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Boom Supersonic Secures $300M Funding Round Led by Darsana Capital Partners
Growth Stage

Boom Supersonic Secures $300M Funding Round Led by Darsana Capital Partners

•December 9, 2025
•Dec 9, 2025
0

Participants

Boom

Boom

company

Altimeter Capital

Altimeter Capital

investor

ARK Invest

ARK Invest

investor

Y Combinator

Y Combinator

investor

BVP

BVP

investor

Why It Matters

The deal diversifies Boom’s revenue, financing its supersonic jet while supplying high‑efficiency power to data centers, a fast‑growing, energy‑intensive sector.

Key Takeaways

  • •Boom raises $300M to launch stationary turbine business.
  • •Crusoe orders 29 turbines, $1.25B, 1.21 GW capacity.
  • •Turbines share 80% parts with Boom’s supersonic engine.
  • •39% efficiency matches aeroderivative rivals; combined‑cycle upgrade planned.
  • •Production goal: 4 GW turbines by 2030, funding Overture.

Pulse Analysis

Boom Supersonic’s pivot from pure aerospace to stationary power reflects a broader trend of leveraging aerospace engineering for data‑center energy solutions. By repurposing the Symphony engine architecture into a 42‑megawatt Superpower turbine, Boom can offer a compact, containerized plant that fits the modular needs of hyperscale operators. The $1,033 per kilowatt price point undercuts traditional aeroderivative units, though total system costs may rise once pollution controls and infrastructure are added. This pricing dynamic positions Boom as a niche player competing with established gas‑turbine manufacturers while promising faster deployment cycles.

Technical performance is a key differentiator. The Superpower turbine delivers roughly 39% thermal efficiency, on par with conventional simple‑cycle aeroderivatives, and Boom is developing a field‑upgrade kit to convert units to combined‑cycle operation, potentially pushing efficiency above 60% in the future. Such upgrades could extend the turbines’ lifespan and reduce fuel consumption, aligning with data‑center operators’ sustainability goals. Moreover, the shared 80% parts commonality with the Overture aircraft engine streamlines supply chains and reduces R&D overhead, enabling Boom to fund its supersonic ambitions without diluting focus.

Strategically, the $300 million raise and the $1.25 billion Crusoe contract provide a revenue stream that mirrors SpaceX’s Starlink model—using a commercial venture to bankroll ambitious aerospace projects. If Boom meets its production targets of 1 GW in 2028 and 4 GW by 2030, it could become a significant supplier of fast‑response power in a market increasingly demanding low‑carbon, on‑site generation. Success would accelerate the timeline for commercial supersonic travel while reshaping the competitive landscape for both data‑center power and next‑generation aviation.

Deal Summary

Boom Supersonic announced a $300 million venture round to fund its turbine power‑plant business, with Darsana Capital Partners leading and investors including Altimeter Capital, Ark Invest, Bessemer Venture Partners, Robinhood Ventures and Y Combinator. The capital will support the rollout of its Superpower stationary turbines for data‑center startup Crusoe.

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