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Commonwealth Fusion Systems: The Sparc reactor advances towards commercialization with Nvidia support
Record Funding Boosts Fusion Reactor Development
Commonwealth Fusion Systems (CFS) has solidified its position as a leader in the race for commercial fusion energy, securing nearly $3 billion in total investment. The latest funding round, Series B2 for $863 million in August, was backed by Nvidia, Google, and other key institutional investors. This massive capital reflects market confidence that fusion could transform the global energy landscape in the next decade.
Sparc Takes Shape: Reactor Magnetic Components Progress According to Schedule
At CES 2026, CFS announced a significant technical milestone: the successful installation of the first magnet in its Sparc prototype. Of the 18 planned magnetic units, this marked the beginning of an ambitious assembly that the company expects to complete before the end of summer. According to Bob Mumgaard, co-founder and CEO of CFS, “we will assemble this revolutionary technology quickly during the first half of the year.”
Each magnet represents a notable engineering achievement: weighing 24 tons and generating a magnetic field of 20 teslas, approximately 13 times stronger than standard medical MRI equipment. For context, Mumgaard compared the power: “these magnets are powerful enough to lift an aircraft carrier.”
Once completed, the toroidal configuration of the 18 magnets will be mounted on a 24-foot diameter stainless steel cryostat weighing 75 tons, positioned on-site last year. The reactor will operate under extreme conditions: the magnets will be cooled to -253°C to allow currents exceeding 30,000 amperes, while the plasma will reach temperatures over 100 million degrees Celsius.
Digital Twin: When Artificial Intelligence Meets Nuclear Fusion
To maximize reactor efficiency before activation, CFS is developing an innovative technological strategy in partnership with Nvidia and Siemens. The goal is to create a functional digital twin of Sparc that enables continuous real-time simulations.
Siemens contributes its advanced design and manufacturing software, gathering data that is integrated into Nvidia’s Omniverse platform. Unlike isolated simulations conducted previously, this unified approach allows constant comparison between the virtual model and the physical reactor during all development and testing phases.
“Instead of running separate simulations, we will be able to compare the digital twin with the physical reactor throughout the process,” Mumgaard explained. This ability to virtually experiment with parameters before implementing them in the real machine would significantly accelerate the learning cycle. “By running the digital twin alongside Sparc, we can speed up our learning and progress,” added the executive.
The Commercial Vision: Arc and the Competition to Connect Fusion to the Grid
The development of Sparc is just the first step in CFS’s strategy. The company plans to build Arc, its first commercial fusion energy plant, conceived as a large-scale pioneering facility with a projected budget in the billions of dollars.
The competitive window is clear: CFS and other sector players aim to be the first to connect fusion-generated electricity to the power grid. The goals focus on the principles of the 2030s. If the technology materializes, fusion would provide virtually unlimited clean energy using infrastructure similar to conventional power plants, revolutionizing global energy security.
Mumgaard emphasizes that advances in artificial intelligence and machine learning will be decisive catalysts: “As machine learning tools improve and our models become more accurate, we can move even faster, which is crucial given the urgent need for fusion energy.” This appreciation of AI’s role underscores how next-generation technology not only accelerates fusion but also redefines the very process of innovation in clean energy.