Crusoe makes big battery buys for its data centers

Image Credits:Form Energy Data center developer Crusoe is ramping up its energy storage capacity with battery buys from Form Energy and Redwood Energy. The company said it will buy 12 gigawatt-hours of Form Energyโ€™s 100-hour batteries. Itโ€™s the second large sale made by Form, which last month said it would build a 30 gigawatt-hour battery…


Crusoe makes big battery buys for its data centers
A big battery sits inside a factory.
Image Credits:Form Energy

Data center developer Crusoe is ramping up its energy storage capacity with battery buys from Form Energy and Redwood Energy.

The company said it will buy 12 gigawatt-hours of Form Energyโ€™s 100-hour batteries. Itโ€™s the second large sale made by Form, which last month said it would build a 30 gigawatt-hour battery for Google in Minnesota. That deal was worth about $1 billion, according to The Information.

Form, which didnโ€™t disclose the value of the sale, will start delivering Crusoeโ€™s batteries in 2027.

Crusoeโ€™s smaller purchase should still bring Form hundreds of millions in new revenue as the battery company embarks on a $500 million funding round. Form has raised $1.4 billion to date, according to PitchBook. Previously, Form had signed smaller contracts with utilities interested in testing the technology.

Formโ€™s iron-air batteries discharge when oxygen from the air flows over iron pebbles inside the battery. The oxidation process produces rust and electricity. To charge the battery, electricity essentially de-rusts the iron, releasing oxygen.

Form began expanding its first factory in West Virginia last year in anticipation of big contracts that are now materializing.

Crusoe also announced that itโ€™s expanding a partnership with Redwood Materials, the battery recycling and reuse company founded by ex-Tesla CTO J. B. Straubel. The data center company has been operating a 12 megawatt, 63 megawatt-hour battery on a microgrid since June, which was the largest second-life battery installation at the time. Redwood will deliver an additional 8 megawatts of power using repurposed EV batteries.

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