First Light Fusion, Frazer-Nash team up for fusion development

Wednesday, 9 April 2025

First Light Fusion, Frazer-Nash team up for fusion development
(Image: First Light Fusion)

The two companies have signed a non-exclusive letter of understanding for multi-year collaboration to develop cutting-edge engineering technologies that they say will accelerate innovation and forge a scalable, commercial pathway to fusion energy globally.

Frazer-Nash will contribute its expertise in complex engineering and systems development to support First Light Fusion’s new business strategy, launched in February this year, which focuses on partnering with innovative businesses that can leverage its cutting-edge proprietary technologies, research facilities and technological expertise. The collaboration will focus on delivering critical engineering solutions, developing new technical capabilities, and nurturing industry partnerships to strengthen the fusion supply chain and innovation network.

In February, Oxfordshire-based First Light Fusion announced it will focus on commercial partnerships with other fusion companies who want to use its amplifier technology, as well as with non-fusion applications such as NASA seeking to replicate potential high-velocity impacts in space. By dropping its plans for a fusion power plant, and instead targeting commercial partnerships with others, it aims to “capitalise on the huge inertial fusion energy market opportunities enabling earlier revenues and lowering the long-term funding requirement”.

“At First Light Fusion, technical innovation and cooperation is integral to realising our mission to make fusion energy possible,” First Light Fusion CEO Mark Thomas said. “This collaboration with Frazer-Nash reflects our commitment to working with the best engineering minds in the industry in pursuit of this goal. The collaboration will strengthen our development pipeline and provide valuable technical insight as we advance our fusion energy programme.

“Frazer-Nash Consultancy has a long-standing reputation for delivering high-value engineering solutions across energy, defence, and advanced technology sectors. The firm’s experience in complex systems engineering, computational modelling, and materials science makes it an excellent collaborator for our business, and I am excited to get started.”

Nial Greeves, Director Energy and Infrastructure, Frazer-Nash Consultancy, added: “First Light Fusion has an unparalleled reputation in its sector for spearheading world-leading technological advancements in the field of fusion. This, combined with Frazer-Nash’s own track record of solving some of the most complex engineering challenges presents an exciting opportunity to contribute to one of the most promising fields in clean energy.”

Nuclear fusion is the process by which two light nuclei combine to form a single heavier nucleus, releasing a large amount of energy. First Light, which was founded by Nick Hawker and Yiannis Ventikos in 2011 as an Oxfordshire University research spin-off, has been pursuing a form of inertial confinement fusion called projectile fusion, which creates the extreme temperatures and pressures required to achieve fusion by compressing a target containing fusion fuel using a projectile travelling at a tremendous speed. The projectile hits its amplifier, which focuses the energy onto the fusion fuel.

   

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