World’s largest nuclear fusion project begins assembly in France
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.
Millions of components will be used to assemble the giant reactor, which
will weigh 23,000 tonnes and the project is the most complex engineering
endeavour in history. Almost 3,000 tonnes of superconducting magnets, some
heavier than a jumbo jet, will be connected by 200km of superconducting cables,
all kept at -269C by the world’s largest cryogenic plant.
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, launched the assembly phase,
alongside senior figures from Iter members, the EU, UK, China, India, Japan,
Korea, Russia and the US. Shinzo Abe, the Japanese prime minister, said: “I
believe disruptive innovation will play a key role in addressing global issues
including climate change and realising a sustainable carbon-free society.”
“Enabling the exclusive use of clean energy will be a miracle for our
planet,” said Bernard Bigot, Iter director-general. He said fusion, alongside
renewable energy, would allow transport, buildings and industry to run on
electricity.
But Bigot said: “Constructing the machine piece-by-piece will be like
assembling a three-dimensional puzzle on an intricate timeline [and] with the
precision of a Swiss watch.” The Iter project was conceived in 1985 but has
suffered delays.
Nuclear fusion releases vast amounts of energy when heavy hydrogen atoms
fuse together, but this requires a temperature of 150m C, 10 times hotter than
the core of the sun. The hydrogen fuel is obtained from seawater and just a few
grammes is needed but huge magnets are needed to contain the plasma in
doughnut-shaped vacuum chamber known as a tokamak.
Like conventional nuclear fission reactors, the process itself does not
produce climate-warming carbon dioxide but fusion reactors cannot meltdown and
produce much less radioactive waste.
The Iter project will be the first to achieve a “burning” or
self-heating plasma and is expected to generate 10 times more heat than is put
in, far more than any previous attempt. It will also use a significant amount
of electrical energy when it is running, to power the magnets and scientific instruments,
But it is intended to be a proof-of-concept of large-scale fusion, not a design
for a future commercial reactor.
Among the components being assembled is the 30-metre-diameter cryostat,
manufactured by India, which surrounds the reactor and keeps it at the
extremely low temperature required. One of the electromagnets, called the
central solenoid and built by the US, will have the magnetic power to lift an
aircraft carrier.
There are numerous private-sector companies pursuing nuclear fusion via
much smaller devices, including Tokamak Energy, based in the UK and which has
raised £117m in investment. Its executive vice-chairman, David Kingham, said:
“We welcome the progress at Iter which we see as a great scientific project and
a major endorsement of tokamak devices.”
“But we are convinced that faster progress is possible, driven by the
need for more carbon-free energy and enabled by private investment, modular
designs, new materials and advanced technologies,” he said. Iter engineers said
their giant project is the size that proven technologies can deliver.
Other nuclear fusion companies include Tri Alpha Energy, which harnesses
particle accelerator technology and is working with Google, General Fusion,
which uses a vortex of molten lead and lithium to contain the plasma and is
backed by Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and First Light Fusion.



