Energy storage is critical to powering the future of AI and data centers, but what if the solution doesn’t come from brand-new batteries? I recently discovered an innovative approach that breathes new life into old electric vehicle batteries, turning what once looked like waste into a key player for clean energy storage.
This isn’t just any energy storage system—it’s a massive 63 megawatt-hour microgrid composed entirely of repurposed EV batteries. Located at Redwood Materials’ battery recycling hub in Nevada and powering modular data centers run by AI infrastructure company Crusoe, this microgrid represents what is likely the largest deployment of reused transportation batteries in the world and arguably the biggest microgrid operating in North America today.
“This microgrid showcases a new model for cost-effective, rapidly deployable, scalable, 24/7 renewable power, integrated with AI computing infrastructure.”
From recycling to repurposing: a circular vision for batteries
The story starts with Redwood Materials, founded by JB Straubel, who is known for co-founding Tesla and guiding its technology for years. Starting as a battery recycling company, Redwood has aggressively grown to process massive amounts of material—some 70% of North America’s collection—and expanded its vertically integrated operations to include refining and manufacturing cathode materials.
But here’s the exciting twist: many of the used EV batteries Redwood collects actually retain up to 50-80% of their capacity. Instead of recycling these batteries immediately, the company realized they could be repurposed as energy storage for microgrids. This essentially wrings out extra value from batteries before their final recycling.
As Redwood scaled, EV battery feedstock is growing by nearly 100% per year, doubling annually with the accelerating adoption of electric vehicles. This surge provides a vast reservoir of batteries ideal for second-life applications. Through thorough evaluation, Redwood verifies that batteries are mechanically sound and electrically capable for energy storage, integrating them into a powerful, modular platform capable of managing batteries with diverse capacities.
Innovation behind the plug-and-play battery microgrid
One of the technical marvels enabling this repurposing is Redwood’s advanced power electronics system, affectionately dubbed the “universal translator.” This device allows batteries from multiple manufacturers, whether at 10% or 90% of their original capacity, to work seamlessly together within the same energy storage array.
The microgrid design focuses on simplicity and safety—battery packs can be swapped out in mere seconds with a forklift, minimizing downtime. This hands-on approach means active management is essential, replacing aging packs and continuously monitoring energy output in real time.
Maintenance and safety go hand in hand; thermal runaway risk demands impeccable battery health systems, but despite added operational effort, the cost benefits are clear: these second-life batteries can cut energy storage costs roughly in half compared to new lithium-ion technology.
Redwood’s approach balances a slightly larger land footprint and ongoing upkeep against these substantial savings, making it a compelling option especially for data centers and modular facilities where quick deployment and affordability are top priorities.
Powering AI’s unprecedented energy hunger
The timing couldn’t be more critical. AI workloads and sprawling data centers are driving electricity demand sky-high. Estimates suggest that by 2028, data centers could consume 12% of all U.S. energy, with AI pushing that demand even faster—assumed to jump 165% by 2030.
Connecting new data centers to existing utility grids is often slow and complicated. Redwood’s microgrid solution sidesteps this bottleneck by enabling rapid energy deployment directly on-site, sometimes in just five months—far faster than the typical two to four years needed for traditional grid connections.
For Redwood’s pilot, two modular data centers run by Crusoe—famous for building massive AI data infrastructure—are powered entirely by 100% solar energy stored in these reused EV batteries, containing Nvidia GPUs crunching AI workloads day and night. This model combines sustainability, speed, and cost-effectiveness in a package tailored for the AI era.
And this is only the beginning. Redwood has over a gigawatt-hour of reusable batteries in inventory and is designing projects 10 times larger than this pilot. With millions of EVs currently on the road, the available pool of batteries for reuse will continue growing, potentially making second-life storage solutions provide up to 50% of America’s future grid energy storage needs.
Key takeaways for the future of energy and AI
- Second-life EV batteries represent a huge, untapped resource that can provide affordable, scalable battery storage for critical infrastructure like AI data centers.
- Modular, rapidly deployable microgrids powered by repurposed batteries enable energy access where grid connections lag behind AI growth.
- The balance of sustainability, cost savings, and operational management makes second-life battery microgrids a compelling alternative to traditional new battery installation for many use cases.
Wrapping up
Exploring Redwood Materials’ journey from recycling champion to energy innovator reveals a fascinating evolution in battery lifecycle thinking. Repurposing EV batteries for microgrids doesn’t just reduce waste—it directly tackles the urgent need for affordable, clean energy at an unprecedented scale driven by AI’s power hunger.
This innovative circular approach could transform how we build energy infrastructure—plugging modular, second-life batteries into the grid (or off-grid) rapidly and at low cost offers a powerful path toward a more sustainable, AI-fueled future.
It’s a reminder that sometimes the best breakthroughs come not from creating something entirely new, but from reimagining how we use what we already have—giving old batteries a surprising new chapter as the backbone of tomorrow’s AI-powered world.



