
Utilidata, a company in Ann Arbor that provides embedded AI for power infrastructure, announced today that it has secured an additional $40 million in Series C funding completing the series at $100 million. The funding will strengthen the company’s position to scale commercialization with hyperscalers and the data center market.
The round was led by existing investor Renown Capital Partners with participation from Keyframe Capital. The extension marks the second and final close of Utilidata’s Series C financing, following the company’s initial $60.3 million round led by Renown Capital in April 2025, with participation from Keyframe Capital, Quanta Services, and NVIDIA.
The company’s power orchestration platform, Karman, was developed in partnership with NVIDIA, and unlocks stranded capacity with real-time visibility and control of power utilization. Built on a custom NVIDIA Jetson Orin Nano module, Karman is designed to be embedded at the rack level of data centers to manage rack power in real time, providing operators with high-speed visibility of power utilization.
“The AI infrastructure buildout is one of the defining themes of this decade, but power is a fundamental limitation,” says James McIntyre, co-founder and managing partner of Renown Capital Partners. “Karman directly solves that problem by getting more out of the power that is available. We’re deepening our commitment to Utilidata because the market need is urgent, the technology is ready, and we are confident that the team has what it takes to deliver.”
Continued support from investors reflects growing recognition that AI growth depends on solving fundamental infrastructure problems.
Power is the binding constraint, according to Utilidata. Interconnection queues stretch years and the increasing density of GPU compute creates power quality challenges that can push instability back onto the grid, the company says.
“Power availability is the defining constraint for data centers right now,” says Josh Brumberger, CEO of Utilidata. “Karman squeezes every watt out of the power you already have and makes every new megawatt you bring online work smarter. We’re commercializing this at exactly the right moment, and we’re grateful for the investors who’ve backed us to do it.”
The industry needs solutions that intelligently orchestrate power to maximize the performance of existing infrastructure, unlock stranded capacity, and enable denser deployments without causing issues on the grid, Utilidata says. Its Karman solution is designed to smooth power fluctuations, reducing negative grid impacts that pose regulatory risks to data center interconnection and operations outlined in the recent guidelines from North American Electric Reliability Corp. (NERC).
The Series C extension comes ahead of Utilidata’s first commercial deployment with NexGen Cloud, which will go live in Montreal next month and target up to 50 percent additional usable capacity.
“We’ve believed in this team for a long time, and this round reflects our conviction that Karman is the breakthrough technology at exactly the right moment,” says John Rapaport, CIO of Keyframe Capital. “AI data centers can’t afford to wait for new power capacity. They need to maximize what they have now and that is exactly what Karman delivers.”
To support Utilidata’s next phase of growth, the company is expanding its executive leadership team with the addition of Kit Chee as chief commercial officer. Previously, Chee scaled Intel’s cloud sales from $9 billion to $23 billion, secured several hyperscalers at Ampere, and helped shape the growth strategy for an ASEAN neocloud.
Along with the addition of Chee, Utilidata is increasing its workforce by 25 percent this year, many of which are based at their headquarters in Ann Arbor, a new state-of-the-art 15,000-square-foot innovation lab.
For more information, visit utilidata.com.



