Saturday, December 03, 2005

International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor

Published: 12/04/2005 12:00 AM (UAE)

EU: India can join reactor project - Reuters

Brussels: The European Union has agreed to include India in a 10-billion-euro (Dh43 billion) project to build an experimental nuclear fusion reactor that in the long-run could provide virtually unlimited, cheap and clean energy.

The EU's willingness to work with India on a civil nuclear project comes months after the United States said it would support India's nuclear power development despite its refusal to sign a global treaty barring the spread of atomic weapons.

That move was seen as a dramatic policy shift as Washington had previously frowned on India's status as an unofficial nuclear power.

The International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) is a project run at the moment by five partners apart from the EU China, Japan, South Korea, Russia and the United States and all have to agree to let India into the club. "By bringing in India, more than half of the world's population is represented at ITER," Antonia Mochan, the European Commission's spokeswoman on science and research, said.

"It's important to have such a scientific experiment which could have such huge ramifications for energy, and it's important to do that with people who could bring so much scientific know-how."

European cooperation with New Delhi on the project was a separate issue from India's avoidance of the nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, she said.

"There is the non-proliferation issue and we are pursuing that with the Indians as part of our external relations policy ... This is nuclear fusion to be used as energy this doesn't have any military potential," Mochan said.

ITER expects the reactor will take 10 years to build, but detractors say the world could wait half a century before a commercially viable reactor is built, if at all.

JOINT EFFORTPlan to produce energy like sun
The aim of the reactor is to mimic the way the sun produces energy by heating hydrogen atoms to 100 million Celsius much hotter than the centre of the sun to achieve a fusion which would produce helium and yield huge amounts of energy.

Scientists say 1 kg of fusion fuel would produce the same amount of energy as 10 million kg of fossil fuels.

They know the theory works because the hydrogen bomb works, but they face the problem of trying to fuse the atoms in a controlled manner, not least to sustain temperatures of 100 million Celsius for long enough to generate power.

http://www.gulfnews.com/world/India/10002357.html

More information can be found on ITER Website - http://www.iter.org

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