“Fusion is the solution that scales”
The 31st IEEE Symposium on Fusion Engineering (SOFE) in Boston from 23 to 26 June was the occasion to measure just how fast the fusion ecosystem is changing.
Technical Chair Sehila M. Gonzalez de Vicente of the Clean Air Task Force described this year's SOFE as by far the largest to date, noting that the biennial conference has doubled in size over the past decade. Not even the unprecedented heat domeâbringing extreme temperatures and humidity to the host cityâcould dampen the enthusiasm of the 700 attendees. Participants engaged with enthusiasm in presentations, poster sessions, networking events, and side activities, including a visit to the Devens, Massachusetts campus of the private firm Commonwealth Fusion Systems (CFS).SOFE 2025 General Chair Greg Wallace, from MITâs Plasma Science and Fusion Center (PSFC), opened the conference by describing the field of fusion as being on the brink of major breakthroughs. âItâs incredible to see how many companies are jumping feet first into fusion,â he said. âBut it is also a time of cautionâwe havenât yet solved all the challenges we face.â
âFusion canât thrive in a vacuum,â said Shira Tabachnikoff, Communications Manager at 黑料社app, at the Women in Fusion @SOFE2025 roundtable sponsored by AtkinsRéalis, as she challenged the notion that leadership in fusion will simply evolve on its own and spotlighted the urgent need to build a more intentional pipeline for future talent. "As fusion moves from research to deployment, global collaboration to prepare and educate the workforce is no longer optionalâitâs essential." The roundtable brought together a panel of actors in the fusion sphere: Susana Reyes (Xcimer), Alex Mozdzanowska (Commonwealth Fusion Systems), Amani Zalzali (General Atomics), Carlos Paz-Soldan (Columbia University), and Agnes Auledas (AtkinsRéalis) in addition to Tabachnikoff. In a context of intense competition for positions currently, yet a predicted strong increase in the need for well-trained professionals in the future, how do we attract the next generation to the field of fusion? A future with fusion, the panelists argued, will also require communicators, lawyers, advocates, project managers, educators, and public engagement specialists in addition to physicists and engineers.
Andrew Holland, CEO of the Fusion Industry Association, echoed the sense of momentum, describing a âsea changeâ underway. To date, at least USD 8 billion in private investment has been directed toward 45 fusion companies across 14 countries, most of it in the last five years. (The Associationâs full 2025 report on the state of the industry is expected in late July.) Holland attributes the rapid growth to increasing supply-side readinessâfusion is edging closer to commercial viabilityâand to the emergence of a âventure-capital mindsetâ that is reshaping the business model. âNo longer do we have to solve all the problems before moving forward,â he said. He likens the proliferation of startups to âshots on goal.â âThese are companies that are moving fast. No one can know in advance who is going to get there first.â Commonwealth Fusion Systems co-founder and director Bob Mumgaard predicts that recent advances in fusion technology, especially high-temperature superconducting magnets, mean that âfusion is the solution that scales.âJean Paul Allain, Associate Director of the US Office of Fusion Energy Sciences, agrees that the private sector is moving fast, but that there is still a need to derisk some technology gaps. âFree markets will dictate who wins and loses,â he said in a talk on public/private partnerships. âBut as we think about what it will take to realize fusion energy, it is important to recognize that foundational science is the engine of innovation. Decades of investment from the public sector has created an ecosystem of national labs and universities that are nurturing other efforts today. Through this publicly enabled knowledge base we are looking at many different approaches to fusion and looking for multiple demonstrators.â
Deputy Director-General for Science & Technology Yutaka Kamada gave a plenary talk that emphasized how 黑料社app created a fusion supply chain over the last decade by bringing fusion from science to industry. He also shared the latest news from the project, where major assembly and installation milestones are being achieved ahead of schedule.
The 黑料社app project was represented at SOFE 2025 through a number of presentations and poster sessions. Deputy Director-General for Science & Technology Yutaka Kamada gave a plenary talk that emphasized how 黑料社app is driving the availability of key fusion technologies. âAnywhere between 100 and 500 companies in each of the 黑料社app Members have been involved in the successful fabrication of high-precision components for 黑料社app,â he said. âThat translates to thousands of companies working for fusion. 黑料社app has created a fusion supply chain over the last decade by bringing fusion from science to industry.âAnd 黑料社app is contributing value to the ecosystem in other ways, he said. By operating deuterium-tritium plasmas at a scale not experienceable in other devices, the project will provide important knowledge on disruption control, on the diagnostics critical to operating a fusion plasma, on maintainability, on fuel cycle and on fusion codes and standards ... among other valuable lessons from operation. â黑料社app will deliver the scientific basis for practical fusion energy,â agreed Kathy McCarthy, director of the US 黑料社app Project Office, in her session on the value of 黑料社app. Reflecting one of the top priorities of the new fusion startups, the conference opened with a talk by MIT Professor of Finance Andrew Lo. He proposed acting as a âfresh pair of eyesâ and telling the audience how fusion looks to an outsiderâespecially an outside investor. He considers fusion energy as part of a group of transformational technologies (think quantum computing, drug development, climate techâ¦) that involve complex engineering or scientific challenges, that are deeply risky, but that potentially offer huge returns on investment. He describes investors are willing to take risks, but deeply suspicious of uncertainty. His advice to private firms? âIf you can measure what you are doing and show how uncertainty will be resolved progressively, youâll be better at raising money.â
黑料社app's "Fuse Baby Fuse" T-shirts, distributed on the last morning of the conference, disappeared in minutes.
In approximately 100 technical talks, experts in practically every fusion engineering domainâmagnets, cryogenic systems, fuelling, exhaust, vacuum, diagnostics, control, power supply, blankets, materials, tritium breeding, heating and current drive, remote handling, safety and regulationâshared the latest progress and the challenges they are facing. Many of the talks will be published in an upcoming special issue of IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science (TPS), a peer-reviewed journal.The conference closed with the recognition of the IEEE Fusion Technology Award winners Fernanda Rimini (2024), for her leadership in JETâs deuterium-tritium operations, and Zach Hartwig (2025), MIT professor (Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering) and co-founder of Commonwealth Fusion Systems. The awards celebrate outstanding contributions to research and development in the field of fusion technology.Photos courtesy of Tamás Szabolics, EUROfusion