ThinkLabs AI builds trustworthy, physics-informed AI for critical power infrastructure. Its software helps utility control-room operators and grid planners maintain reliability and reduce the bottlenecks and outages that threaten grids as electricity demand, especially from AI data centers, climbs sharply.
The core advantage is speed without sacrificing accuracy. ThinkLabs says its models can compress a month-long grid study into under three minutes and run 10 million scenarios in 10 minutes while maintaining greater than 99.7% accuracy on grid power-flow calculations. Because the AI is grounded in the physics of electrical systems, its outputs are intended to be trustworthy enough for operators making real-time reliability decisions.
The company is Canadian-led and New York-based, founded by Josh Wong, a power-systems engineer who previously led the smart-grid department at Toronto Hydro and founded smart-grid startup Opus One Solutions, which GE acquired in 2022. GE Vernova incubated and then spun out ThinkLabs with about $5 million in seed funding in early 2024.
In March 2026 ThinkLabs closed a $28 million Series A led by Energy Impact Partners, one of the leading energy-transition funds, with NVIDIA's venture arm NVentures and Edison International (parent of Southern California Edison) also investing. The capital supports scaling its grid-intelligence platform.
ThinkLabs' thesis is that the AI boom is also a grid-reliability crisis, and that physics-informed AI is the only kind utilities can trust to manage soaring, volatile demand in real time.