World’s largest nuclear fusion project begins assembly in France
by Damian Carrington Environment editor from Science | The Guardian on (#567WQ)
Project aims to show clean fusion power can be generated at commercial scale
The world's largest nuclear fusion project began its five-year assembly phase on Tuesday in southern France, with the first ultra-hot plasma expected to be generated in late 2025.
The 20bn (18.2bn) Iter project will replicate the reactions that power the sun and is intended to demonstrate fusion power can be generated on a commercial scale. Nuclear fusion promises clean, unlimited power but, despite 60 years of research, it has yet to overcome the technical challenges of harnessing such extreme amounts of energy.
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