Scalvy Raises $13.9M Series A to Rethink Distributed Power Delivery
Funding Details
$13.9M
Series A
Power doesn’t negotiate. It either shows up on time or everything downstream starts making excuses. Data centers, EVs, energy systems, all pulling harder, running hotter, demanding more without asking nicely. Everyone wants more compute, more range, more storage. Few want to deal with what it actually takes to deliver it without cracking the foundation.
Scalvy just walked into that tension with $13.9M in Series A funding and the kind of calm confidence that usually signals they have already solved the part everyone else is still debating. Mohamed Badawy, CEO, and Amr Ibrahem, CTO, did not approach this like spectators. They built inside the constraints long enough to see the flaw clearly. Centralized power was never designed for this level of load, density, or speed. It is not underperforming. It is outdated.
Silicon Badia stepped in alongside a strategic lead, with Azolla Ventures, Climate Capital, and SkyRiver Ventures leaning in again. That kind of repeat backing is not optimism. It is pattern recognition. Investors who have seen enough cycles know when something is incremental and when something is structural.
Scalvy is not chasing bigger power systems. They are rethinking where power lives and how it moves. The Power Neuron platform breaks apart the old model and distributes it, placing modular power exactly where demand happens. Inside AI racks, across battery packs, throughout energy systems. Less waste, tighter control, no need to redesign the entire environment just to keep up.
Validation did not happen in isolation. Work with Valeo pushed this into real-world conditions, delivering 98.3% inverter efficiency and extending battery life up to 15%. Numbers like that do not come from theory. They come from systems that hold up under pressure.
The strategy is clean. Do not scale the old model. Replace it with something that scales naturally. Scalvy is operating across AI, energy, and mobility, 3 sectors where inefficiency compounds fast and tolerance runs thin. As customers move from testing into production, the conversation shifts. Less about possibility, more about dependency.
Scalvy recognized early that power is not just another layer in the stack. It is the limiter. Change that, and everything built on top starts behaving differently. Small modules, distributed precisely, ending up with an outsized impact on how entire systems perform.









