Kepler Fusion Technologies, a wholly owned subsidiary of Renewal Fuels, Inc. (OTC: RNWF), was featured on a recent episode of The Stock2Me Podcast released by IBN, where CEO Brent Nelson discussed the company's progress toward commercializing its fusion energy technology. The company is developing the Texatron(TM) aneutronic fusion platform with the goal of deploying a fully operational 100-megawatt fusion reactor. A 5-megawatt pre-production model is currently under development as part of this roadmap.
Nelson outlined a power-as-a-service strategy specifically targeting data centers and industrial customers, sectors with high, consistent energy demands. He detailed the company's economic model, noting potential pricing of approximately 6.25 cents per kilowatt-hour for the generated power. This pricing model is central to making fusion energy commercially viable and competitive with existing energy sources for industrial applications.
The company's long-term scaling plan aims to deliver about one gigawatt of power by 2028. This ambitious timeline underscores the company's focus on moving fusion from a research concept to a deployable infrastructure-grade energy solution. Kepler's technology is designed to support modular deployment for industrial, commercial, and grid-constrained applications, which could provide a stable, high-density power source for critical infrastructure.
Kepler Fusion Technologies operates as a subsidiary of Renewal Fuels, which is doing business as American Fusion Inc. Following a merger with Kepler, the company has filed a corporate action with FINRA to change its legal name to American Fusion Inc. The corporate strategy is centered on building a scalable fusion energy platform supported by proprietary technology and disciplined intellectual property development. The latest news and updates relating to RNWF are available in the company's newsroom at http://ibn.fm/RNWF.
The development of commercial fusion energy represents a potential paradigm shift for global energy markets, particularly for industries like data centers that face growing pressure over power consumption and sustainability. Kepler's focus on a specific business model and customer base, rather than just the underlying science, indicates a maturation in the approach to bringing fusion power to market. If successful, the deployment of fusion reactors at the scale and price point discussed could provide a carbon-free, always-on power source, reducing reliance on fossil fuels for base-load industrial power and potentially altering the economic landscape for energy-intensive industries worldwide.


