Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Power Government Science Politics Technology

France Will Be Home To Fusion Plant 744

ScentCone writes "After years of politicking, France has won the right to be the location for a $12 billion fusion research facility. The plant will use deuterium-from-seawater and a huge electromagnetic ring to produce the 100-million-C conditions in which researchers hope to produce viable fusion. The debate over whether this is even possible continues to rage. The ITER project started in 1985, and there has been a running fight over money and location since. France indicated that if Japan (one of the holdouts) didn't see it their way, they'd build a coalition of the willing and do it anyway. With financing and contracting agreements in place, the 10-year construction can begin." Coverage also available at MSNBC, the NYTimes, CNN, and the BBC.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

France Will Be Home To Fusion Plant

Comments Filter:
  • by Vonotar82 ( 859920 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @02:57PM (#12934762)
    I'm sure Greenpeace is gonna Love this!!
    • by spyder913 ( 448266 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @02:59PM (#12934776)
      Nah they just need to refer to it as 'Solar Power' and people will think it's great!
    • by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @02:59PM (#12934782)
      I'm sure Greenpeace is gonna Love this!!

      Specifically, Greenpeace (real quote), said: " At a time when it is universally recognized that we must reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, Greenpeace considers it ridiculous to use resources and billions of euros on this project"

      You know, because it would be horrible to have this as an emmissions-free source of energy. Incredible.
      • Specifically, Greenpeace (real quote), said: " At a time when it is universally recognized that we must reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, Greenpeace considers it ridiculous to use resources and billions of euros on this project"

        You know, because it would be horrible to have this as an emmissions-free source of energy. Incredible.


        Green Peacers have never been the type to use calm logic. It is nuclear, therefore it is bad.
        • I suppose the logic goes along the lines: no one knows if fusion will ever be a feasible power source whereas spending the same money on further developing and promoting (taxation, R&D, ...) existing environmentally friendly technologies is a better bet.
        • Reminds me a bit of what happened in the NZ government when the Green party finally got some MPs voted in. What happened was an MP from one of the big parties distributed a joke email about the dangers of oxygen-dihydride and that hundreds of New Zealanders die from exposure to it each year.

          Well without stopping to ask a chemist what h20 was, the Green party imediately issued a press release calling for a nation-wide ban on all of this dangerous chemical. Needless to say it would be rather difficult giv
      • by daniil ( 775990 ) <evilbj8rn@hotmail.com> on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:10PM (#12934914) Journal
        It seems to be because of safety concerns, but also because they demand a solution that would work now, not 50 years in the future. From the BBC article: "However, some environmental groups are doubtful about the viability of nuclear fusion, and have warned that Cadarache lies on a known earthquake faultline./../Some green groups criticised Tuesday's announcement as a waste of money. They are doubtful whether Iter will ever deliver practical technologies. "With 10 billion [euros], we could build 10,000MW offshore windfarms, delivering electricity for 7.5 million European households," said Jan Vande Putte of Greenpeace International."

        I can actually see their point, yet this doesn't mean i agree with them...

        ---
        Came flying low. [slashdot.org]

        • by MinutiaeMan ( 681498 ) * on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:28PM (#12935159) Homepage
          but also because they demand a solution that would work now, not 50 years in the future.
          Gee, that's a great idea! By that line of thinking, our ancestors would never have bothered to develop the wheel, because carrying stuff on our back was "just good enough". Besides, think of all those poor stones back in prehistoric times that were sacrificed in the name of "progress" to create the wheels of the future -- it's a crime against nature, I tell you!

          The whole point of this endeavor is that it's an experiment to develop a method that will work in the future, and a method that offers greater potential. I'm quite sure that, once fusion power becomes economical and practical on a widespread basis (and no major disasters turn public opinion against it), the cutbacks in emissions that could be made by shutting down all the older power plants will more than make up for the problems. That's a bit of an assumption, I know, but suffice to say that current methods of "alternative" power generation are not truly practical on a widespread basis.
          • by daniil ( 775990 ) <evilbj8rn@hotmail.com> on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:46PM (#12935355) Journal
            Gee, that's a great idea!

            Actually, it does make a lot of sense if you see things their way. If we don't act now, there might not be much left to save by the time we have a working solution (why do we even need one? Because there's reason to believe that in the near future, we'll hit an oil crisis and will need another energy source). Wind power might not be as good a solution as fusion power is (building all those wind farms will probably take even more resources than building a fusion plant), but if it works, it would at least be a partial solution for the immediate problem at hand.

            And yes, i find it reasonable to solve the power problem (if there will ever be one) using that works now, instead of waiting for the utopia (at present, it is a utopia, in that it doesn't exist yet, and might not even come to exist in the form everyone imagines that it will) of fusion power to come true.

            ---
            A nasty snotball [slashdot.org]

          • by Mad_Rain ( 674268 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @04:27PM (#12935877) Journal
            Gee, that's a great idea! By that line of thinking, our ancestors would never have bothered to develop the wheel, because carrying stuff on our back was "just good enough".

            How about another metaphor more slashdotters can relate to - When to upgrade some computer hardware.

            This situation is akin to "Well, my computer's not fast enough anymore to run FPS-of-the-moment with the resolution cranked all the way up. I've got $150 in my pocket this week, and over the next couple of months I can save up $1000." So you have 3 choices: 1) Lower the resolution and eye-candy. 2) Buy some RAM, or a newer video card, and make some progress towards getting that FPS going at full speed. Or 3) "I'll just wait a while, until the really new stuff drops in price."

            So you can leave the problem where it's at (no good), can put together a solution that works better right now (an improved situation), or you can hope that you'll somehow survive and can find the uber-solution later.

            I think what sensible people should be advocating for is that middle solution - make things better, sooner, rather than hold out until later, in both the computer upgrade problem and the power problem.
          • by Shihar ( 153932 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @06:32PM (#12936999)
            I think this is just the nature of many far out there environmentalist groups. They loath technology and technological solutions. They are utterly obsessed with extrapolating the present to the future. "At our current rate" is their favorite phrase. If these people were in charge we would never have had an industrial revolution, or, as soon as we noticed how ugly the industrial revolution was, they would have advocated halting progression and changing society such that the status quo was sustainable.

            The simple fact of the matter is that humans, especially in this day and age, are driven forward to solve their problems with technology. You build a technology, use it, find its flaws, then fix the flaws. So, yes, solar power is fine, as is wind power. What they utterly ignore these technologies are expensive, ugly in terms of resource usage, limited in application, and completely unsustainable for our energy needs without some sort of interference in our social lives. This is completely unrealistic. You are not going to convince a European, and certainly never convince an American that what they really need to do is slow or reduce their energy consumption to the extremes required AND eat the additional costs in taxes and economic productivity required to meet sustainable environmental goals with the technology we have. It is like advocating that the cure for war is for people to just for people to stop getting mad at each other. That certainly might be a cure, but it isn't going to happen in any of our life times.

            What we need is a technology that can produce massive amounts of clean energy without any ugly waste products. Fusion is one of those technologies. It is worth pumping some money into it if in 50 years it means the world will have more cheap energy then it knows what to do with.

            We have 6 billion people on this planet that all want power, cars, and a basic standard of living. We have a billion or so that live in relative luxury to the rest and utterly refuse to lower their standard of living, if for no other reason then the economic destruction they would suffering for doing so. This will NEVER be a sustainable state of affairs. The only way out is for the billion haves to figure out a way to keep what they have without being so destructive to the environment, and develop it for the have nots who make the environmental destruction of the haves look like pocket change. The three billion or so people sitting in between China, India, Pakistan, and Indonesia who currently have nothing are not going to stay that way forever, and a few solar cells are NOT going to meet their needs. Either we have a technology waiting for them when they rise out of poverty or the environment pays the price.
          • By that line of thinking, our ancestors would never have bothered to develop the wheel, because carrying stuff on our back was "just good enough".

            Nope. By your "fusion will save us, even though we haven't made it work in the last 50 years, and it is always 50 years in the future, and we could have used that time to build solar sites, and wind sites, and tidal energy sites, and ..." line of thinking our ancestors would have a few wheels scattered around. But nobody would ever connect two with an axel to m

      • Specifically, Greenpeace (real quote), said: " At a time when it is universally recognized that we must reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, Greenpeace considers it ridiculous to use resources and billions of euros on this project"

        care to source that "real quote"?

        the greenpeace press release on the fusion plant in question is here [greenpeace.org]. i didn't see your quote in it anywhere.

        i would further suggest that, if you are actually intetested in following greenpeace's position on this and similar matters, t

        • by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:20PM (#12935038)
          care to source that "real quote"?

          I'm guessing you don't consider Reuters to be trustworthy? Well, anyway: here's a run of the article as seen on Yahoo [yahoo.com] where you can read the quote verbatim.
          • by Frymaster ( 171343 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:33PM (#12935204) Homepage Journal
            I'm guessing you don't consider Reuters to be trustworthy?

            i do. however, i do take umbrage with the parent poster's complete lack of context! for reference, the paragraphs in question are:

            Environmental campaign group Greenpeace estimates that if the project yields any results at all, it will not be until the second half of this century.

            "At a time when it is universally recognized that we must reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, Greenpeace considers it ridiculous to use resources and billions of euros on this project," it said.

            what this says to me is that greenpeace is saying the fusion project will probably not make a dent in greenhouse gas emissions for fifty years and we should be using that 10 billion euros to convert our polluting power sources to current solutions, such as they are.

        • by Valdrax ( 32670 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:52PM (#12935439)
          the greenpeace press release on the fusion plant in question is here. i didn't see your quote in it anywhere.

          Maybe you should find a press release that is more recent than one from 2003. [greenpeace.org]

          i would further suggest that, if you are actually intetested in following greenpeace's position on this and similar matters...

          I'm not really interested in the slightest. While I share Greenpeace's commitment to saving the environment and to achieving nuclear disarmament and world peace, I think their fear of nuclear fusion power is ludicrous and unfounded. To be honest, their opposition to it has made me write off their opinion on it almost completely.

          They do have a really good point about what we could achieve if we put that money to other uses right now. However, if fusion is to be achieved, serious money must be committed to it. They just don't want the technology to even exist, and I do not respect them for it.
      • "You know, because it would be horrible to have this as an emmissions-free source of energy. Incredible."

        You're missing the point. Even if ITER works, we're still many decades away from commercial fusion power. More improvement would result from spending that money in optimizing what we already have.

        Also, IIRC Greenpeace grudgingly supports nuclear technology because it's the lesser evil.
        • Also, IIRC Greenpeace grudgingly supports nuclear technology because it's the lesser evil.

          Actually, the word they use in reference to this particular project is "madness." Here [eubusiness.com] is an article discussing their condemnation of this project.
        • by sploxx ( 622853 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @04:47PM (#12936119)
          You're missing the point. Even if ITER works, we're still many decades away from commercial fusion power. More improvement would result from spending that money in optimizing what we already have.

          I'm sure that this happens ALOT faster if the oil price rises steeply.

          Give us humans a rational cause (global warming etc.) and we'll ignore it.
          Give us a 'direct' feeling (evil enemy in (cold) war, money for gasoline), and we'll react promptly.
      • by AdmiralWeirdbeard ( 832807 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @06:18PM (#12936884)
        Fun tho it is to bash on greenpeace, you might want to consider a couple things.

        First, they have a good point. If you've read more than simply the greenpeace soundbite, you'd know that the overall position is that this represents merely another in a chain of expensive energy projects that will not be operational many years. This reactor should be online in 2015, but the project was begun in 1988: that date should be considered with a few grains of salt. Meanwhile, conservative governments, like the Bush Emperium, get to spout about how they're pursuing clean alternatives, like fusion, instead of doing anything about future shortages now by starting a program of active conservation.

        Second, though the reaction itself is indeed emissions-free, you must consider the energy budget of the entire process. This includes but is not limited to: the fabrication of the plant itself and all of its component parts, transportation of all of its component parts to the plant's location, etc. All of which are unlikely to be done with clean energy, as most are highly energy intensive industrial processes, or likely to be done using large diesel trucks. Additionally there is the question of the massive amount of energy necessary to start the fusion reaction, which is unlikely (at first anyways) to be a part of the theoretically self-sustaining nature of a fusion reactor.

        This is not to say the thing shouldnt be built, it should. We just shouldnt have the illusion that its helping out with any of our energy needs any time during the first half of the century.

        While I have no love for eco-nuts, it is pretty silly to ignore everything, just because you're enamored with the technology they've dissed.
    • There are actually several french green politicians and activist who are pro nuclear fission (yes the old nukes!) because they see it as the only realistic way of cutting CO2 emissions in the short term.
  • Will this fusion plant usher in the foretold era of unlimited energy? I remember when those claims were made about nuclear power, about how it would be so cheap that it wouldn't be metered. That didn't happen with fission power, but perhaps it will happen with fusion power.
    • That didn't happen with fission power, but perhaps it will happen with fusion power.

      It won't happen with either, so long as oil remains absurdly profitable and we're not choking to death on carbon-dioxide.
    • I remember when those claims were made about nuclear power, about how it would be so cheap that it wouldn't be metered.

      It was originally expected that "fast breeder reactors" would be used to recycle and re-enrich the spent fuel rods that came out of power plants. Instead, Carter used execuitive order to put a blanket ban on those types of plants. Fast breeder reactors would drastically cut hte amount of high level radioactive waste that comes out of power plants and cut the costs of operating a plant.
  • by HMA2000 ( 728266 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:01PM (#12934800)
    From TFA:

    Greenpeace, for one, stated that "at a time when it is universally recognized that we must reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, Greenpeace considers it ridiculous to use resources and billions of euros on this project."

    I swear, I think Greenpeace is more concerned about making sure nobody builds any new powerplants than they are about protecting the environment.

    They are against new coal plants with modern scrubber technology, they are against fission plants, now they are against this expiremental fusion plant. Do they realize that humanity needs energy to live and thrive? Do they realize that by not building new more efficient powerplants they are forcing people to rely on older, more polluting powerplants more heavily?

    It seems counterintuitive to me, it's like they would rather stick their thumb in the eye of corporations than actually help the environment.
    • by TorKlingberg ( 599697 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:09PM (#12934900)
      While I agree that building the ITER is a good idea, you are missreading Greenpeace a bit here. What they are saying is that it will take too long to get commercial fusion reactors (~50 y), so it might be too late to stop the greenhouse effect.
      • by sl3xd ( 111641 ) * on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @04:52PM (#12936163) Journal
        The flaw of the argument is also quite typical:

        Just because the IETR gets funding doesn't mean that other forms of energy development is going to even slow down.

        It's not only possible, but desirable to fund many different energy projects; simply trying to throw more resources at any particular problem doesn't necessarily mean that it will get finished any faster.

        The greenpeace argument depends on the belief that somehow all scientists are equal, and you can take any metallurgist, and he'll magically be an immediate expert in nuclear physics. The fact is that each area of energy development is highly specialized; taking decades to learn the dicipline; you can't just take the people working on the ITER and move them to solar power, and expect them to work their best; first you insult them by telling them their life's work is worth nothing, then you force them to do something they don't like.

        It would also have a terrible effect on scientific morale; why start a promising new branch of research at all; you won't be able to prove your theories anyway!
    • by mcc ( 14761 ) <amcclure@purdue.edu> on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:11PM (#12934925) Homepage
      I swear, I think Greenpeace is more concerned about making sure nobody builds any new powerplants than they are about protecting the environment.

      I just find it funny that Greenpeace and such groups are probably doing more to promote fossil fuels-- far more harmful by almost every single possible measure than anything nuclear will ever be-- than they are in practice doing anything else at this point. Talk or harrass people out of using nuclear power and all that you're going to result in is people sticking with the existing coal and oil technology, which is both cost effective and for some reason (everyone's too used to it?) mostly leaves you free of protesters.

      The most publicity-effective coal lobby in the world is doing so in the name of the environment. Great thinking!
    • I swear, I think Greenpeace is more concerned about making sure nobody builds any new powerplants than they are about protecting the environment.

      Actually, they do both. From Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]

      Greenpeace's goal is to ensure the ability of the earth to nurture life in all its diversity.

      --
      Need a used Sprint charger? [ebay.com]

    • by NardofDoom ( 821951 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:31PM (#12935192)
      Coal plants with scrubber technology do nothing to stop the release of greenhouse gasses or decrease our dependence on fossil fuels. I understand why Greenpeace is opposed to them.

      Fission plants produce material that can be used in weapons or remains hazardous for hundreds of thousands or millions of years. I can understand why Greenpeace is opposed to them.

      Fusion power plants have neither of these problems. They use water for fuel and produce material that isn't fissionable and is safe after about 50 years.

      However, they do give an excuse for governments, corporations and people to not move toward a safe, clean energy grid made up of wind, solar, biofuels and maybe fusion. From this reasoning I can understand why Greenpeace would have trepidation.

      Or they could not understand what nuclear fusion is and have a knee-jerk reaction.

      Either way, criticizing them as anti-progress is wrong. I was at one of their mercury testing events where they served coffee that was brewed with solar power. They're nice people, and the chicks were really cute.

      • cute chicks? (Score:3, Insightful)

        Yea I like cute volunteer chicks like that. "I wish everybody would stop fighting and polluting the environment. It'd make me feel much safer and secure."

        They're just dying to find a nice highly-paid computer programmer like me. Then they can afford a hybrid car and go out to lunch with all their cute volunteer friends. And when I come home she'll tell me about all of the important volunteer activities she did that day. And I'll tell her about my day. About how my ideas are helping my huge company become
        • Sounds like a reasonable trade-off after whoring yourself out to your company like that.
        • Dude, have you ever known any 'activist chicks'? The ones I've known have been fairly intelligent and more likely to be a engineer or businessperson than most girls. Do not confuse proactive, activist types with the stoner chicks...

          Although, knowing how to play guitar will get you more of both kinds of girls than being a rich programmer.
      • hazardous for hundreds of thousands or millions of years

        Nitpick: The longer the half-life, the fewer decays per unit time. Stuff that's dangerous for a couple of days is far, far more dangerous than the basically stable elements you mentioned.

      • by Hartree ( 191324 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @11:33PM (#12938864)
        I was at one of their mercury testing events where they served coffee that was brewed with solar power. They're nice people, and the chicks were really cute.

        You should go to some industry shows for the chemical, oil and coal industries. They'll serve you coffee brewed with electricity generated at a coal plant. The reps will be very nice people to you, and the chicks in the booth will be really cute.
    • by Mad_Rain ( 674268 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:36PM (#12935238) Journal
      They are against new coal plants with modern scrubber technology, they are against fission plants, now they are against this expiremental fusion plant. Do they realize that humanity needs energy to live and thrive?

      Absolutely - which is why they advocate for safe technology (wind and solar power) that is economically and environmentally responsible in the present as opposed to 50 years down the road.

      I'm all in favor of developing fusion power and other alternatives, but why wait on utilizing some of the current (no pun) energy alternatives?
    • by jcdick1 ( 254644 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:41PM (#12935316)
      Greenpeace is against building power plants because they are against the idea of humanity being so dominant. To many environmental groups, mankind is often seen as synonymous with a cockroach infestation. To these groups, any given tree or platypus has more of a right to be where it is than we, the humans, have to put in yet another road for our SUVs. We should be a partner with nature, not a overwhelming force dominating it. Nature has inherent value beyond being a resource to be exploited, manipulated or eliminated. The more extreme groups would really like to see mankind return to a agrarian society, thereby "sticking the thumb" at corporations *and* helping the environment.

      This is being devil's advocate, of course, but the response to your question about humanity needing to live and thrive is "At what point does humanity say 'enough is enough'?" That is Greenpeace and Co.'s rationalization.
      • To these groups, any given tree or platypus has more of a right to be where it is than we, the humans, have to put in yet another road for our SUVs People like you live in scifi phantasy land, where you actually think that we can make tradeoffs between more environment or more technology. But we can't. Our current level of population, our current resource consumption, and our current environmental destruction aren't sustainable. The longer we continue, the harder the eventual crash will be. It doesn't
      • Nature has inherent value beyond being a resource to be exploited, manipulated or eliminated

        To say that Nature has an inherent value apart from humans is a fallicy.

        For anything to have value, one must say of value to whom? Values and judgements and ideas and theories all fail to exist without someone or something to HAVE Those values. Without mankind, the planet could burn. Does a dead planet like mars have the same value? Do we weep when a supernova destroys an empty, lifeless system of planets who al
    • by jafac ( 1449 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @04:27PM (#12935884) Homepage
      I swear, I think Greenpeace is more concerned about making sure nobody builds any new powerplants than they are about protecting the environment.

      What's truly tragic, is that their position is represented by the Limbaughs and O'Reilly's of the world as "the mainstream Liberal position".

      Frankly, I would much rather have seen the $300 Billion US we've spent in Iraq (so far) instead, spent on Fusion research in the US. If the Fusion research succeeds, then there's no fucking reason to go to Iraq or any other damn Middle Eastern country ever. I think THAT is closer to the mainstream Liberal position than the Greenpeace drivel.
    • by D. Book ( 534411 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @04:40PM (#12936043)
      I swear, I think Greenpeace is more concerned about making sure nobody builds any new powerplants than they are about protecting the environment.

      The Reuters article is not very balanced, and your post reflects this. Here's how the BBC [bbc.co.uk] decided to quote Greenpeace:

      Some green groups criticised Tuesday's announcement as a waste of money. They are doubtful whether Iter will ever deliver practical technologies.

      "With 10 billion [euros], we could build 10,000MW offshore windfarms, delivering electricity for 7.5 million European households," said Jan Vande Putte of Greenpeace International.

      "Governments should not waste our money on a dangerous toy which will never deliver any useful energy. Instead, they should invest in renewable energy which is abundantly available, not in 2080 but today."


      Sounds a bit more reasonable, whether you agree with that position or not.

      I think your post was a bit of a cheap shot designed to appeal to the current Slashdot groupthink. It wasn't all that long ago Microsoft-bashing was the favourite karma whoring method. Now that blatantly one-sided criticism of Microsoft is passe, the Greenpeaces and PETAs of the world have become our favourite whipping boys :-/
  • The good part is ... (Score:4, Informative)

    by beach_mon ( 892996 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:04PM (#12934843)
    The good part is, if this works, the efficiency scales with size. Also, if there is an accident, the reaction will burn itself out, rather than polluting the surrounding area for years to come, like a fission meltdown would.

    Of course, you'd want to be far away if a leak happened, in a remote control centre.

  • by TimeTraveler1884 ( 832874 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:07PM (#12934868)
    It will be available just in time to power Longhorn on the latest Intel. Oh yeah, and maybe restore power to the undersea Internet link to Pakistan.

  • by haggar ( 72771 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:09PM (#12934901) Homepage Journal
    I have nothing against France (only some French), but I was warmly hoping that Japan gets the project. In my view, Japan is so perfectly suited, technology and mentality-wise, to pull this off.

    Still, France is OK, because they are one of the countries with highest % of nuclear energy. So much so, in fact, that they make a lot of good money exporting it.

    And get this: one of the largest importers (the largest?) offrench electric energy is Germany, who have outlawed and disbanded their nuclear plants due to Green misguided pressure, and are now
    a) polluting themselves with coal plants, which actually produce more radioactive waste than nuclear plants of same energy output (not to mention other pollutants).
    b) paying for el. energy to France, which is produced by nuclear plants which are close enough to Germany, that if a meltdown happened, they would be just as affected!

    There is something humorous in all this.
    • Germany hasn't dismantled their nuclear power plants just yet. They have a law saying that the existing plants will be shut down after a shorter than expected lifetime (20 years instead of 30) and that no new plants will be built, but this is expected to be turned around by the next legislature way before a single plant is actually concerned. I don't know whether they export lots of electricity from France. France does a lot of business selling electricity to Spain and Italy though.

      kW.h prices for indiv
  • by joelsanda ( 619660 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:12PM (#12934935) Homepage

    Here in Colorado, USA, we're getting a new coal fired electrical plant. Stick with proven technology, we always say.

    • by lheal ( 86013 )
      we're trying to phase out coal. That technology never really panned out for us, even though we mine a lot of good coal here. Our Amish lobby is just too strong. We'll still sell it to Colorado, though.

      We're going back to wood. The initial leading choice for the fuel is oak, since those are the biggest, oldest trees we have. When those are gone, the maple crop should be ready.
    • by Dirtside ( 91468 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @06:01PM (#12936757) Journal
      Here in Colorado, USA, we're getting a new coal fired electrical plant. Stick with proven technology, we always say.
      I think you meant, "Stick with *cough* proven tech*hack cough*nology, we always *cough cough* say. *cough*"
  • Read about Fusion (Score:5, Informative)

    by vectorian798 ( 792613 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:18PM (#12935011)
    For those of you who don't know what fusion is exactly, read at Wikipedia:

    Fusion Power [wikipedia.org]

    Some interesting quotes:
    "The natural product of the fusion reaction is a small amount of helium, which is completely harmless to life and does not contribute to global warming. "

    "The half-life of the radioisotopes produced by fusion tend to be less than those from fission, so that the inventory decreases more rapidly. Furthermore, there are fewer different species, and they tend to be non-volatile and biologically less active. As opposed to nuclear fission, where there is hardly any possibility to influence the spectrum of fission products, the problems can be further reduced by careful choice of the materials used."

    "Although fusion power uses nuclear technology, the overlap with nuclear weapons technology is small. "
  • A "fusion plant" is not the same thing as a "research facility." A misleading headline, in this case implying production-level fusion capacity, does nobody any good.
  • by mark2003 ( 632879 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:47PM (#12935378)
    Nice to see that on an interesting and scientific story about the possible solution to the world's energy problems the discussion decends into just slagging off the French. I thought this was a site for geeks interested in technology and science, not a playground for people to trade cheap insults.

    And you Yanks are always accusing everyone of being anti-American, can you not see any hypocrisy?

    For the record I am not French but I think the EU deserved to have this in their backyard - after all the EU is the major contributor. This is fantastic news, if this works then at a stroke the world will have access to what is essentially unlimited energy. No more greenhouse gasses, smog and you will be able to run a Pentium 7 without causing a blackout across the entire continent.
  • ITER is a fiasco! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by InterGuru ( 50986 ) <interguru@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @03:53PM (#12935457)
    I post this as a former fusion researcher and a former project manager for the Office of Fusion Energy (OFE) of the Department of Energy (DOE)

    Many decades ago the international fusion community put all of its chips on the Tokamak. It has been a disaster.

    Even if a Tokamak could produce break-even fusion ( getting more energy out than you put in) the engineering obstacles to creating an economically successful reactor are daunting.

    Many years ago, the OFE sponsored a study, Project Aries, of the costs of a Tokamak reactor. Even using the usual optimistic assumptions, the cost came in way above solar and wind power, let alone fossil fuels.

    Another symptom of the problem is that three times in a row, projects to build larger Tokamak have collapsed in the design stage. That is, even before anything was build, none could come up with a working design. The International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), the latest attempt, collapsed as the price tag spiraled above $20 billion, but now is resurrected. I assume that they found some technical advances, or just "cooked the books" space-station style to justify it.

    The whole OFE degenerated into a "you scratch my back and I'll scratch yours" process where the lab directories divvied up the pie. All non-Tokamak ideas were cut off, including the one I worked on.( more below).Congress cut the OFE budget almost in half a 10 years ago in response to this.

    Now for a blatant plug. In the 70s I worked on a small project at the University of Miami, the Trisops project, which was defunded. The amount of money was not an issues ( our request was quite small), but the non-Tokamak nature, and the nerve of the principal investigator, Dan Wells, to point out that the Tokamac was unworkable.

    Last decade the Trisops machine was moved from the University of Miami, to Lanham Md, with a small NASA grant, but there is not money to run it. You can see a report on it.

    Another interesting project, the Plasmak(TM) project that is being run by Paul Koloc ( out of his garage!!).

    The holy grail on fusion research is a stable plasma structure. The Trisops project achieved it one way. Paul has noted that ball lightning, which has been known for millennia, is a stable plasma structure. He has machine that produces ball lightning, and is measuring it. He gets no DOE funding of course.

    This is a update of an earlier post Don't sell your Exxon Stock [slashdot.org]
    • Re:ITER is a fiasco! (Score:3, Informative)

      by krysith ( 648105 )
      Another former non-tokamak fusion researcher here.

      I agree. The biggest problem with the large tokomak designs is the scale, and hence price tag, required for a self-sustaining reaction. The large price tag and long construction times mean that prototyping is essentially a decades-long process subject both to political whims and the need to be used for years after it is built just to make the building of it worthwhile.

      Imagine how fast computer science would advance if each new motherboard required an act
    • Re:ITER is a fiasco! (Score:3, Interesting)

      by deglr6328 ( 150198 )
      Perhaps because some nut in his garage futzing around with what he thinks might be ball lightning likely has little to nothing to do with controlled fusion? When I do a search like this [aip.org] and get 2 hits, that's not really a good encouraging sign. Has he seen neutrons? What is his confinement time etc.? So far as can see it did not exceed 5usec! not exactly what I would describe as "stable plasma structure", even small tokamaks have confinement times exceeding this by a million. The reason the tokamak is consi
  • by gillbates ( 106458 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @04:05PM (#12935584) Homepage Journal
    The ITER project started in 1985, and there has been a running fight over money and location since

    So it took 20 years for ITER to make a decision? That would make even Washington D.C. bureaucrats proud...

  • by Ex-MislTech ( 557759 ) on Tuesday June 28, 2005 @04:18PM (#12935740)
    The bay of Fundy moves more water in and out every 13 hours than
    all the water of all the rivers in the world combined .

    If we could figure out a way to harness it, we would be good on
    power for a VERY long time indeed .

    http://www.valleyweb.com/fundytides/ [valleyweb.com]

    The 3 gorges damn is huge, the world's largest dam at present time,
    but the power generation possible at fundy is just staggering .

    I think underwater screened turbines would prevent sea life
    from being churned up, and prevent silting like the 'dam'type
    hydro electric tidal generators built in france .

    Some under sea power turbines are being deployed near malaysia .

    Also in the fusion arena, I think the bubble fusion principle
    makes alot more sense economically, and has already demonstrated
    that it will work .

    Keep in mind it is not cold fusion, it is high temp based .

    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/03/04030 3080222.htm [sciencedaily.com]

    Peace,
    Ex-MislTech

"The following is not for the weak of heart or Fundamentalists." -- Dave Barry

Working...