At this year’s SNEC 2025 in Shanghai, Sungrow Hydrogen and Wison Engineering unveiled a modular hydrogen production platform that signals a fundamental shift in how large-scale electrolysis infrastructure may be deployed.

The new solution—dubbed MegaFlex “Plant as a Product”—promises to standardize what has traditionally been a bespoke, site-specific endeavor, replacing months of custom engineering with an off-the-shelf industrial product built for replication and scale.

The MegaFlex system is more than a redesign; it represents an operational rethink. By consolidating all critical subsystems—electrolysers, power electronics, water purification, cooling, and control systems—into a pre-engineered outdoor module, Sungrow and Wison aim to sidestep persistent project delays and cost overruns that plague traditional electrolysis deployments. According to company figures, the MegaFlex offers an 11.5% reduction in total costs and occupies 15.5% less land area compared to conventional 100 MW installations. Crucially, it’s engineered for deployment across a range of environmental conditions, including dust-laden, humid, or high-temperature sites, without the need for protective indoor housing.

The outdoor, corrosion-resistant design is paired with a plug-and-play architecture that enables rapid assembly and disassembly. This approach aligns with broader industry trends toward factory-built hydrogen assets that reduce both on-site construction complexity and commissioning time. Such industrialized thinking mirrors innovations already seen in battery storage and solar PV sectors, where containerized, modular designs have replaced fixed-site builds.

The MegaFlex’s first deployment is scheduled for ACME’s green ammonia project in Oman—one of the largest planned renewable ammonia facilities globally. This pilot will serve as the real-world proving ground for the system’s operational flexibility, reliability, and economic performance. Oman’s desert environment, with its temperature extremes and infrastructure challenges, will provide a stress test for the MegaFlex concept.

Beyond technical innovation, the MegaFlex reflects a growing urgency in the hydrogen sector to shift away from infrastructure “craft projects” toward scalable production models. Electrolyser oversupply, falling investor confidence, and mounting pressure to reduce levelized hydrogen costs have underscored the inefficiencies of project-by-project customization. With electrolyser capital expenditures still representing a significant share of green hydrogen’s total cost, modular, pre-integrated systems could offer one of the most immediate and replicable paths to competitiveness.

For Wison Engineering, best known for its work in industrial modularization, the partnership with Sungrow Hydrogen is an opportunity to transfer lessons from oil & gas and chemicals into the renewables domain. Their co-developed platform suggests that gigawatt-scale hydrogen need not rely on gigawatt-scale project management. Instead, the future may belong to systems built more like consumer technology than infrastructure: prefabricated, certified, and deployable with minimal customization.


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