Austin, United States - March 26, 2026 - Scalvy has raised USD 13.9 million in an oversubscribed Series A round led by Silicon Badia, as the company looks to scale its technology for next-generation AI data centers and energy systems.
The funding round also saw participation from Azolla Ventures, Climate Capital, and SkyRiver Ventures, reflecting growing investor interest in infrastructure solutions addressing power constraints across AI, grid, and mobility sectors.
The company is developing a modular power electronics platform known as “Power Neurons,” which distributes power conversion into smaller, software-coordinated units deployed closer to compute loads. This architecture is designed to improve efficiency, reduce footprint, and enable scalable power delivery across high-density environments such as AI data centers.
Scalvy said the capital will be used to advance certification, testing, and commercial deployment of its technology while expanding its team to meet increasing demand.
The funding comes amid a growing industry challenge: power delivery is emerging as a critical bottleneck in scaling AI infrastructure. While much attention has focused on compute hardware, limitations in energy distribution and efficiency are increasingly constraining data center expansion.
Scalvy’s distributed approach contrasts with traditional centralized power systems, which can limit efficiency and scalability in high-density environments. Its platform is designed to deliver high power density and efficiency while enabling flexible deployment across applications, including data centers, grid storage, and electric mobility.
According to investors, the company is addressing the issue at a foundational level rather than incrementally improving existing systems. One investor noted that while the industry is focused on compute performance, “power delivery has become the constraint,” highlighting the growing importance of energy infrastructure in AI scaling.
The raise also reflects broader market dynamics, with global data center power demand projected to rise sharply as AI workloads increase. Emerging architectures that improve efficiency and reduce dependency on centralized systems are gaining traction as operators seek to overcome grid limitations and rising energy costs.
Scalvy’s leadership team, led by CEO Mohamed Badawy, is now focused on transitioning from validation to production-scale deployments as customers begin adopting its technology in real-world environments.
The funding underscores a growing shift in the data center industry, where solving power delivery challenges is becoming as critical as advancing compute capabilities in enabling the next phase of AI-driven infrastructure growth.