Anchorage Digital adds custody support for Fuse Energy’s Energy Dollar token
Anchorage Digital says it has built institutional custody support for Fuse Energy’s Energy Dollar ($ENERGY), expanding its regulated custody platform to cover a token the companies frame as part of real-world energy infrastructure. The move is aimed squarely at institutions that want exposure to “utility-driven” digital assets but need bank-grade controls to hold them.
Fuse Energy, described in the announcement as a regulated energy supplier, is pitching a bigger idea than “energy-themed crypto.” Its claim is that electricity markets need better coordination — across homes, EV chargers, batteries, solar, and other smart devices — and that programmable incentives can help shift consumption away from peak demand without constantly building new grid hardware.
What Anchorage says it’s supporting (and why)
The token at the center is Energy Dollar ($ENERGY), which the post says is built on Solana and designed to support participation in Fuse Energy’s broader “Energy Network” system. Anchorage’s role is custody: letting institutions securely hold the asset through Anchorage Digital’s regulated platform, with the operational controls that typically determine whether a token is “investable” for many professional participants.
Anchorage frames this as part of a wider strategy: supporting digital assets “grounded in real economic activity” as crypto expands beyond trading and into real-world infrastructure categories.
Fuse Energy uses the announcement to underscore traction. It says it has grown its customer base more than 8× in the past year to over 200,000 households, and increased annual recurring revenue 12× in 2025—positioning the project as an operating energy business using crypto rails, not a purely onchain experiment.
Simply put
If you strip away the buzzwords, this is the bet: energy systems get messy when demand spikes, renewables get wasted when supply doesn’t match timing, and adding new capacity takes years. Fuse Energy says its network coordinates devices and incentives so consumers can shift usage and provide “flexibility” to the grid. The token is presented as the programmable mechanism that makes that coordination easier.
Anchorage is essentially saying: if you’re an institution and you want to touch that category, custody is the first gate — and we’re opening it.
Why it matters for crypto
- Institutions are being marketed “real-world utility tokens,” not just RWAs. This isn’t tokenized treasuries; it’s crypto positioned as operational infrastructure for an energy coordination network.
- Custody determines what can scale beyond retail. Institutional participation often starts with a simple question: can we custody it under regulated controls? Anchorage is answering “yes” for $ENERGY.
- “Onchain infrastructure” narratives are widening. As crypto tries to prove it’s more than finance, regulated custody providers supporting non-financial verticals is a notable signal.
- Solana keeps attracting non-trading use cases. The announcement explicitly states the Energy Dollar is built on Solana, adding another real-world themed token deployment on the chain.
What to watch next
- Institutional uptake and integration depth. Custody support is step one; watch whether institutions actually add $ENERGY and whether it becomes collateral/settlement-capable in broader workflows.
- More detail on how $ENERGY links to real-world energy activity. The post describes the system conceptually; the next signal is operational clarity on incentives, participants, and measurable outcomes.
- Regulatory framing and jurisdictional scope. Fuse Energy is described as a regulated supplier; watch for specifics on where it operates and how compliance maps to token activity.
- Expansion of “real-world infrastructure” custody. If this category gains traction, expect more custody announcements for tokens tied to non-financial systems (energy, telecom, mobility, etc.).
Source: Anchorage Digital — “Anchorage Digital Builds Custody Support for Fuse Energy’s Energy Dollar”