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General Fusion goes public in the US with a $1 billion SPAC deal

General Fusion, a nuclear energy startup in the U.S., announced on Thursday that it would go public with a deal worth about $1 billion. The company will be partnering with blank-check firm?Spring Valley Acquisition Corp. III. This is due to a growing demand for?cleaner electricity.

General Fusion reported that the deal included $105 million in private equity investment oversubscribed by SVAC III and approximately $230 million in cash held in trust for SVAC III.

General Fusion expects to complete the merger?by the middle of 2026 and list the stock on Nasdaq with the ticker GFUZ.

The Canadian company is developing magnetized target-fusion, a new experimental approach that aims to replicate the process that powers the sun.

General Fusion, unlike conventional nuclear fission has yet to prove fusion in commercially viable power plants.

The company expects to construct a unique power plant by mid-2030s.

The listing is a result of the renewed interest in nuclear power after decades of stagnation. This has been driven by the surge in electricity demand for AI data centers, and wider electrification?in sectors like transportation and manufacturing.

The company stated that the proceeds from the transaction would be used to further develop its magnetized fusion system.

In an interview, Chief Executive Greg Twinney said: "The demand for electricity is massive... AI, data centers, and current technologies will not cut it." In an interview, Chief Executive Greg Twinney told?Einen: "The demand for energy is massive... AI,?data centers, and existing technologies are not going to cut it."

He added that the company works with "potential customers" to ensure that what they build is something they can use, finance, and operate into the future.

Its peers include Sam Altman's Oklo, NuScale and Centrus, but none of them are pure-play companies. (Reporting by Dharna Bafna in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim Zahid)

(source: Reuters)