Renewal Fuels, Inc., operating under the American Fusion brand, has appointed Travis Yakimishyn as Chief Electrical & Power Systems Officer to lead electrical architecture and utility-scale integration for the company's Texatron™ aneutronic fusion platform. The appointment represents a strategic move to accelerate commercialization efforts by bringing specialized grid engineering expertise to the forefront of fusion energy development.
Yakimishyn brings extensive experience in electrical infrastructure, grid interconnection, substation design, and high-voltage power systems to his new role. As a licensed professional engineer, his technical expertise spans power distribution architecture, protection and control systems, and utility-scale energy infrastructure. His career includes leadership and support of complex electrical engineering initiatives involving transmission systems, substation configuration, system protection coordination, load flow analysis, and interconnection planning.
In his position, Yakimishyn will oversee the electrical architecture and grid integration strategy for Kepler's Texatron™ platform. His responsibilities include advancing scalable electrical design standards, coordinating interconnection pathways, aligning protection and control systems with commercial deployment requirements, and ensuring that power systems infrastructure is engineered for long-term operational stability. According to company leadership, his appointment reflects a focus on building a team capable of executing at commercial scale as development progresses toward commercialization.
Brent Nelson, CEO of Kepler Fusion, noted that Yakimishyn has been instrumental in bridging advanced plasma physics with utility-scale electrical engineering. "His deep expertise in high-voltage systems and infrastructure deployment significantly strengthens our ability to transition Texatron™ from advanced development into commercial operation," Nelson stated. Richard Hawkins, Chairman and CEO of Renewal Fuels, Inc., emphasized that institutional investors and infrastructure partners evaluate energy platforms based on execution capability as much as innovation, highlighting the practical importance of Yakimishyn's real-world power systems expertise.
The appointment comes as the company continues to advance additional patent filings supporting the Texatron platform and progresses regulatory initiatives, including Form 10 preparation, audit completion, and corporate actions related to its transition to American Fusion. For more information about Kepler Fusion Technologies and its Texatron™ platform, visit www.keplerfusion.com and americanfusionenergy.com.
This development matters because it addresses one of the most significant challenges facing fusion energy commercialization: integrating advanced fusion technology with existing electrical grids at utility scale. Yakimishyn's experience working directly with utility providers and regulatory bodies, ensuring compliance with applicable standards while designing systems capable of operating reliably at industrial scale, positions American Fusion to navigate the complex regulatory and technical landscape of energy infrastructure deployment. His background in developing power system designs requiring disciplined execution across multiple engineering domains, including grounding systems, relay protection, transformer configuration, and large-load integration, provides the practical expertise needed to translate fusion technology from laboratory settings to operational power plants.
The implications extend beyond the company itself to the broader energy industry and global efforts to develop clean, abundant energy sources. As fusion energy moves closer to commercial viability, successful grid integration becomes increasingly critical. Yakimishyn's appointment signals that American Fusion is prioritizing the engineering and infrastructure challenges that will determine whether fusion technology can deliver power reliably to consumers and industries. This focus on utility-scale integration and electrical architecture suggests a maturation of the company's approach, moving beyond theoretical development to address the practical requirements of energy deployment in real-world settings.


