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US Fusion Firm Eyes Australia for Mid-2030s Plant
28 Dec
Summary
- A US company aims for a commercial fusion plant in Australia by mid-2030s.
- Fusion technology seeks to replicate sun's conditions for clean energy.
- Australian experts express skepticism about commercial fusion viability.

A US company, Type One Energy, is pursuing ambitious plans to construct a commercial nuclear fusion power plant in Australia by the mid-2030s. This venture, centered around stellarator technology which uses intense heat and magnetic fields to fuse atoms, aims to generate vast amounts of clean energy. The company is currently building a testbed facility in Tennessee and has expressed interest in deploying a 350MW reactor in Australia, projecting costs as low as $US2 billion per plant.
Despite the company's confidence, the scientific community in Australia is cautious. Fusion power, while theoretically a source of abundant, clean energy, has yet to demonstrate commercial viability. Only one experiment has reportedly produced more energy than it consumed, and this was not in a typical reactor configuration. Significant scientific and technical challenges persist, leading organizations like CSIRO to exclude fusion from their energy modeling.
Type One Energy's proposed Australian plant, intended to be operational by the mid-2030s, contrasts sharply with the current reality of fusion research. The technology mimics solar processes within a device called a stellarator. While the company suggests the technology is ready for deployment, Australian experts argue that major obstacles remain before commercial-scale fusion power becomes a reality.




