tech
March 24, 2026
Don’t expect Trump Media’s nuclear fusion power plant to generate electricity soon
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

TL;DR
- The high energy consumption of AI is leading major tech companies and Trump Media to invest in fusion power as a potential solution.
- Fusion aims to replicate the energy-producing process of stars by fusing atomic nuclei, offering a clean alternative to fossil fuels and avoiding long-lasting radioactive waste.
- Significant scientific and engineering challenges persist, particularly in achieving a net energy gain and making fusion economically viable for utility-scale power plants.
- While a net energy gain ('ignition') was achieved at Lawrence Livermore in 2022, commercial fusion power plants are not yet operational.
- TAE is a company developing fusion technology, aiming to construct its first utility-scale plant by 2026 and generate power by 2031, backed by substantial private investment.
- Regulatory hurdles are being navigated, with fusion reactors in the US currently being regulated as particle accelerators, bypassing some of the lengthy licensing for fission reactors.
- The timeline for widespread commercial fusion power remains uncertain, with experts cautious about setting definitive dates for widespread deployment.
Continue reading the original article