T wo developments in the coming year will mark a decisive shift from the public to the private sector in the decades-old quest to generate cheap and a

Fusion power is getting closer—no, really

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2024-11-23 17:30:03

T wo developments in the coming year will mark a decisive shift from the public to the private sector in the decades-old quest to generate cheap and abundant power from nuclear fusion. The first will be the opening towards the end of 2025, by a private firm, of a machine called SPARC. This will be the first fusion reactor, public or private, designed to operate at near-commercial scale, with an eventual output of about 140 megawatts (MW). The second will be the non-opening of ITER, the flagship of intergovernmental fusion collaboration, which was scheduled to be ready in 2025. In a hurried announcement in July, that date was postponed.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition of The World Ahead 2025 under the headline “Fusion power is getting closer”

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