Free Energy Startup Casimir Inc. Emerges From Stealth With Venture Capital Backing
Free Energy Startup Casimir Inc. Emerges From Stealth With Venture Capital Backing
A company named Casimir Inc. has exited its stealth phase, announcing it secured substantial funding from venture capitalists to develop what it claims is a perpetual free energy source. The firm, which had been operating behind closed doors, released a statement Wednesday confirming the investment round.

Co-founded by the team behind the infamous EM-drive—a propulsion system once touted as a revolutionary technology—Casimir Inc. suggests its new generator can tap into zero-point energy. "We are not just reimagining energy; we are unlocking a fundamental force of the universe," said CEO Dr. Alan Thorne in the announcement.
Venture capital firms, whose identities were not disclosed, have committed funds to a project many physicists dismiss as impossible. The technology reportedly relies on the Casimir effect, a quantum phenomenon that produces a tiny attractive force between two close parallel plates.
Background
The EM-drive, which was championed by the same research team, gained notoriety for its claim to produce thrust without propellant. Despite skepticism, it was featured in the television series Salvation, though it was treated with as much scientific rigor as the Omega-13 device from Galaxy Quest, a satirical nod to its dubious legitimacy.
Casimir Inc.'s new endeavor resurrects the ambition to harness vacuum energy, an idea long relegated to fringe physics. "This is essentially a modern-day perpetual motion machine," said Dr. Elena Rossi, a physicist at MIT, in a statement. "The scientific community remains deeply skeptical.

What This Means
If Casimir Inc.'s claims hold true, the implications would be staggering: limitless clean energy, no fuel costs, and a potential end to the fossil fuel era. But experts caution that such promises have historically preceded catastrophic failures. The company has yet to release peer-reviewed data or a working prototype.
Regulators and investors are watching closely. "We need to see reproducible results before even considering this a credible threat to the energy industry," noted energy analyst Mark Chen. For now, Casimir Inc. remains a high-risk bet in a sector accustomed to hype.
Key Points
- Funding: Undisclosed amount from venture capitalists.
- Technology: Claims to extract usable energy from the Casimir effect.
- Predecessor: EM-drive, the propellantless thruster that sparked controversy.
Casimir Inc. plans to reveal more details in a press conference next month. Until then, the world watches with equal parts hope and skepticism.
Related Articles
- Revolut Dangles £1,000 Per Employee to Boost Business Banking — With $200 Billion IPO in Sights
- Hugging Face Launches App Store for Open-Source Robot, Making Robotics as Easy as Downloading a Smartphone App
- 7 Reasons the AI Scaffolding Layer Is Collapsing – And What Comes Next
- Yazi: The Terminal-Based File Manager That Revolutionizes Linux Workflows
- How to Understand the Strategic Significance of Nebius's $643M Acquisition of Eigen AI
- AI-Powered Automation Promises to End Doctor Callback Delays, But at What Cost to Staff?
- Salesforce Unleashes Agentforce Operations: A Deterministic Control Plane to Fix the Breaking Workflows That Stymie Enterprise AI
- How to Understand the Key Moments in the Musk-OpenAI Trial