ITER Reactor Assembly Stoppage Enters Third Year

Jan 052024
 

Jan 5, 2024
By Steven B. Krivit

The first vacuum-vessel sector waiting in the assembly hall, Dec. 2021

The first vacuum-vessel sector waiting in the assembly hall, Dec. 2021. The core of the reactor will be built from nine of these sectors.

Second Anniversary

Two years ago today, French nuclear authorities ordered a halt to assembly of the core of ITER, the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor. Neither the French regulators nor the ITER Organization publicly initially disclosed the shutdown. New Energy Times broke that story on Feb. 21, 2022.

The organization was unable to proceed with assembly of the massive vacuum-vessel sectors because of multiple fabrication and shipping defects. Ancillary construction on the site continued; however, assembly of the reactor core is an essential process of the critical-path for the project.

New Energy Times asked Laban Coblenz, the spokesman for the organization, for the earliest projected date for the installation of the repaired sectors. He did not reply.

Timeline entry posted on ITER Organization's Web site, Dec. 2021

Timeline entry posted on ITER Organization’s Web site, Dec. 2021

When the ITER project was approved by its international partners, the cost was estimated at €5 billion. But that value did not include most of the parts. In 2018, David Kramer of Physics Today broke the story that — as of 2018 — a more realistic estimate for the project was $65 billion (€59 billion).

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