
Proxima Fusion, RWE, der Freistaat Bayern und das Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik unterzeichnen Vereinbarung zum Bau des weltweit ersten kommerziellen Fusionskraftwerks in Europa – Wenn Alpha in den 2030er Jahren in Betrieb geht, wird es der erste Stellarator sein, der einen Nettoenergiegewinn demonstriert …
https://www.proximafusion.com/press-news/proxima-fusion-rwe-the-free-state-of-bavaria-and-max-planck-institute-for-plasma-physics-sign-agreement-to-build-the-worlds-first-commercial-fusion-power-plant-in-europe
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From the article
The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) outlines a roadmap to commercial fusion in Europe that begins with building demonstration stellarator Alpha near the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics (IPP) in Garching.
When operational in the 2030s, Alpha will become the first stellarator to demonstrate net energy gain, meaning its plasma will generate more energy than it consumes. The demonstration stellarator will additionally allow Proxima and its partners to test and validate key fusion technologies under real-world conditions and in shorter development cycles, accelerating the path to building the first stellarator fusion power plant, Stellaris.
# Site secured for Stellaris power plant
The Stellaris commercial power plant is planned for the site of a former nuclear fission power plant in Gundremmingen, currently being decommissioned by RWE. This agreement marks Europe’s first major step toward commercial fusion power, as the continent’s leadership in fusion research moves into industrial deployment.
Alpha and Stellaris will together create thousands of jobs and supplier contracts for European manufacturers and engineers, from construction and manufacturing to advanced electrical, magnet systems, and more. The long-term aim is to make fusion an integral part of Europe’s energy system, reduce dependence on imported energy, and, for the first time, apply Europe’s fusion expertise to a grid-connected commercial project.
# Accelerating fusion industrial scale-up in Europe
Under the MoU, the Free State of Bavaria, Proxima Fusion, RWE and IPP will work together on site selection, permitting and regulatory processes, project structure, and financing.
IPP will lead on plasma physics and the scientific leadership of demonstration stellarator Alpha. Proxima Fusion will lead on engineering, public procurement processes, and construction. RWE will contribute its extensive experience in the construction and operation of complex power plant facilities, as well as its strong global industrial network.
Proxima intends to finance approximately 20 percent of the project’s total costs through private international investors. Subject to federal funding, the Free State of Bavaria has indicated a potential state co-financing contribution of 20 percent. RWE has also signaled its willingness to participate financially within the framework of the MoU.
All four partners are pooling their efforts to maximize chances of success in securing federal funding under the High-Tech Agenda Germany.
**Francesco Sciortino, Co-Founder and CEO, Proxima Fusion said:** “This MoU is a milestone that visibly positions the European fusion industry on the global stage. It marks the starting point of an industrial ecosystem that consolidates existing and new know-how in Europe and anchors value creation here. This marks the beginning of a long-term industrial growth trajectory over the coming decades, creating new export opportunities for Germany and Europe.
Alright, will see it 20 years later with a 300%markup!
I’d like to see „no press releases“ added to Reddit rules.
Interesting to see when it is build and comes online, how they are going to keep fusion alive long enough to actually gain from it. Last I heard china got about 7 minutes, so dont know how they will help power a town or something.
Anyway, sceptisism aside, I am happy someone is doing it, and I hope the best for them. If nothing else it will be a learning for future plants. And we have to try to do it at some point.
Demonstration plant will be in 2030’s; no date given for the commercial plant.
> When operational in the 2030s, Alpha will become the first stellarator to demonstrate net energy gain
We *have* a perfectly good fusion reactor just sitting out there giving us energy. All we have to do is collect it better.