Global private investments in nuclear fusion hit a record $4.48 billion in 2025, in large part driven by the booming energy demands of AI data centers and rising global energy security concerns. According to the Fusion Industry Association (FIA), confidence in the viability of nuclear fusion technology is growing, with ~71% of fusion companies now expected to deliver commercial power to the grid by the 2030s. And that confidence is now translating into tangible dollars and infrastructure with fusion companies now inking site selection and Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) with major tech companies.Â
To wit, three years ago, Helion Energy signed a first-of-its-kind power purchase agreement with Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT), with Helion committing to supplying Microsoft with at least 50 megawatts of electricity from a commercial fusion plant by 2028. Unlike a loose letter of intent, this is a binding corporate PPA, with Helion facing potential financial penalties from Microsoft and its transmission partner Constellation Energy (NASDAQ:CEG) if it fails to deliver on schedule. Constellation Energy serves as the primary power marketer, managing transmission from the reactor straight to the grid.
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Last year, Helion broke ground on its first commercial-scale power facility dubbed Orion in Malaga, Washington. The Malaga site was strategically selected near the Columbia River to hook directly into Washington’s main power delivery network, landing just upstream to power Microsoft’s massive cloud infrastructure.Â
Helion is heavily backed by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who has injected hundreds of millions of dollars of his personal capital into the company. To keep pace with the strict 2028 Microsoft deadline, last year, Helion closed a $465 million Series G funding round led by Thrive Capital. The capital injection elevated Helion’s valuation to $15.5 billion, moving it from a speculative science venture into a heavily capitalized utility competitor.
In August 2025, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) spinoff, Commonwealth Fusion Systems, raised $863 million in a Series B2 funding, with the oversubscribed round bringing its total funding to nearly $3 billion. Some of CFS’ High-profile backers included tech heavyweights and PE firms such as Nvidia Corp. (NASDAQ:NVDA), Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) and Planet First Partners, as well as tech billionaires Bill Gates (Breakthrough Energy Ventures), George Soros’s Counterpoint Global and Stanley Druckenmiller. CFS will utilize the funds to develop its proprietary fusion device SPARC, a compact, tokamak device that aims to generate net-positive fusion energy by 2027. Unlike Helion’s Orion, SPARC is a 170,000-square-foot research and demonstration facility designed to prove that commercial fusion is scientifically and practically viable. By using HTS magnets developed in collaboration with MIT, SPARC can be built at a fraction of the size and cost of traditional fusion machines. The facility’s subsystems, including cryoplants and magnet power systems, are currently being installed and commissionedÂ
