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The World Ahead | Science & technology in 2025

Fusion power is getting closer—no, really

The action is shifting from the public to the private sector

Artists concept view of the interior of the ITER reaction vessel.
Illustration: Science Photo Library

By Geoffrey Carr, Senior editor, Science & technology, The Economist

Two developments in the coming year will mark a decisive shift from the public to the private sector in the decades-old quest to generate cheap and abundant power from nuclear fusion. The first will be the opening towards the end of 2025, by a private firm, of a machine called SPARC. This will be the first fusion reactor, public or private, designed to operate at near-commercial scale, with an eventual output of about 140 megawatts (MW). The second will be the non-opening of ITER, the flagship of intergovernmental fusion collaboration, which was scheduled to be ready in 2025. In a hurried announcement in July, that date was postponed.

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This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition of The World Ahead 2025 under the headline “Fusion power is getting closer”

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