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Geothermal Company Fervo Energy Debuts Strongly on the Stock Market – IPO Significantly Oversubscribed

New York/Houston (USA) – The U.S. geothermal specialist Fervo Energy has successfully debuted on Nasdaq. The first trading day followed a significantly upsized initial public offering, in which a total of 70 million Class A shares were placed at a price of US$27 each.

In addition, the underwriting banks received a 30-day over-allotment option for up to 10.5 million additional shares. The company’s shares are traded under the ticker symbol “FRVO.” With its stock market debut, Fervo Energy becomes one of the few publicly listed pure-play companies in the deep geothermal energy sector. The offering was managed by a banking consortium led by JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, RBC Capital Markets, and Barclays.

Strong market debut following upsized IPO

The IPO is considered a success for the company, which positions scalable geothermal energy as a potential baseload technology in the energy market. Strong investor demand for the offered shares had already led to a substantial increase in the size of the offering ahead of the listing.

The shares opened at US$36 — a premium of 33% over the issue price of US$27. Based on approximately 378 million outstanding shares, this implies a market capitalization of around US$10.2 billion even at the issue price. The initial free float amounts to roughly 70 million shares and could increase to as many as 80.5 million shares if the greenshoe option is exercised.

Innovative geothermal technology: Fervo Energy does not search for reservoirs — it builds them

Fervo Energy develops so-called Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) — a technology that could fundamentally reshape the geothermal energy market. Unlike conventional geothermal energy, EGS does not rely on naturally occurring hot water reservoirs. Instead, it actively accesses deep hot rock formations through horizontal drilling and multi-stage hydraulic fracturing — techniques that Fervo has directly adapted from the oil and gas industry.

The rock is intentionally fractured to create a permeable network of cracks through which fluid can circulate. The circulating fluid absorbs heat from the earth and transports it to the surface for electricity generation. The key advantage: the system can function almost anywhere, independent of special geological conditions such as hot springs or natural steam reservoirs.

The result is a nearly emissions-free source of electricity generation available around the clock — making it one of the few renewable energy technologies capable of providing reliable baseload power.



Source: IWR Online, 20 May 2026

 


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