Google is building a bevy of renewable energy in Minnesota—including the world’s largest battery system providing power for a whopping 100 hours

Google announced this week it’s developing a new data center complex south of Minneapolis to be powered by a practical utopia of clean energy: lots of wind, solar, and, notably, the world’s largest battery storage system. While the battery business is now booming, most storage systems provide power in four-hour durations, or increasingly, eight hours.…


Google is building a bevy of renewable energy in Minnesota—including the world’s largest battery system providing power for a whopping 100 hours
Google is building a bevy of renewable energy in Minnesota—including the world’s largest battery system providing power for a whopping 100 hours

Google announced this week it’s developing a new data center complex south of Minneapolis to be powered by a practical utopia of clean energy: lots of wind, solar, and, notably, the world’s largest battery storage system.

While the battery business is now booming, most storage systems provide power in four-hour durations, or increasingly, eight hours. But the Form Energy technology Google will utilize aims to dispatch up to 100 hours of power at a time. Form’s iron-air battery technology offers multiday durations intended to keep the power on during prolonged severe weather events, peak summer demand, or just a particularly cloudy week that weakens solar power.

The idea is that renewable power—when coupled with shorter- and long-duration batteries—can finally shed the reliability concerns of critics and offer the equivalent of baseload power provided by fossil fuel generation and nuclear power.

“This is the largest announced energy storage project in the world,” Form cofounder and CEO Mateo Jaramillo told Fortune. “It definitively confirms the business case for what we call multiday-duration storage.”

Nine-year-old Form is opening its Form Factory 1 manufacturing hub in West Virginia this year and is now ready to scale up. The plan is to take the company public on a “relatively near-term horizon,” said Tesla alum Jaramillo, likely next year. “For the scale of company that we are becoming, for the kinds of deals that we’re doing with our customers, it is beneficial to us to be a public company.”

Importantly, Form’s deal with Google and Minneapolis utility Xcel Energy for the Pine Island data center complex is potentially a watershed moment for the nascent long-duration battery industry. Google is the first hyperscaler to contract for the battery tech.

Standard, short-duration lithium-ion batteries have come a long way quickly on the U.S. grid. In 2020, it had about 1.5 gigawatts of total installed battery storage capacity. But this year alone, the Department of Energy projects 24.3 gigawatts of new battery storage installations—more than twice as much as new wind power and almost quadruple the new gas-fired generation capacity.

Whereas lithium-ion technologies are transferred from electric vehicle chemistries, Form’s tech instead focuses on heavier, less-efficient iron-air batteries that are, most notably, much cheaper than lithium-ion. That makes the technology compatible for long-duration electricity storage, but definitely not for EVs.

The battery technology functions through a reversible rusting process. Essentially, oxygen pumped into the cells rusts the iron through oxidation, releasing electrons. The batteries do so at about one-tenth the cost of lithium-ion, enabling the long durations.

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