Close Menu
  • Tech Insights
  • Laptops
  • Mobiles
  • Gaming
  • Apps
  • Money
  • Latest in Tech
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT UpdatesTechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT Updates
  • Tech Insights
  • Laptops
  • Mobiles
  • Gaming
  • Apps
  • Money
  • Latest in Tech
TechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT UpdatesTechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT Updates
Home » A High-Profile Geneticist Is Launching a Fusion-Power Moonshot
Latest in Tech

A High-Profile Geneticist Is Launching a Fusion-Power Moonshot

adminBy adminOctober 26, 2024No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Eric Lander is a Big Science heavyweight. A geneticist, molecular biologist, and mathematician, he led the International Human Genome Project and is founding director of the powerful Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. His countless accolades include a MacArthur “genius” grant and 14 honorary doctorates. When Joe Biden became president, he tapped Lander to be his science adviser and the head of the Office of Science and Technology Policy. Lander lost the job because of charges that he bullied subordinates, but he went on to head a nonprofit organization called Science for America.

So what is he doing running a Silicon Valley startup that aims to solve the climate crisis by realizing the long-held dream of clean fusion energy? Lander is the founding CEO of newly announced Pacific Fusion, heading a team that includes top scientists from the national nuclear labs—Lawrence Livermore and Sandia—as well as experts in simulation and operations. It joins several dozen companies chasing a fusion dream that always seems to be 10 or 20 years out. And it still is—Pacific Fusion says it won’t deliver a working commercial fusion plant until well into the 2030s. But this time there’s a clear path to success. Or so says its famous CEO.

In May 2023, Science for America issued a report that flagged progress in fusion, citing recent breakthroughs. The year before, a Livermore group achieved what is known as “target gain,” producing significantly more energy than the amount required to perform the experiment. Soon after publishing the paper, Lander quietly formed a company with some scientists in the field, including some who worked at the labs and others from places like Alphabet’s X division and Tesla.

Sitting in a conference room at Pacific Fusion’s headquarters in Fremont, California, Lander explains to me why commercial fusion is finally within reach—and why Pacific Fusion may have the best chance to make it happen. He starts by giving me a primer on fusion, which happens when hydrogen is, in his word, “squished” into helium, releasing massive amounts of energy. It occurs naturally on the sun and other stars, but humans have yet to figure out how to do it efficiently here on Earth. But the potential payoff—unlimited clean power—has prompted around 50 startups to chase this dragon. Billionaires including Sam Altman and Bill Gates have backed one or another of these startups. Every few months, it seems, one of those contenders announces some breakthrough.

Why does Pacific Fusion say it’s different? The method it’s pursuing is called pulsed magnetic fusion, which involves inserting tiny containers of deuterium-tritium fuel into a chamber and blasting large electrical pulses through them to magnetically squeeze the fuel containers and achieve fusion. (It’s all explained here in a paper.) “It’s a very attractive approach that’s sort of been known for decades as an idea but has only just become feasible in the last two years because of this work in the national labs,” says Lander. His contention, which I will hear repeatedly as I meet with his team, is that we’ve now made all the scientific breakthroughs we need to understand how to use this technique to generate way more energy that it takes to build and run this system. The remaining challenges—hard ones to be sure— lie in engineering.

Another challenge is getting the money to build the prototypes for the hundreds of commercial plants that will theoretically solve the world’s energy woes. (And maybe cause global disruption when the current suppliers are upended, but that’s another story.) How do you fund a moonshot? Even when an investor accepts the risk, the prospect for payoff is distant: The Pacific Fusion timeline is to have a full-scale demonstration system sometime in the early 2030s, and commercial systems later in the decade.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
admin
  • Website

Related Posts

Here Is Everyone Mark Zuckerberg Has Hired So Far for Meta’s ‘Superintelligence’ Team

June 30, 2025

NYT Strands hints and answers for Monday, June 30 (game #484)

June 29, 2025

Infinix Hot 60i Launched With MediaTek Helio G81 Ultimate SoC, 50-Megapixel Rear Camera

June 28, 2025

Comments are closed.

Latest
  • ChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI chatbot July 1, 2025
  • Quantum Witch shows the endless possibilities of what cults, coercion, and ultimately, the right support can do June 30, 2025
  • Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 Could Drop a Key Design Feature of the Galaxy Z Fold 6 June 30, 2025
  • Instagram caused battery drain on Android phones, confirms Google – The Indian Express June 30, 2025
  • Students are deliberately short-circuiting school laptops as part of social media trend – KDVR June 30, 2025
We are social
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Techzlab.

Tags
Ada Ventures ai safety Alphabet Apple Automatic Aydin sykut cybersecurity daniel ek data centers doge Donald Trump Elon Musk evergreens Exclusive foodtech Fundraise fundraising Google In Brief India legal tech lucky matt mullenweg Meta Microsoft Openai Perplexity Pinterest remittance restaurant tech robotics Scales to Sequioa signalfire social media SpaceX Spotify Startups Tesla Trump Administration UK vw WordPress xrobotics Y Combinator
Archives
Quick Link
  • Apps (234)
  • From the Editor (3)
  • Gaming (233)
  • Laptops (234)
  • Latest in Tech (234)
  • Mobiles (235)
  • Money (59)
  • Tech Insights (234)
Don't miss

How Do Pimple Patches Work? Here’s Everything You Need to Know

June 30, 2025

This app got my kids off YouTube and into learning through play

June 29, 2025

AR in retail: How Augmented Reality is transforming shopping experiences

June 28, 2025
Follow us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
© 2025 Techzlab.com Designed and Developed by WebExpert.
  • Home
  • From the Editor
  • Money
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.