Oman Daily Observer

Italy’s Eni may up stake in nuclear fusion project

- GIANCARLO NAVACH

Italian energy group Eni is considerin­g stepping up its investment in nuclear fusion, potentiall­y doubling down on a technology considered so uncertain that Eni remains the only global oil company prepared to place a bet on it. Eni and bigger rivals such as Shell and BP have been looking at moving into renewable energy as climate change, the falling cost of solar and wind power and a shift to electric vehicles raise doubts over long-term demand for oil.

Eni last month committed 50 million euros ($62 million) to one of several projects aiming to produce energy by fusing atoms at temperatur­es as hot as the sun, a process seen by doubters as still closer to science fiction than commercial reality.

After the move, Eni’s head of developmen­t operations and technology, Roberto Casula, said it might raise its investment in Commonweal­th Fusion System, a firm created by the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT), which is developing the project.

“After the transition to renewable energy, the real breakthrou­gh technologi­cally is nuclear fusion,” Casula said, adding the process involved recreating the physics of the sun, producing heat but no emissions and very limited nuclear waste.

Casula estimates it will cost $3 billion to develop a 200-megawatt fusion reactor by 2033 and says Commonweal­th Fusion System is looking to raise more funds and to draw up an overall investment agreement with a range of financiers.

Eni executive could not say at this stage how much it would be ready to invest. He said Eni had signed a deal giving it the right to use the project’s intellectu­al property.

“The eventual stake we’ll have in the company will be decided when there is an overall investment agreement, depending also on how much they will raise,” Casula said.

The MIT project is vying with research teams in France, China and Britain to develop a reactor that can generate more energy than the enormous amount that fusion consumes, and can also safely contain a mass of super-hot gases or plasma.

Italy also recently entered the race, though Eni is sticking with MIT, saying the Boston project is unique in its aim to produce electricit­y, while others have scientific objectives.

All projects are based on a system known as tokamak, which uses supercondu­cting magnets to hold the plasma at temperatur­es of up to 100 million degrees, suspending it inside a vacuum chamber without it touching the chamber’s walls.

To make electricit­y, heat produced by the fusion of hydrogen isotopes is used to spin steam turbines in the convention­al way.

The France-based ITER project is the largest endeavour, with a budget of around 20 billion euros. A collaborat­ion between Europe, the United States, China, India, Japan, Russia and South Korea, it is more than halfway towards the first test of its super-heated plasma by 2025 and first fullpower fusion by 2035.

Unlike the MIT project, the Internatio­nal Thermonucl­ear Experiment­al Reactor (ITER) team does not plan to generate electricit­y, saying this will be further in the future, and is being supported by government­s rather than the private sector.

“Based on our experience with the ITER project, we feel the MIT timeline to a power plant in 15 years is very ambitious, if not overly ambitious,” ITER chief scientist Tim Luce said. “But if they succeed, we will celebrate their success.”

ITER director Bernard Bigot said nuclear fusion research and developmen­t were being driven mainly by government­s, likening it to the early days of space technology and suggesting the time had yet to arrive when private investors would take the lead.

ENI AND BIGGER RIVALS SUCH AS SHELL AND BP HAVE BEEN LOOKING AT MOVING INTO RENEWABLE ENERGY AS CLIMATE CHANGE, THE FALLING COST OF SOLAR AND WIND POWER AND A SHIFT TO ELECTRIC VEHICLES RAISE DOUBTS OVER LONG-TERM DEMAND FOR OIL

 ?? — Reuters ?? Ted Golfinopou­los performs maintenanc­e between plasma campaigns on the interior of the fusion experiment Alcator C-mod at MIT in Massachuse­tts.
— Reuters Ted Golfinopou­los performs maintenanc­e between plasma campaigns on the interior of the fusion experiment Alcator C-mod at MIT in Massachuse­tts.

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