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CrowdScience

Is Nuclear Fusion Coming Anytime Soon?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science

4.81K Ratings

🗓️ 9 March 2018

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Unlike nuclear fission power stations, which leave harmful radioactive waste to be stored or disposed of for thousands of years, a nuclear fusion power plant would create precious little burden on future generations. The fuel source would be seawater, and the energy created limitless.

Back in the 1950s, the technology to “tame the hydrogen bomb” seemed just a few decades away from practical deployment, and governments across the divide of the cold war shared the challenges, costs and laboratories.

But to the outsider, it might look like progress has been slow. In 1997 the Joint European Torus at Culham in the UK set the world record for energy released from a controlled fusion reaction, but even that was less than the energy was put in.

Keeping the plasma – the super-hot atoms of exotic types of hydrogen – at temperatures many times the temperature of the sun safely in place inside a magnetic field is not a trivial task.

Last year construction of the International Experimental Thermonuclear Reactor, ITER, reached its halfway point at its huge home in France, and if all goes to plan it should produce its first plasma by 2025. The hope is that operational fusion reactions will take place within a decade after that, paving the way for its successor DEMO - which would actually generate electricity - to be built sometime before 2050.

But in parallel with the big intergovernmental roadmap, in recent years a number of small commercial startups have joined the race to achieve commercial fusion energy. With their various different approaches and more ambitious timelines, will the private sector beat the publicly funded science to the goal?

Presenter: Bobbie Lakhera Producer: Alex Mansfield

(Photo of ITER Organization, with permission)

Transcript

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0:00.0

Take some time for yourself with soothing classical music from the mindful mix, the Science of

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Happiness Podcast.

0:08.0

For the last 20 years I've dedicated my career to exploring the science of living a happier more meaningful life and I want

0:14.4

to share that science with you.

0:16.1

And just one thing, deep calm with Michael Mosley.

0:19.4

I want to help you tap in to your hidden relaxation response system and open the door to that

0:25.4

calmer place within. Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:31.2

Welcome and the winner is you. You've only got and picked one of the finest science

0:37.5

podcasts out there for your perusal. There are countless episodes for you to choose

0:41.8

from all answering fantastic questions from our listeners.

0:46.0

And perhaps you've got a question in mind, in which case you can flex those fingers and email it to crowd Science at BBC.co.

0:54.7

UK. Don't forget to subscribe to the Crowd Science

0:57.5

podcast and you can rate and review us as well.

0:59.7

We'd love to hear what you think. But you know what the best gift you can give us is?

1:04.3

Send this podcast on to a friend and together let's spread the science.

1:09.6

But before that, let's head back to the 1950s.

1:14.0

One of the things is controlling the hydrogen bomb.

1:18.0

And we're about to start up a piece of apparatus in the course

1:22.0

in the next few weeks. Now that is long term.

1:26.8

It's a long time before we can apply that in a practical way, but it is the beginning of something that's going to have a very revolutionary effect.

1:35.7

It's an extremely difficult thing.

1:37.2

We've got to go up into millions of degrees centigrade, which you can imagine takes a lot of controlling, otherwise everything will not.

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