- Prelude Ventures led the round, with participation from JERA Co., Inc., Japan's largest power generation company, and Idemitsu Kosan, one of Japan's largest integrated energy companies
- Series B equity is the first component of a diverse financing that includes project-level equity and debt
- Quaise's millimeter wave drilling system is approaching one kilometer of depth at its Central Texas field site
- Series B proceeds fund Project Obsidian in Central Oregon, the world’s first commercial superhot geothermal power plant
HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Quaise Energy, a leading developer of utility-scale superhot geothermal energy, today announced the first close of its Series B financing, raising $134 million with additional equity and debt capital expected to close imminently. The round was led by Prelude Ventures, with strategic investments from JERA and Idemitsu, two of Japan's largest energy companies. Nearly all existing investors, including Safar Partners, participated in the round.
The proceeds from Series B will fund Project Obsidian, the world’s first commercial superhot geothermal power plant, and the continued development and commercialization of Quaise's millimeter wave drilling system towards depths in excess of 5 km. Project-level equity and debt financing is concurrently being raised as the company advances toward first revenues secured by yet-undisclosed commercial off-take partners. The Series B brings Quaise's total funding raised to date to $230 million.
Quaise uses a millimeter wave drilling system developed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to ablate rock at depths and temperatures that are not economically accessible using conventional drilling. With this technology, Quaise has the unique potential to reach rock at temperatures of 300-500°C in most places worldwide, enabling the construction of geothermal systems that rival fossil and nuclear energy in power density and renewables in cost.
“Our ambition is to power civilization with Earth's most compelling energy source. This round takes us from field-proven technology to first commercial revenues,” said Carlos Araque, CEO and President of Quaise Energy.
Quaise has demonstrated the capability of its millimeter wave drilling system at its Central Texas field site, drilling more than 100 meters through granite in 2025 — the first time the technology penetrated basement rock at full scale in field conditions. The company is now approaching one kilometer of depth at the same site, a milestone that would represent the deepest penetration ever achieved with millimeter wave drilling — and the deepest ever recorded by any non-contact drilling technology. These results validate the core technology that Quaise will deploy at Project Obsidian and at other sites as the company dramatically expands the map for geothermal.