
“Studies and examining the feasibility of a national plan titled ‘Designing and building experimental nuclear fusion reactor and plant’ are under way,” Asghar Sedighzadeh, head of Iran’s Nuclear Fusion Research Centre was quoted as saying by ISNA news agency. He did not provide more information.
Earlier on Saturday, Iran’s atomic chief Ali Akbar Salehi said an eight-million-dollar fund had been set up to conduct “serious” research in the area of nuclear fusion.
He said 50 people had been hired for the work, which Iran began nearly three decades ago but was initially “not very serious” about pursuing.
“Fusion research has been launched seriously today,” ISNA quoted Salehi as saying.
“The start-up budget is 80 billion rials [eight million dollars],” he said.
“It takes 20 to 30 years before this process can be commercialised but we have to use all the capacity in the country to provide the necessary speed for fusion research.”
Nuclear fusion has long been touted as the cheap, safe and clean energy source of the future, but efforts to harness it for power generation have so far failed to bear fruit.
Fusion is used in the hydrogen bomb, in which fissile material like that in a simple nuclear warhead launches the process by which atomic nuclei fuse together to release energy.
In May, North Korea said it carried out a nuclear fusion reaction that could lead to an almost limitless supply of clean energy, a process that scientists have so far yet to achieve.
Physicists worldwide are striving to develop a nuclear fusion power plant, a project which the International Atomic Energy Agency terms “a great challenge.”
Published in The Express Tribune, July 25th, 2010.
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