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With the ITER experiment on track to begin operations in 5-10 years, the United States has the opportunity to begin planning for its first fusion energy pilot plant. This study will map out the high-level scientific, technical, and logistical goals and key innovations needed to support the development of a fusion test plant that can serve as a model for producing electricity at the lowest possible capital cost.
This is a follow-on activity to the 2019 National Academies report, the Final Report of the Committee on a Strategic Plan for U.S. Burning Plasma Research.
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Consensus
·2021
Fusion energy offers the prospect of addressing the nation's energy needs and contributing to the transition to a low-carbon emission electrical generation infrastructure. Technology and research results from U.S. investments in the major fusion burning plasma experiment known as ITER, coupled with...
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Description
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) shall assemble a committee to provide guidance to the U.S. Department of Energy, and others, that are aligned with the objective of constructing a pilot plant in the United States that produces electricity from fusion at the lowest possible capital cost (“Pilot Plant”). In the study, to be completed within eight months of project initiation, the committee shall provide a concise report that addresses the following points -
- In developing and carrying out a plan for building a Pilot Plant, key goals need to be established for all critical aspects of the Pilot Plant. Identify those key goals, independent of confinement concept, which a Pilot Plant must demonstrate during each of its anticipated phases of operation.
- List the principal innovations needed for the private sector to address, perhaps in concert with efforts by DOE, to meet the key goals identified in the first bullet.
Considerations
In addressing the first bullet in the statement of task, the committee should consider the key goals for each of the plant's anticipated phases of operation. Areas for key goals that the committee might consider include scientific (e.g., materials and systems performance and integration), technical (e.g., electrical output and availability), economic (e.g., capital costs and time frame, operating and maintenance costs), environmental (e.g., level of radioactive wastes), and safety-related (e.g., regulatory, tritium inventory).
In carrying out the statement of task, the committee is encouraged to seek input from potential “future owners” of power plants, such as electric utility companies, and potential manufacturers of fusion power plant components, to broadly characterize the energy market for fusion and to provide input on what they would look for in a fusion pilot plant and how such plants can contribute to national energy needs.
Collaborators
Committee
Chair
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Christopher Jones
Staff Officer
Sponsors
Department of Energy
Staff
Christopher Jones
Lead
Meg Knemeyer
K. John Holmes
Neeraj Gorkhaly
James Lancaster
Linda Walker
Guru Madhavan
Alton D., Jr. Romig
Charles Ferguson
Radaka Lightfoot
Amisha Jinandra
Catherine Wise
Major units and sub-units
Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences
Lead
Division on Earth and Life Studies
Lead
Center for Advancing Science and Technology
Lead
National Academy of Engineering Office of Programs
Lead
Board on Energy and Environmental Systems
Lead
Board on Physics and Astronomy
Lead
Nuclear and Radiation Studies Board
Lead
Aeronautics, Space, and Astronomy Program Area
Lead