SAINT-PAUL-LES-DURANCE, FRANCE -- Fourteen years after receiving the official go-ahead, scientists began to assemble a machine in southern France on Tuesday that will seek to prove whether nuclear fusion, the process that powers the Sun, can be a safe and viable energy source for Earth.
The groundbreaking multinational experiment, ITER, has seen components arrive in the tiny commune of Saint-Paul-les-Durance from all corners of the world in recent months.
The components must now be painstakingly put together to finish what is dubbed by ITER in promotional material as the "world's largest puzzle".
The experimental plant's goal is to demonstrate that fusion power can be generated sustainably, and safely, on a commercial scale.
"Fusion provides clean, reliable energy without carbon emissions," said a statement from the 35 ITER partners: China, the 27 members of the European Union, Britain, Switzerland, India, Japan, South Korea, Russia and the United States.
"Fusion is safe, with minute amounts of fuel and no physical possibility of a run-away accident with meltdown," it added.
Furthermore, the fuel for fusion is found in seawater and lithium, abundant enough to supply humanity for millions of years.
"A pineapple-sized amount of this fuel is the equivalent of 10,000 tonnes of coal," the statement said.
The ITER machine will be constructed from about a million components, and initial experiments are set to begin in December 2025.
The facility is meant to produce about 500 megawatts of thermal power, translating into about 200 megawatts of electric energy if operated continuously, or enough to power some 200,000 homes.