ITER’s new Magnet Cold Test Facility has successfully reached 4 Kelvin, marking a crucial step in testing superconducting coils.
The world’s largest tokamak restarts with giant coils to control plasma, bringing fusion energy a step closer to reality.
The ITER Organization has announced the start of operations at its Magnet Cold Test Facility following the successful cooldown of the first magnet coil to 4 Kelvin, or minus 269°C.  ; ...
At the ITER construction site in Saint-Paul-lès-Durance, in the hills of southern France, engineers have finished stacking ...
In May 2026, the United States completed delivery of the last of six superconducting magnet modules built in San Diego to the ...
Take a look inside ITER, the world's largest fusion energy project, to see how scientists from around the world are working ...
ITER, a €22-billion project in France, progresses as it receives final components for its central solenoid magnet, aiming to replicate the Sun's energy for limitless clean power.
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Project officials now prioritise durability and repeatability over speed, according to the Baseline Plan presented last year. Though ITER will not generate electricity, its success is intended to ...
On a plateau in southern France, crews are assembling ITER’s core – a steel chamber about 64 feet wide – to recreate a solar fusion reaction here on Earth. This is the moment when a decades-long plan ...