Iran hopes to join project to produce nuclear fusion power

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New YORK: Iran is hoping to join an international project in southern France that hopes to build the first machine to generate significant amounts of energy using nuclear fusion, which is considered a clean, safe and virtually limitless form of nuclear power.

Laban Coblentz, spokesman for the ITER project, said a high-level Iranian delegation led by nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi and Vice President for Science and Technology Sorena Sattari visited St. Paul Lez Durance on June 30-July 1, where the fusion device is being built. Coblentz said fusion-generated nuclear power has no significant weapons applications.

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Image courtesy: AP

Salehi was quoted by the Mehr news agency as telling reporters on Wednesday that during the visit “we discussed possibilities of Iran’s joining to ITER, and the other members welcomed a prospective Iran membership.”

Nuclear fusion, which joins atoms together, is the process that powers the sun and stars, and “harnessing fusion’s power is the goal of ITER,” according to its website. The project “has been designed as the key experimental step between today’s fusion research machines and tomorrow’s fusion power plants.”

Coblentz said in a telephone interview and email exchanges with The Associated Press this week that the six world powers who signed last summer’s nuclear deal with Iran to rein in its nuclear program — the U.S., Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany — encouraged Tehran’s participation in the ITER project.

The six powers believe that Iran wanted to use its nuclear reactors — which are based on fission where atoms are split — to produce uranium for nuclear weapons, which Tehran denies.

An annex to the nuclear agreement on Civil Nuclear Cooperation says the six powers and Iran can “explore cooperation” on an Iranian contribution to the ITER project

Coblentz said the Iranians are “very eager to get moving” and join the 35 countries collaborating on building the world’s largest experimental fusion machine called a tokamak.

Iran has not made a formal application and new members must be approved unanimously by the ITER council which also includes India, South Korea and Japan who were not part of the Iran nuclear deal, he said.

(Sourced from Agencies, Image Courtesy: blueibaofficialblog.wordpress.com)

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