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General Atomics Receives $20 Million Tax Credit to Advance Fusion Energy Development

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General Atomics Receives $20 Million Tax Credit to Advance Fusion Energy Development
Business

Business

General Atomics Receives $20 Million Tax Credit to Advance Fusion Energy Development

2026-06-23 07:56 Last Updated At:08:01

SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 22, 2026--

General Atomics (GA) announced today it has been awarded a $20 million California Competes Tax Credit from the state of California through the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development (GO-Biz). The award will support the company’s proposal to design and develop a Blanket Component Test Facility (BCTF) in San Diego.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260622185374/en/

The proposed state-of-the-art facility would be dedicated to testing full-scale fusion blanket components, an essential system that lines the inside of a fusion vessel, captures energy and produces tritium, a fuel needed to sustain fusion reactions. The work would address a major scientific and engineering challenge on the path to the world’s first commercial fusion power plant.

For GA and San Diego, the BCTF would serve as a focal point for scientists and engineers from the public and private sectors to validate blanket designs and develop other critical technologies. The project would also support a growing workforce and further strengthen the region’s role as a fusion innovation hub focused on helping the industry move toward commercialization.

“We are grateful for this award and energized by what it means for the future of fusion in San Diego,” said Anantha Krishnan, senior vice president of the General Atomics Energy Group. “This support will aid General Atomics’ continued investment in the research and capabilities needed to move fusion closer to realization, while strengthening our clean energy future. Facilities like the BCTF are where fusion research begins moving closer to real-world energy, and we are proud to help lead that work in California.”

The California Competes Tax Credit is a statewide income tax credit designed to help businesses grow in California and create quality, full-time jobs. Administered by GO-Biz and approved by the California Competes Tax Credit Committee, the program supports high-value employers that drive investment, strengthen the economy and provide good wages and benefits.

“Through the California Competes Tax Credit, we are doubling down on the ingenuity and innovation that will define the future. By further investing in the fusion sector, we are helping ensure California remains a global leader in both the industries of today and the transformative technologies of tomorrow,” said Dee Dee Myers, senior advisor to Gov. Newsom and director of GO-Biz.

General Atomics first announced earlier this month that it is currently pursuing concept designs for a BCTF in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy. The initiative is part of a public-private partnership that includes Idaho National Laboratory, UC San Diego and other key collaborators across industry and academia.

Fusion is the same process that powers the sun. Instead of splitting atoms, as traditional nuclear power does, fusion combines light atomic nuclei to release large amounts of clean energy without long-lived radioactive waste. Researchers believe fusion could provide virtually limitless, carbon-free electricity to help meet growing global energy demand.

General Atomics helped pioneer fusion research in the United States, establishing its program in 1957. Since then, the company has played a leading role in international fusion research, advancing plasma physics, high-field magnets and precision engineering.

GA also operates the DIII-D National Fusion Facility on behalf of DOE. Located in San Diego, DIII-D is the nation’s largest magnetic fusion user facility and testbed. The region is also home to the Fusion Data Science and Digital Engineering Center, major academic programs at UC San Diego and San Diego State University, and a growing network of private-sector and government collaborators.

California’s growing fusion ecosystem was strengthened last year by Senate Bill 80, which created the California Fusion Research and Development Innovation Initiative, the first state program of its kind focused on accelerating fusion technology development and commercialization. The state also expanded support for fusion technologies through SB 86, which extended the Sales and Use Tax Exclusion Program to fusion technologies. SB 925, currently pending in the California Legislature, would establish a state strategic plan and regulatory roadmap for fusion. Ongoing efforts by the city of San Diego and the San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation also continue to highlight the region’s potential as a center for fusion innovation and advanced manufacturing.

“Fusion has always required bold science, sustained commitment and a shared belief in what is possible,” Krishnan said. “With growing support from federal, state and local leaders, I am more optimistic than ever about the future of fusion energy and the role California, San Diego and GA can play in helping move this industry forward. Together, we are closer than ever to turning decades of research into a new source of clean energy that could benefit generations to come.”

For more information about General Atomics’ energy research and technologies, visit https://www.ga.com/about/energy-group.

About General Atomics

Since the dawn of the atomic age, General Atomics innovations have advanced the state of the art across the full spectrum of science and technology from nuclear energy and defense to medicine and high-performance computing. Behind a talented global team of scientists, engineers, and professionals, GA’s unique experience and capabilities continue to deliver safe, sustainable, economical, and innovative solutions to meet growing global demands.

Conceptual design of a potential Blanket Component Test Facility in San Diego, utilizing General Atomics existing Magnetic Technology Center Facility. (Credit: General Atomics)

Conceptual design of a potential Blanket Component Test Facility in San Diego, utilizing General Atomics existing Magnetic Technology Center Facility. (Credit: General Atomics)

Conceptual design of a potential Blanket Component Test Facility in San Diego, utilizing General Atomics existing Magnetic Technology Center Facility. (Credit: General Atomics)

Conceptual design of a potential Blanket Component Test Facility in San Diego, utilizing General Atomics existing Magnetic Technology Center Facility. (Credit: General Atomics)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Comedian Carlos Mencia has pleaded not guilty to 12 felony charges alleging he failed to report or pay taxes on more than $8 million in earnings.

The 58-year-old Mencia appeared behind glass in a custody area of a Los Angeles County court at his arraignment on Monday, when a judge also reduced his bail from $250,000 to $50,000.

Mencia had been in jail since his arrest on Thursday. Court documents show that he has now posted bail, but it's not clear whether he has been released.

Emails seeking comment from an attorney representing the comedian were not immediately answered.

He was charged with six felony counts of failure to file personal income tax with the intent to evade taxes — one each for the years 2019 to 2024 — and six similar counts for corporate taxes.

When he announced the charges, District Attorney Nathan Hochman called Mencia “one of California’s biggest tax scofflaws," saying he owes more than $300,000 in state taxes on income totaling $8.7 million.

If he’s convicted of all 12 counts he could get more than 11 years in prison.

The charges are the first filed under the district attorney's new Business Tax Fraud Unit that was established in May by Hochman, a former longtime prosecutor of tax cases.

Born Ned Arnel Holness in Honduras and raised in East Los Angeles, Mencia began doing stand-up in LA clubs in the late 1980s. By the early 2000s, he became one of the most popular comics in the U.S. and also did some acting in film and television. He had his own TV series, “Mind of Mencia,” combining stand-up with sketches on Comedy Central from 2005 to 2008.

Mencia still does regular stand-up shows, touring clubs and small theaters. He missed a series of Southern California shows while he was in jail.

FILE - Actor and comedian Carlos Mencia arrives at the 23rd Annual Imagen Awards, Aug. 21, 2008, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (AP Photo/Gus Ruelas, File)

FILE - Actor and comedian Carlos Mencia arrives at the 23rd Annual Imagen Awards, Aug. 21, 2008, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (AP Photo/Gus Ruelas, File)

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