Towards "An Artificial Sun" - Will China Win The Nuclear Fusion Race?
Towards "An Artificial Sun" - Will China Win The Nuclear Fusion Race?
BY TYLER DURDEN SUNDAY, DEC 13, 2020 - 15:42 Authored by Haley
Zaremba via OilPrice.com,
China is on a quest for world domination. Beijing
has been making assertive moves into global energy markets for a while now,
stepping into energy market power vacuums in largely untapped markets around
the world. Chinese president Xi Jinping has made major inroads with his
ambitious Belt and Road Initiative, started in 2013, which is a massive-scale,
globe-spanning infrastructure development program that now includes
approximately 70 countries and international organizations.
Beijing has a lot of irons in the global energy market
fire, facing off against
Russia for nuclear energy dominance in Africa, ramping up
coal-fired capacity abroad while simultaneously touting its
lofty decarbonization plans back at home, and now, powering up a brand new, cutting-edge “artificial
sun.”
The so-called sun is a nuclear fusion reactor which came online for the first time last week, “marking a great advance in the country's nuclear power research capabilities,” according to a report by Science X Network’s Phys.org.
Nuclear fusion, often thought of as the holy grail of
clean energy, is the process that takes place naturally in the Sun. Fusion
merges atoms instead of splitting them in a process that creates several times
more energy than nuclear fission (the way we produce nuclear energy now) and
all without the use of radioactive materials--meaning no hazardous nuclear
waste. So far, however, while we
have achieved nuclear fusion here on Earth, the process has required more
energy than it produces, making it non-viable as an energy solution.
Scientists have long
endeavored to achieve commercial nuclear fusion, and they’re getting closer than
ever. China is the most recent
country to join this exclusive club.
China’s HL-2M Tokamak
reactor, located in the southwest of China in Sichuan province, uses
ultra-powerful magnets to create and fuse hot plasma at temperature over 150
million degrees Celsius, a
mind-blowing temperature “approximately ten times hotter than the core of the
sun.” The tokamak that powered up for the first time last
week was just the biggest and latest version of a project that China has been working on
for almost 15 years now.
"The development of nuclear fusion energy is not only
a way to solve China's strategic energy needs, but also
has great significance for the future sustainable development of China's energy
and national economy," said the People's Daily, China’s largest news group
and an official news outlet of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist
Party.
Instead of competing with the
International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), an international
nuclear fusion research project located in the south of France which is
currently the world’s largest, China
plans to work in collaboration with the project. ITER is
still under development, and is slated to come online in 2025, when it could
very well be the first major step toward commercializing nuclear fusion
(despite the project’s whopping $22.5 billion price tag).
While it’s promising for the
global energy future that there are so many promising fusion projects underway,
and even more promising that there are plans in place for continued
international scientific cooperation, it’s
likely that China’s forays into fusion are more for the country’s own energy
security than a vision of a global green energy utopia. China
shocked the world earlier this fall with the scale and ambition of the
country’s newest decarbonization goals - President Xi doubled down on China’s
previous commitments and proclaimed that his fuel-hungry nation will reach peak
emissions in just a decade and go on to achieve carbon neutrality by 2060. To achieve this goal, China has leaned heavily on
nuclear and renewable energies, but it’s more than likely that
this, too, is more related to geopolitics and energy security than
concerns about global warming. Regardless of the
motivation, however, bringing down China’s carbon footprint is a win for all of
us, and even more so if it can do that without leaving behind radioactive
nuclear waste.
https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/towards-artificial-sun-will-china-win-nuclear-fusion-race
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