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BP teams up with Tesla to venture into battery storage for windfarm

(Corrects megawatt to kilowatt in paragraph 2)

LONDON, April 10 (Reuters) - BP has teamed up with Tesla to build its first battery storage project at one of its U.S. windfarms as part of a strategy to expand its renewable energy business, the energy group said on Tuesday.

Tesla will supply the 212 kilowatt (KW)/840 kilowatt hour battery at BP's Titan 1 windfarm in South Dakota in the second half of this year. It operates 12 other windfarms in the United (Shenzhen: 000925.SZ - news) States.

Providing large-scale battery power to windfarms allows them to store energy when wind is ample and make electricity available when demand is high, offering a crucial commercial advantage to an otherwise volatile energy source.

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"Lessons from the project will enable BP to make better informed decisions when evaluating and developing battery applications in the future," BP said in a statement.

"The project also supports BP’s broader strategy to invest half a billion dollars annually into low-carbon technologies, including projects within its established renewables portfolio as well as in new low-carbon businesses."

Several oil firms have already invested in battery technology. Norway's Statoil (LSE: 0M2Z.L - news) plans to use a battery system, called Batwind, with its Hywind floating wind farm off the coast of Scotland.

Vitol-owned VPI Immingham has developed a 50 megawatt, grid-connected battery portfolio in Britain.

BP estimates renewables could account for around 10 percent of global energy demand by 2035, up from 4 percent currently. (Reporting by Shadia Nasralla and Justin Varghese Editing by Mark Heinrich)