The oversubscribed raise marks the first in a series of milestones as Thea Energy solidifies its position as the preeminent stellarator company and leader in commercial fusion energy
KEARNY, N.J., May 27, 2026 – Emerald Technology Ventures has joined a $100 million Series B funding in Thea Energy, Inc., a technology company advancing the stellarator for the commercialization of an abundant source of baseload fusion power. Other investors include Thomas Tull’s US Innovative Technology Fund (USIT), General Innovation Capital Partners (GICP), Linse Capital, Calm Ventures, Climate Capital, Divergent Capital, Gaingels, Idemitsu Kosan, Overlay Capital, Timescale Ventures, and Whatif Ventures.
The funding will expand the Company’s magnet manufacturing capacity, fast-track the construction of its integrated fusion system, and ultimately accelerate progress toward commercial deployment.
This oversubscribed investment round underscores the growing demand for baseload power and confidence in Thea Energy’s ability to deliver cost-competitive, scalable fusion power plants with lower-risk. Existing investors Alumni Ventures, Hitachi Ventures, Lowercarbon Capital, Mercator Partners, Orion Industrial Ventures, Prelude Ventures, and Starlight Ventures also participated, among others.
“We built Thea Energy to take fusion out of the lab and onto the grid. Our architecture is simpler to manufacture, faster to construct, and more tolerant of real-world conditions compared to all other approaches. Commercial fusion requires adaptable, high-uptime power plants; this Series B accelerates that reality,” said Brian Berzin, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Thea Energy. “With the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)’s certification of our power plant preconceptual design milestone, proven magnet hardware, best-in-class team, and the capital now in place, we are on the path to delivering the first commercial stellarator power plants.”
This funding will expand the company’s magnet manufacturing infrastructure, including the addition of a second facility in Northern New Jersey. The capital will also support the siting and construction of “Eos”, a large-scale integrated stellarator that will create power plant relevant, steady-state fusion enabled by Thea Energy’s simplified architecture as well as its ability to build fusion systems on shorter timescales and at lower costs. The Company is set to select a site for Eos later this year while also doubling its team to support this pivotal phase.
Thea Energy is progressing toward starting construction of the first “Helios” power plant before the end of the decade. As demand for baseload power accelerates and competition for fusion leadership intensifies globally, Thea Energy is positioning the U.S. at the forefront of the next generation of energy infrastructure. The Company is already in discussions with over a dozen power offtakers, hyperscalers, and utility partners interested in tapping into this scalable, high-availability source of fusion power.
This funding round follows the DOE’s certification of Thea Energy’s Helios preconceptual design milestone, making the company the first awardee to receive this distinction.
Over the past year and a half, the Thea Energy team:
- De-risked its core fusion technologies, including the full-scale planar shaping magnets utilized in the upcoming Eos system.
- Built and operated the world’s first superconducting magnet array capable of making the complex and precise magnetic fields required for commercial stellarator systems.
- Assembled an industry leading team of engineers, scientists, and operators capable of building and scaling fusion power plants across the world, on time and on budget.
Read more in Bloomberg: Thea Energy Raises $100 Million to Build Fusion Power Prototype - Bloomberg