Proxima Fusion Secures €411M to Lead Europe in Fusion Energy Race Against US and China

July 7, 2026
Proxima Fusion Secures €411M to Lead Europe in Fusion Energy Race Against US and China
  • Proxima Fusion, a Munich-based startup, has closed a funding round of €411 million led by XTX Ventures and East X Ventures, with strategic investments from Alphabet's Google and German utility RWE.

  • The company is pursuing stellarator technology and aims to demonstrate a fusion plant in the early 2030s, followed by a commercial facility later in the decade.

  • CEO Francesco Sciortino emphasized Europe’s race with the US and China to deploy the first fusion power plant and highlighted investor support as critical to building a generational energy technology company.

  • Fusion energy, unlike conventional fission, relies on the fusion of atoms and does not involve a perpetually dangerous chain reaction or long-lived waste, though the technology remains in development.

  • Google cautioned that while fusion could transform energy production, commercialisation is immensely challenging and not guaranteed.

  • Google has also noted fusion as a potentially clean and abundant energy source, but acknowledges the path to commercialization is uncertain.

  • Market opportunities include software tools to optimize AI workloads based on fusion plant availability, integrating energy planning with AI workload scheduling.

  • The announcement reinforces ongoing interest in fusion as a carbon-free electricity source to support growing data-center energy needs and industrial decarbonisation.

  • AI firms may pursue power purchase agreements and co-located data centers with fusion developers, using phased pilots that blend grid power with early fusion output to manage risk during maturation.

  • Advances in stellarator performance reduce plasma instability versus tokamaks, potentially improving commercial viability and informing AI-caused capacity planning for large model deployments.

  • Competition in fusion is intense globally, with significant US and Chinese investment; views vary on timing and feasibility, from decades away to major future industry.

  • Fusion is envisioned as inexpensive and generating less radioactive waste than fission, with potential to enhance energy independence over time.

Summary based on 20 sources


Get a daily email with more Startups stories

More Stories