In a historic breakthrough for clean energy, a fusion reactor in France has achieved a record-shattering milestone by sustaining temperatures three times hotter than the sun’s core for an astonishing 22 minutes. This achievement marks one of the most significant advancements in the global race toward limitless, carbon-free energy.
The experiment took place at the Tokamak reactor inside the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) facility, the world’s largest nuclear fusion project located in southern France. Using hydrogen isotopes, scientists were able to recreate the same fusion process that powers the sun — compressing atoms together under extreme heat to release vast amounts of energy.
During the test, the plasma inside the reactor reached over 150 million degrees Celsius, triple the temperature of the sun’s core. Holding this intense heat for more than 20 minutes is unprecedented in fusion history and demonstrates that sustainable energy from fusion is not just theoretical — it is becoming a reality.
Fusion energy could solve the world’s energy crisis. It produces no greenhouse gases, leaves behind no long-lived nuclear waste, and uses abundant fuel like hydrogen extracted from water. If perfected and scaled, it could replace fossil fuels entirely and power the planet indefinitely.
This landmark success from ITER is a glimpse into the energy future — one that is safe, powerful, and virtually infinite.
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