interested in cutting cooling bills and being at the forefront of grid-saving thermal VPPs, we'd love to chat.