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Nuclear Fusion Projects Worries EU

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(NB Do not confuse this with Nuclear Fission).

Nuclear Fusion Projects Worries EU

June 09, 2010

A funding battle is brewing in Europe over a 16-billion-euro ($21.5 billion) experiment to crack the puzzle of commercialising nuclear fusion - the process that powers the sun.


 The European Union's executive arm is trying to coordinate an extra contribution of 1.4 billion euros in 2012-2013 from EU member countries, whose finances have been crippled by the economic crisis.

 

Many environmentalists say the cost of the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) project is out of control and money would be better spent on low-carbon projects such as home insulation which also create millions of jobs. ITER's backers argue it has the potential to change the course of history and needs unwavering commitment.

 

 

At the centre of the issue are dreams of harnessing nuclear fusion, which releases vast amounts of energy in the core of a star, under huge gravitational forces and temperatures of around 10 million degrees Celsius.

 

Scientists have shown the process can be recreated on Earth, combining simple hydrogen isotopes to release vast amounts of energy, but so far it has not been demonstrated on an industrial scale. Nor have previous experiments released more energy than they consume.

 

In 2006, more than 30 countries signed a deal to build the ITER nuclear fusion reactor, under construction in Cadarache, southern France. At its core will be a 500-cubic-metre doughnut-shaped steel vessel in which a superheated stream of plasma circulates in a vacuum, held in place by superconducting magnets.

 

If all goes well, from 2020 the project will be capable of generating around 500 megawatts of fusion energy - clean power with no climate-damaging emissions and little radioactive waste.But increasing complexity and rising prices for steel, concrete and copper have led to a tripling of construction costs since they were estimated in 2001.

 


 

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