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But the Chinese government might have other considerations. While budget estimates for the CFETR project have not been publicly released, a fusion reactor is likely to cost much more than a commercial fission reactor, and many technological hurdles remain unsolved.
The recent EAST experiment, for instance, had to be terminated because the researchers were afraid that letting it run for longer might damage the facility beyond repair.
China has also embarked on the world’s most ambitious conventional nuclear power plant construction programme and that heavy investment might leave less funding available for large, experimental projects like CFETR.
How China hopes to solve nuclear waste issue with hybrid fusion-fission reactor at top secret facility
Then there’s also the question of whether large, government-funded fusion projects will be able to reach the stage of commercialisation faster than smaller projects carried out by private companies funded by venture capital. In recent years, several start-ups have been established in the US to approach fusion with technology different from the donut-shaped tokamak, an old design proposed by former Soviet scientists more than 50 years ago.
But some scientists from private companies overseas are also working in Chinese facilities. Wan told the conference in Kyoto that the CFETR project had participants from General Atomics, a defence contractor headquartered in San Diego, California, that specialises in nuclear physics, as well as others from the US Department of Energy’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory.
“I have a dream, to see a light bulb lit by the power of fusion within my lifetime,” Li Jiangang, a leading Chinese fusion scientist, said in a programme on China Central Television in April. “This light bulb will be, and has to be, in China.”
http://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/2044428/how-chinas-leading-world-nuclear-fusion-research