Around 50 startups have now emerged worldwide, spurred by progress in experimental reactors and aiming to bring fusion into the commercial domain. IDTechEx's new report, Fusion Energy Market 2025-2045: Technologies, Players, Timelines, assesses leading companies, timelines, reactor materials, and evaluates seven of the most promising technological approaches.
The sector, however, cannot thrive on private investment alone. Governments must back long-term development if fusion is to succeed. Policymakers increasingly view fusion as a defining 21st century competition, akin to a modern space race. The key question remains which nations are truly leading.
Fusion differs from nuclear fission in both principle and safety. Rather than splitting heavy elements like uranium, fusion combines light elements such as hydrogen isotopes to release energy, mimicking the process that powers stars. This approach produces no long-lived radioactive waste and carries less risk of meltdown or proliferation.
Still, effective regulation is needed to manage risks without slowing innovation. Encouragingly, governments are moving to regulate fusion separately from fission, allowing industry and scientists to shape balanced frameworks.
Meanwhile, electricity demand continues to surge. Short-term growth comes from data center expansion driven by artificial intelligence, while long-term pressures stem from electrification and global development. Solar and wind remain vital but face intermittency challenges without large-scale storage. With data centers demanding stable baseload power, major technology players such as Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman have invested heavily in private fusion ventures.
Three blocs currently dominate fusion progress: the United States, China, and Europe. The US has the most startups and strong private investment, supported by the Department of Energy's milestone-based funding program. Industry leaders, however, stress that public investment remains insufficient.
China leads the world in government-backed fusion spending, with major advances including the EAST tokamak and rapid development from startups like Energy Singularity. Its approach is less diverse, relying heavily on tokamaks, but supported by sovereign supply chains and large-scale funding.
Europe offers unmatched academic strength and infrastructure, with France hosting ITER, the world's largest fusion experiment, and the UK announcing Pounds 2.5 billion in fusion funding in June 2025. Yet Europe often struggles to commercialize innovations due to slower regulatory frameworks and smaller financial commitments compared with China and the US.
The commercial race remains wide open. China dominates other energy technologies such as solar, batteries, and advanced fission, raising concerns in the West that fusion could follow the same pattern of rapid Chinese industrialization. IDTechEx notes that with varied reactor designs, fuels, and dozens of private ventures worldwide, fusion's future leadership is still undecided.
Research Report:Fusion Energy Market 2025-2045: Technologies, Players, Timelines
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