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"Made In India" Written All Over "Little Sun" Being Created In France

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"Made In India" Written All Over "Little Sun" Being Created In France
PM Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron reviewed the ITER project and commended the joint partnership in International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactors (ITER).
All India | Written by Pallava Bagla, Edited by Stela Dey | Updated: August 23, 2019 21:55 IST
by Taboola
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22COMMENTS

29i44f1g_cryostat-iter_625x300_23_August_19.jpg

The completed base of the cryostat has been declared officially "receivable" by the ITER


SAINT-PAUL-LES-DURANCE, FRANCE:
HIGHLIGHTS
  1. Prime Minister Narendra Modi took stock of this mega project recently
  2. This is the most expensive mega-science effort India is participating in
  3. Project is a herculean effort, operations are expected to start by 2025


The world's best scientists are trying to create a 'miniature Sun' on Earth to tap its fusion energy, costing over Euro 20 billion and India is a full partner in this mega project. Called The ITER Project or The Path, it has Made in India written all over it.

Having committed about Rs. 17,500 crores, Prime Minister Narendra Modi took stock of this mega project on his recently concluded trip to France. India, by contributing to about ten per cent of the cost, gets access to one hundred per cent of technology. This is the most expensive mega-science effort India is participating in and globally ITER is the most expensive science project on Earth ever to be undertaken in the 21st century. The total weight of the ITER reactor will be about 28,000 tonnes.

On his visit to France, PM Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron reviewed the ITER project and commended the joint partnership in International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactors (ITER).

Far away in France this team of over one hundred Indians is trying to do the seemingly impossible, tapping the Sun's real energy source to give the world an unlimited supply of clean energy. Being made collaboratively by USA, Russia, South Korea, China, Japan, European Union and India as equal partners or participating in this mega effort are countries that together hold 50 per cent of the world's population accounting for about 85 per cent of the global GDP.

NDTV visited the heart of the facility to take a look at the place where the Sun will be re-born on Earth.

i3b2l4k8_cryostat_625x300_23_August_19.jpg

This ten-metre-tall cylindrical component of the cryostat weighs 430 tonnes

Dr Mark Henderson, a scientist at ITER, said, "This place to me is the coolest place on Earth, because here in the near future we will have a little Sun on Earth and it will be a 150 million degrees Celsius so it will be the hottest place on Earth, ten times hotter than our Sun." He says as per one calculation ten such fusion reactors could power all the energy needs of Italy.


India has contributed the biggest component in the project - the world's largest refrigerator that houses this unique reactor, was made in Gujarat by Larsen & Toubro. It weighs over 3800 tonnes and is almost half the height of the Qutb Minar.

Dr Tim Luce, Chief Scientist at ITER called India "a valuable partner" and said it made key components like the cryostat, which is perhaps one of the biggest thermos bottles in the world. On being asked how much carbon dioxide the main culprit for global warming would be released from the ITER project Dr Luce quips "only the carbon dioxide the scientists exhale". The radioactive substances generated from reactions would be the sort that can die off in a hundred years.

The project is a herculean effort and operations are expected to start by 2025. Later a full scale electricity generating unit called the DEMO reactor is scheduled to be completed by 2040.

22 COMMENTS
Dr Anil Kakodkar, Former Chairman, Atomic Energy Commission in Mumbai wants the DEMO plant in India. "Having done so much on ITER, we should actually prepare ourselves to do the DEMO plant done on Indian soil - an International DEMO plant done on Indian soil - that will enable us to leap frog even faster that's my dream."

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/mad...er-little-sun-being-created-in-france-2089584
 
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nothing practical is going to come from this expensive project, fusion energy can not be harnessed with the materials we have available today may be in next 50 years we find an alloy that can do it but not possible as of now.
Waste of resources for a poor country.
 
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Salaam

I'm sure there is a lot to learn from such science projects. I'd say we should also invest - to whatever extent we can manage - into such projects with other countries.
 
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Its a huge project costing in excess of $ 25 billion. The data, technology and know how that will be generated from such a project is enormous. Great job by India joining it and similar other mega science project. Wasting money on subsidies will not help the country, but scientific research will. Good luck to the countries.
Also, India should totally push to get DEMO reactor in India. Will boost research and science tremendously.
 
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nothing practical is going to come from this expensive project, fusion energy can not be harnessed with the materials we have available today may be in next 50 years we find an alloy that can do it but not possible as of now.
Waste of resources for a poor country.
Investment in R&D is never a waste, 50 years down the line nation states might be kicking themselves for not investing now, that's how technology works.
 
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