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Datavault AI signed a multi-million-dollar services agreement with Triton Geothermal to tokenize a planned offering tied to U.S. geothermal projects. The company said the deal supports a projected $125 million digital-token issuance and creates recurring revenue from future transactions. The announcement was made on Nov. 17 and was later republished in Taiwan, where Taiwan News carry announcement.
Under the agreement, Datavault will earn up to $8 million in upfront and milestone fees, plus 5% of Triton’s token transaction fees after issuance. The press release further outline terms and explains that tokens may be distributed through exempt or registered offerings, subject to securities rules. Industry wires also note details on the fee structure and ongoing participation.
The tokens will help fund Triton’s long-cycle geothermal assets, starting with an extraction site in a U.S. reservoir validated through Department of Energy research. Datavault said the project will use smart-contract frameworks and independent valuation before issuance. Its release describe resource, including DOE-supported assessments, to anchor the tokens in verifiable, real-world assets (GlobeNewswire).
“Geothermal is one of the very few natural renewable energy sources, and it is uniquely positioned to become a key solution in the progression of advanced energy systems,” said Nathaniel Bradley, Chief Executive Officer of Datavault AI. He added that structured digital assets can speed energy development by linking investors to transparent, on-chain project economics.
The partnership arrives as more infrastructure and real-estate-adjacent assets move on-chain. Datavault frames the Triton mandate as a repeatable model for energy and property-linked finance, with income tied to real operations rather than speculative rewards. If execution stays on track, the pair could demonstrate how tokenization supports capital formation for regulated, revenue-producing projects.