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Nuclear Renaissance: Getting Serious About Fusion (Part III)

China's fusion ambitions and the race for unlimited clean energy

2021-05-1014 min read
Archive Notice: This article was originally published on macropolo.org on 2021-05-10. MacroPolo was the Paulson Institute's in-house think tank (2018–2024). This archived version preserves the original research for continued citation and reference.

While fusion power has been "30 years away" for decades, recent breakthroughs and massive Chinese investment suggest the timeline may finally be compressing. China's EAST reactor and participation in ITER position it as a potential fusion leader.

China's Fusion Program

China operates several experimental fusion reactors, including EAST (Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak), which has achieved increasingly long plasma confinement times. Generous funding and talented researchers have accelerated progress.

The ITER Connection

As a major participant in the international ITER project, China gains access to cutting-edge fusion technology while contributing its own advances. This collaboration may accelerate timelines even as geopolitical tensions complicate other tech partnerships.

Commercial Prospects

Unlike fission, fusion produces no long-lived radioactive waste and poses no meltdown risk. If commercialized, it could provide virtually unlimited clean energy. China's stated goal of fusion power by 2050 may be ambitious but is no longer dismissed as fantasy by experts.