Smart Business Tips
Sign In
  • Home
  • Business
    • Business Coaching
    • Business Growth
    • Business Tools & Apps
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Entrepreneurs
    • Crypto
    • Innovation
    • Investing
    • Leadership
    • Productivity
  • Contact US
    • Blog
  • Branding
    • Content Marketing
    • Digital Marketing
    • E-commerce
    • Marketing Strategies
    • Personal Finance
  • Sales
    • Small Business Tips
    • Social Media
    • Startups
    • Tech Trends
    • Investing
  • Shop
Notification
What Is Future-Proofing? How to Make Sure Your Business Thrives
Business Coaching

What Is Future-Proofing? How to Make Sure Your Business Thrives

Social Security Reforms Could Be on the Way—Here’s What Real Estate Investors Need to Know
Investing

Social Security Reforms Could Be on the Way—Here’s What Real Estate Investors Need to Know

Building a CAPM That Works: What It Means for Today’s Markets
Investing

Building a CAPM That Works: What It Means for Today’s Markets

Top 7 Retail POS and Inventory Software Solutions
Small Business Tips

Top 7 Retail POS and Inventory Software Solutions

Font ResizerAa
Smart Business TipsSmart Business Tips
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Contact US
  • Branding
  • Sales
  • Shop
Search
  • Home
  • Business
    • Business Coaching
    • Business Growth
    • Business Tools & Apps
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Entrepreneurs
    • Crypto
    • Innovation
    • Investing
    • Leadership
    • Productivity
  • Contact US
    • Blog
  • Branding
    • Content Marketing
    • Digital Marketing
    • E-commerce
    • Marketing Strategies
    • Personal Finance
  • Sales
    • Small Business Tips
    • Social Media
    • Startups
    • Tech Trends
    • Investing
  • Shop
Sign In Sign In
Follow US
Made by ThemeRuby using the Foxiz theme. Powered by WordPress
Smart Business Tips > Blog > Startups > Sam Altman-backed Exowatt wants to power AI data centers with billions of hot rocks
Startups

Sam Altman-backed Exowatt wants to power AI data centers with billions of hot rocks

Admin45
Last updated: November 13, 2025 5:33 pm
By
Admin45
6 Min Read
Sam Altman-backed Exowatt wants to power AI data centers with billions of hot rocks
SHARE


When Hannan Happi started thinking about how to solve the AI power crisis, he kept one figure in mind: one cent per kilowatt-hour.

“We went through all sorts of configurations and designs,” Happi, co-founder and CEO of Exowatt, told TechCrunch. “They all look different from each other. We tried to learn from every one of them: How do I reduce structural costs? How do I reduce maintenance costs? How do I optimize for this?”

After years of brainstorming and building, Exowatt’s first step toward that goal is a simple box the size of a shipping container topped with a clear awning. Inside is similarly simple. If Exowatt can deliver on its promise of delivering cheap solar power that generates electricity 24-7, it could upend the data center market and broader energy world, delivering round-the-clock power at very low cost.

To scale production in pursuit of the one-cent per kWh target, Exowatt has raised an additional $50 million in an extension to its $70 million Series A round that closed in April, TechCrunch has exclusively learned. 

The extension was led by MVP Ventures and 8090 Industries with participation from Atomic, BAM, Bay Bridge Ventures, DeepWork Capital, Dragon Global, the Florida Opportunity Fund, Massive VC, New Atlas Capital, Overmatch, Protagonist, and StepStone. Previous investors include Andreessen Horowitz and Sam Altman.

Happi said that Exowatt wasn’t looking to raise additional capital after the April round, but “strong momentum we saw in the market” and “strong investor interest” encouraged him to take the new money at a higher valuation.

Exowatt’s backlog is currently about 10 million P3 units representing 90 gigawatt-hours of capacity, he said. “The goal is to scale as fast as possible to the millions and ultimately billions of units,” he said. The company should hit its one-cent target when production hits around 1 million units per year, Happi said.

Techcrunch event

San Francisco
|
October 13-15, 2026

Exowatt is basically repackaging a technology that’s been around for decades. Known as concentrated solar power or thermal solar power, it uses the sun’s energy to heat materials that are good at storing or transporting thermal energy. In cases where that thermal energy is stored for an extended period of time, those materials tend to be derived from or resemble rocks — hence the technology’s nickname of “rocks in a box.”

Each P3 device consists of a metal box topped with lenses that focus the sunlight into a tight beam. That beam then heats a special brick inside the shipping container. A fan blows air over the brick to carry the heat to another box which contains a Stirling engine (a piston-driven device that converts heat to mechanical energy) and a generator. To store more power, developers would install more P3 boxes. “Everything is designed to be extremely simple,” Happi said.

Each thermal battery can retain heat for up to five days, ensuring continuous operation, and Exowatt will string several together to feed a single generator unit. How many depends on how quickly and how much electricity a customer wants to generate. The system’s efficiency is on par with photovoltaic solar panels, and slightly better than PV paired with lithium-ion batteries, Happi said.

Other companies have built various approaches to the same technology, though most have failed to compete with photovoltaic solar and lithium-ion batteries, both of which have surprised experts with how quickly they’ve come down in cost.

Happi argued that the P3’s small size and Exowatt’s iterative approach sets it apart. There are just over 100 solar thermal or concentrated solar power projects that are planned, built, or decommissioned around the world, he said. “If you compare that to the fact that we produce 1.5 billion solar panels per year, you can see the learning curve effects are very, very far apart from each other. 

“What Exowatt is about is taking a modular system that we know in principle works, and really scaling the manufacturing of that and then applying the learning curves of manufacturing.”

Exowatt is unlikely to be cost-effective everywhere, and the number of P3 units needed to power a data center could require massive amounts of land. Plus, it works best in the sunniest regions, which could limit its broader impact. 

But Happi counters that there’s a “high overlap” between where Exowatt’s P3 excels and where new data centers are being built. “We’re not running short of any projects to do,” he said.



Source link

Join Our Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!
Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
XFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow
Ad image

You Might Also Like

How 2 UC Berkeley dropouts raised M for their AI marketing automation startup
Startups

How 2 UC Berkeley dropouts raised $28M for their AI marketing automation startup

By
Admin45
July 30, 2025
AI’s talent arms race is starting to look like pro sports
Startups

AI’s talent arms race is starting to look like pro sports

By
Admin45
July 23, 2025
How a headphone site operator built loyalty startup Lantern to solve his own problems
Startups

How a headphone site operator built loyalty startup Lantern to solve his own problems

By
Admin45
October 16, 2025
[Databricks in The Wall Street Journal] OpenAI and Databricks strike $100 million deal to sell AI agents
Startups

[Databricks in The Wall Street Journal] OpenAI and Databricks strike $100 million deal to sell AI agents

By
Admin45
September 29, 2025
Rainmaker partners with Atmo to squeeze more rain from clouds
Startups

Rainmaker partners with Atmo to squeeze more rain from clouds

By
Admin45
July 14, 2025
9 Critical Amenities to Make or Break Morale at Your Small Business
Startups

9 Critical Amenities to Make or Break Morale at Your Small Business

By
Admin45
July 29, 2025

SmartBusinessTips

  • Business Tools & Apps
  • Marketing Strategies
  • Social Media
  • Tech Trends
  • Branding
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Sales
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Member Login
  • Contact Us
  • Business Coaching
  • Business Growth
  • Content Marketing
  • Branding

@Smartbusinesstips Copyright-2025-2027 Content.

Don't not sell my personal information
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?

Not a member? Sign Up