Maritime Fusion has closed a $4.5 million seed round to develop fusion reactors designed specifically for ships and off-grid systems. The San Francisco-based company believes this approach will bring fusion to market years before grid-scale reactors become viable.
Trucks VC led the round, with participation from Y Combinator, Paul Graham, Alumni Ventures, Aera VC, and several strategic angel investors. The funding will accelerate development of the company’s high-temperature superconducting (HTS) cable technology and its compact tokamak reactor called Yinsen.
Why Ships Instead of the Grid?
Most fusion companies are racing to power electrical grids. That’s an enormous technical challenge. Grid-scale fusion requires extremely high power density and near-continuous uptime to compete on cost. Maritime Fusion is taking a different approach entirely.
“Breakeven fusion is on the horizon, but the grid may not be the first place fusion achieves commercial success,” said Justin Cohen, co-founder and CEO of Maritime Fusion and a former Tesla engineer. “By targeting applications that require lower power and lower uptime, we simultaneously reduce challenging physics problems from power exhaust to nuclear activation, while also decreasing the burden and cost impact of maintenance operations that are unavoidable in any first-of-a-kind deployment.”
The maritime industry needs roughly 10× less power than the grid, has zero emissions requirements, lower uptime demands, and can achieve cost parity with existing energy sources more easily. This lets Maritime Fusion sidestep some of the hardest unsolved problems in fusion science.
The Technology Behind Yinsen
Maritime Fusion is building its physics foundation through two research partnerships. The company has a Sponsored Research Agreement with Columbia University focused on pulse scenario development and time-dependent plant systems. They’re also participating in the U.S. Department of Energy’s DIII-D National Fusion Facility, running experiments aligned with their specific operating regime.
The company recently hit a major milestone at its San Francisco HTS lab. Their patent-pending SHIELD cable (Superconducting High Integrity Energy Link & Distribution) carried 5,000 amps at 77K in a liquid-nitrogen-cooled bench test.
A Cable Smaller Than a Quarter
SHIELD’s cross-section is smaller than a quarter, excluding cryostat hardware. Yet it can handle up to 8,000 amps at 77K self-field, with even higher current capacity under fusion-relevant conditions. The design is highly modular, allowing insulated cable bundles to be packaged together for strong mechanical robustness and simplified integration into fusion magnets.
Here’s where it gets interesting from a business perspective. Maritime Fusion plans to sell the same cable technology into commercial power distribution, starting with AI data centers. Compared to copper, an HTS solution eliminates ohmic losses entirely, requiring only about 1.5 watts per meter of cryocooling at 77K. For large-scale data center operators, the efficiency gains and smaller physical footprint could mean more than $10 million per year in cost savings.
From Tesla to Fusion Startups
Maritime Fusion was founded by former Tesla engineers and is headquartered in San Francisco. The team chose their target market deliberately.
“Fusion’s impact on transportation will be enormous, obviously for the grid, but also for large-scale applications like maritime,” said Jeffrey Schox, partner at Trucks Venture Capital. “The team picked a smart first channel, allowing them to make a significant impact well before the largest barriers to grid fusion are fully solved.”
The company is currently hiring across engineering, manufacturing, and business development. Open positions include Member of Technical Staff roles in electrical, mechanical, systems, thermal, manufacturing, plasma physics, and nuclear disciplines, as well as R&D technicians and business development specialists.
Backing From Deep-Tech Investors
The investor roster reflects strong confidence in the team’s technical approach. Trucks VC, which focuses on transportation technology, led the round. Paul Graham, co-founder of Y Combinator and one of Silicon Valley’s most influential investors, participated alongside Y Combinator itself. Alumni Ventures and Aera VC rounded out the institutional investors.
Maritime Fusion joins a growing wave of fusion startups attracting venture capital, but its focus on near-term commercial applications rather than grid-scale ambitions sets it apart. The company believes that by solving easier problems first, they can generate revenue and prove out their technology while others continue working on the harder grid-scale challenges.

