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Fuse to open sa国际传媒官网网页入口 facility, adding to state鈥檚 nuclear fusion push

Company鈥檚 expansion is 鈥榓nother indication that our state is at the forefront of cutting-edge technology,鈥 governor says

Fuse CEO JC Btaiche during a signing ceremony on Oppenheimer鈥檚 desk in 2025. Btaiche is flanked by John Kline, left, the program director for fusion energy sciences at Los Alamos National Laboratory; James Zahler, middle, the director of the Feynman Center for Innovation; and Lisa Gordon-Hagerty, right, a Fuse board member and former administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration.
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At age 19, JC Btaiche, the son of a nuclear physicist, decided not to pursue a college degree. Since he was a young boy, he was fascinated by the physics of the cosmos and, eventually, nuclear fusion, which powers the sun and stars 鈥 and could promise to bring humanity limitless energy.

Now 26, Btaiche is the CEO of a company that has broken half a dozen records in fusion science. That company, Fuse, is expanding with a facility in sa国际传媒官网网页入口. 

Since the nuclear era, scientists have dreamed of creating fusion power generators. The science is there, but building a scalable and economic fusion power plant has proven to be one of science鈥檚 biggest challenges, and not for a lack of effort. 

During fusion, the 鈥渘uclei of light atoms overcome the electric resistance that keeps them apart and get close enough to activate the strong nuclear force that holds them together,鈥 or fuse, notes the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory鈥檚 . 

鈥淢aking elements fuse requires an enormous amount of heat and pressure, like that found in the cores of the sun and stars,鈥 the lab notes. 

To solve this challenge, Btaiche said he faced three options: Get a Ph.D. under the tutelage of a professor, work at the national labs or start his own company. 

鈥淓very professor has their own belief of, 鈥楾his is the fusion that鈥檚 going to work,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like asking a rabbi, priest and sheikh, 鈥榃ho is God?鈥 They all have very compelling answers.鈥 The national labs struggled with funding and worked slowly, he added. 

鈥淪o I thought the only option is to build a company in order to make the progress at a pace that we need,鈥 he said. 

Knowing that, like Rome, fusion power cannot be built in a day, Fuse is building a commercial facility of nearly 30,000 square feet in the 2600 block of Baylor SE, near the Sunport, where it will conduct radiation testing services for national defense, space and electronic components.

Inside the facility, Fuse will have machines, such as a flash X-ray generator and a pulse neutron generator, to test if devices can survive high-radiation environments. (He said the testing process does not produce radiation waste).

New Mexico has made a bet on fusion power, which other states have been unwilling to make, according to Btaiche. Last year, Pacific Fusion, another California company, announced it selected Mesa del Sol for its $1 billion research and manufacturing campus. Hiring is already underway for that expansion, with some 200 long-term jobs expected at Pacific Fusion鈥檚 facility. 

 鈥淚t鈥檚 quite safe 鈥 there鈥檚 no radioactive waste or anything like that,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut some states are more comfortable with these technologies than others.鈥 

And why would anyone need to test whether a device can withstand high levels of radiation? 

鈥淭here鈥檚 different levels of like why do people care,鈥 he said. 鈥淔irst, natural space. Once you exit the Earth鈥檚 atmosphere, you are susceptible to natural radiation just from solar flares or other naturally produced radiation, which is why pretty much all space components generally need to be tested against some radiation threshold.鈥

The other reason is more ominous, something Btaiche calls 鈥渉uman-generated radiation,鈥 say, from a nuclear weapon or accident.

鈥淲e (need to) make sure that our critical infrastructure will still hold in a bad scenario happening from like a human-made radiation event,鈥 he said. 

The inside of Fuse鈥檚 sa国际传媒官网网页入口 facility, which is expected to be operational this summer.

The company, which has in recent years signed cooperative research and development agreements with  and s, said it has 鈥渁cquired several acres of land and will invest tens of millions of dollars to build next-generation radiation testing infrastructure.鈥 The facility is expected to create dozens of high-skilled engineering and technical jobs over several years and is scheduled to begin serving customers this summer. 

New Mexico鈥檚 two U.S. senators, Martin Heinrich and Ben Ray Luj谩n, as well as Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, were all quoted praising Fuse in its announcement. 

鈥淔use鈥檚 investment in sa国际传媒官网网页入口 is yet another indication that our state is at the forefront of cutting-edge technology while creating high-quality jobs and expanding opportunities for collaboration with our national laboratories and research institutions,鈥 Lujan Grisham said in a statement. 

Asked what kind of degree it would take to work with Fuse, Btaiche, the wonderkid who opted out of college, said, 鈥淚 care about being really democratic.鈥 If you have the drive and willingness to be a part of the 鈥渇usion dream,鈥 there are skills that can be built, he added. 

鈥淏ut, at the same time, we have hired already and expect to continue hiring some highly skilled jobs as well as to bring to the state from our other facilities another pool of talent 鈥 as well as hire locally,鈥 he said. 

Justin Horwath covers tech and energy for the Journal. He can be reached at jhorwath@abqjournal.com.