By MDADIB @Adobe Stock

The US Department of Energy (DOE) has announced $134 million in funding to boost American leadership in fusion energy. The investment includes $128 million for the Fusion Innovative Research Engine (FIRE) to support collaborative fusion technology research, and $6.1 million for the INFUSE program to promote private-sector partnerships with labs and universities. These initiatives aim to accelerate the development of commercial fusion powerโ€”offering clean, reliable, U.S.-made energyโ€”while strengthening domestic innovation, supply chains, and energy security. The DOE writes:

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced $134ย million in funding for two programs designed to secure U.S. leadership in emerging fusion technologies and innovation. These investments are part of DOEโ€™s broader mission to unleash American energy, science, and innovation, ensuring the technologies that define the future of fusion power are developed here in the United States.

โ€œUnder President Trumpโ€™s leadership, DOE is unleashing the next frontier of American energy,โ€ saidย U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright. โ€œFusion power holds the promise of limitless, reliable, American-made energyโ€”and programs like INFUSE and FIRE ensure our innovators have the tools, talent, and partnerships to make it a reality.โ€

DOE is announcingย $128 millionย for the Fusion Innovative Research Engine (FIRE)ย collaboratives. The funding was awarded to sevenย teams that are focused onย creating a fusion energy science and technology innovation ecosystem by forming virtual, centrally managed teams. The teams selected have a collective goal of bridging the DOE Fusion Energy Sciences (FES) programโ€™s basic science research programs and growing fusion industries.

DOE is also announcing $6.1 million in funding for the Innovation Network for Fusion Energy (INFUSE) program. With this funding, DOE has selected 20 projects that accelerate private-sector fusion energy development by reducing barriers to collaboration between businesses and national laboratories or universities. The projects selected include research in materials science, laser technology development, high temperature superconducting magnet assessment, artificial intelligence (AI) learning for fusion modeling and simulation, and enabling technologies to move toward achieving economical fusion energy.

Fusion has the potential to provide abundant, reliable energy by replicating the same process that powers the sun and stars. Following the passage of the Energy Act of 2020, FES has sought to accelerate the viability of commercial fusion energy in partnership with the private sector by establishing several industry-relevant programs like INFUSE and the FIRE Collaboratives.

These initiatives represent a significant step forward in advancing fusion energy research, maintaining U.S. leadership in fusion, strengthening U.S. based manufacturing and supply chains and supporting the development of technologies crucial for national security, energy security, and defense. In accordance with President Trump’s recent executive orderย Unleashing American Energy, these selections advance domestic fusion production and expand collaboration across the growing American fusion industry.

A full list of projects and additional information can be found on theย Fusion Energy Sciences program homepage.

Read more here.