New England may soon become the world’s nuclear-fusion capital
Adapted from Robert Whitcomb’s “Digital Diary,’’ in GoLocal24.com
Happiest news of the month?
Commonwealth Fusion Systems LLC has just gotten $1.8 billion in private funding to build and operate the world's first commercial fusion-energy machine at its facility in Devens, Mass. The company, based in Cambridge, thus is moving faster toward what may bring about a revolution in electricity generation. It could eliminate the scary problem of trying to find safe places to store the radioactive waste that’s produced by nuclear fission, which is what nuclear-power plants use now.
Commonwealth Fusion hopes that it can prove, by 2025, that its fusion reaction creates more energy than it uses and then build a commercial-scale power plant by 2030.
What an environmental and economic boon for the world – massive amounts of clean, noncarbon-based energy -- and a boon for New England to have such an enterprise growing in its midst.