Dan Sutton, Syntholene: Building on a volcano and betting on geothermal
Date: 10 June 2026
In this episode, we sit down with Dan Sutton, CEO and co-founder of Syntholene, to explore their geothermally integrated synthetic fuel production technology currently being developed in Iceland.
Dan explains why geothermal energy is such a compelling foundation for eSAF production, how Syntholene’s solid oxide electrolyzer cell (SOEC) technology — integrated with Iceland’s abundant heat and electricity — creates a step-change in hydrogen cost reduction, and why the company believes it can achieve unit economics competitive with fossil fuels without relying on perpetual subsidies.
We also explore the independent feasibility study conducted by notable alternative fuels sceptic Robert Rapier, whose findings validated Syntholene’s scientific fundamentals while identifying the integration and construction risks that Dan openly acknowledges — and explains how his team is managing them.
The conversation broadens into project development philosophy, the replicability of the Iceland model in geothermally active regions globally and how you manage earthquake and volcano risk, Iceland’s strikingly low-bureaucracy environment for infrastructure permitting, and a frank debate on whether European eSAF policy is addressing the real problem — or papering over a fundamental unit economics challenge.
We close with Syntholene’s unconventional but deliberate choice to go public on the TSX Venture Exchange — and why Dan believes building in public, with a diversified investor base, gives the company more control over its destiny than the traditional venture capital route.
