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Tuesday, April 23, 2024 | Back issues
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France’s Global Nuclear Fusion Device a Puzzle of Huge Parts

A hugely ambitious project to replicate the energy of the sun is entering a critical phase, as scientists and technicians in southern France begin assembling huge parts of a nuclear fusion device, an international experiment aimed to develop the ultimate clean energy source.

PARIS (AP) — A hugely ambitious project to replicate the energy of the sun is entering a critical phase, as scientists and technicians in southern France begin assembling huge parts of a nuclear fusion device, an international experiment aimed to develop the ultimate clean energy source.

World leaders involved in the project on Tuesday appeared virtually at a ceremony for the start of the new stage of the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, or ITER, noting that work has proceeded despite the Covid-19 pandemic in many of the 35 contributing countries.

"Clearly, the pandemic impacted the initial schedule," said ITER's director-general, Bernard Bigot, who led the ceremony at Saint-Paul-les-Durance, northeast of Marseille. He said none of the on-the-ground staff has contracted Covid-19.

Scientists have long sought to mimic the process of nuclear fusion that occurs inside the sun, arguing that it could provide an almost limitless source of cheap, safe and clean electricity. Unlike in existing fission reactors, which split plutonium or uranium atoms, there's no risk of an uncontrolled chain reaction with fusion and it doesn't produce long-lived radioactive waste.

French President Emmanuel Macron hailed ITER as a "promise of peace" because it brings together countries that decided to forego differences for the "common good." China, the U.S., India, Russia, South Korea and nations of the European Union are taking part in the project.

Bigot compared the milestone phase getting under way as akin to assembling a giant, three dimensional puzzle that "must (have) the precision of a Swiss watch."

Billed as the world's largest science project, ITER is gigantic. The circular device, called a Tokamak, with a 98-foot circumference and standing 100 feet high, is made up of more than a million parts constructed in several countries.

Some pieces transported to France weigh several hundred tons. Tools to put the reactor together match that size, with giant lifts that must transfer components over the walls and down into "the pit." A key component being built by the United States, the Central Solenoid, is the most powerful of ITER's numerous magnets. Together, they will be strong enough to lift an aircraft carrier.

The project begun in 2006 is far from over. The experimental reactor will be functional five years from now, a landmark moment when scientists launch what is called "First Plasma" to show that the reactor functions.

The estimated budget for the European Union is about 20 billion euros (some $23.5 billion), Bigot told reporters. He said an overall price tag is difficult to estimate because participating countries make their own contributions.


By ELAINE GANLEY Associated Press

Categories / Energy, Environment, International, Science

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