In a bid to attract private-sector funding for clean energy, the UK government has made a £20 million (about $26.6 million USD) commitment to establish Starmaker One, the world's first government-affiliated private fusion investment fund.
In January of this year, the British government announced a record £410 million ($545.6 million USD) investment in its Plan for Change, a fusion energy research and development strategy to help the country become a clean energy superpower.
Now, in hopes of bolstering these efforts, it's seeking private sector capital to accelerate the commercialization of fusion energy tech with this limited partnership, where the government is a cornerstone investor, as Interesting Engineering reported.
The promise of fusion as a source of nearly limitless energy is growing as projects across the globe race to try to solve the enormous complexity involved in harnessing it.
Fusion reactors work by heating Earth-abundant and hydrogen-rich deuterium and tritium fuels to temperatures hotter than the core of the sun.
This creates a superheated plasma, and through methods including magnetic confinement, researchers hope to sustain an environment in which two nuclei can fuse to form a single heavier nucleus, giving off energy in the process.
Fusion is an environmentally friendly energy-generating process and doesn't release carbon dioxide or any other planet-warming gases through its operation.
Global leaders believe that fusion is one of the key solutions for future energy security, but as IE explained, private UK firms working on developing the technology have had limited access to capital in order to scale up their work.
The UK government believes that a British private investment fund like Starmaker One can help these new fusion start-ups grow their businesses and begin to commercialize at scale, as a press release detailed.
Not only would the success of any of these projects help add a new renewable energy resource to the grid, complementing solar and wind investments, but it would also help support the job economy.
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The funding boost would allow these companies to train employees in key areas such as physics, engineering, and chemistry, creating new jobs in the renewable energy sector.
Additionally, the government believes it would support fusion-adjacent technologies like magnetics, industrial AI, robotics, transportation, and energy storage.
"This investment is our Plan for Change in action — we are backing British pioneers to secure the clean energy of the future while supporting jobs today, from scientists and welders to engineers and construction managers," as energy minister Kerry McCarthy stated in a press release.
McCarthy added, "As countries around the world recognize the huge potential of fusion, breakthroughs in this technology are happening thick and fast, and we want to keep the UK at the forefront of the global race by helping projects to innovate and grow here, in turn driving economic growth."
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