We Went Inside the Largest Nuclear Fusion Reactor
This could be the most important construction project of our lifetimes. See how digital tools are enabling the ITER project - bit.ly/3KGfiF8
Full story here - theb1m.com/video/inside-iter-...
This video contains paid promotion for Thinkproject. See how ITER's teams are using Thinkproject's tools to stay on track - bit.ly/3KGfiF8
Presenter and Narrator - Fred Mills
Producer - Jaden Urbi
Video Editing - Aaron Wood
Graphics - Vince North
Content Partnership - Liam Marsh
Executive Producers - Fred Mills, James Durkin and Graham MacAree
Special thanks to ITER. Additional footage and images courtesy of ITER, WGBH and Reagan Library.
Go Behind The B1M. Click "JOIN" here - bit.ly/2Ru3M6O
The B1M Merch store - teespring.com/stores/theb1m/
View this video and more at - www.TheB1M.com/
Follow us on Twitter - / theb1m
Like us on Facebook - / theb1m
Follow us on LinkedIn - / the-b1m-ltd
Follow us on Instagram - / theb1m
#construction #architecture #nuclear
We welcome you sharing our content to inspire others, but please be nice and play by our rules - www.theb1m.com/guidelines-for-...
Our content may only be embedded onto third party websites by arrangement. We have established partnerships with domains to share our content and help it reach a wider audience. If you are interested in partnering with us please contact Enquiries@TheB1M.com.
Ripping and/or editing this video is illegal and will result in legal action.
© 2022 The B1M Limited
Пікірлер: 3 700
How, in 9 minutes, you've managed to expertly weave a narrative on the importance of both nuclear fusion and construction together seamlessly is nothing short of astounding. This channel really is something else entirely 👏
@yonatanschlussel
2 жыл бұрын
Exactly, they dive right into it and keep you interested throughout.
@hansolowe19
2 жыл бұрын
If I could give this guy a quarter every time he made a nice video, he'd have a lot of quarters.
@rajbanwait325
2 жыл бұрын
"Must See TV"
@pgplaysvidya
2 жыл бұрын
there's a saturday morning breakfast cereal comic that made a joke on educators vs fanatics (it's comic/2010-12-09) - this channel is amazing at distilling important and esoteric scientific ideas into something that is digestible to the average individual, without basically ignoring a lot of the scientifically important aspects. Like I was horrible at science when i went to high school and if I had to self study these ideas I would get overwhelmed with Wikipedia articles that tend to be more toward the 'technical' and less toward the 'understandable' spectrum. without these YT channels I would be thoroughly ignorant of these things. so important!
@tristqnejdjeh7278
2 жыл бұрын
If I had a quarter every time a news anchor used the word narrative
ITER is one of the single most important projects happening on earth right now. I really hope it's successful.
@ffdv7458
2 жыл бұрын
Sadly most people don't care
@texaswunderkind
2 жыл бұрын
There is no way to overstate that. Even removing global warming from the equation, there is the health effects of pollution, and wars fought over oil. At this very moment, Russia has invaded Ukraine. Not to liberate fellow Slavic people or stop imaginary bio labs, but because a massive natural gas field was found in Ukraine that would disrupt Russia's entire economy. Tens of thousands dead for petrodollars.
@Saotik
2 жыл бұрын
@@ffdv7458 Fortunately they don't need to. As long as the value is recognised by decision makers, we will all reap the benefits when they start being delivered.
@FazedSoul
2 жыл бұрын
Ameen
@Alucard-gt1zf
2 жыл бұрын
@@ffdv7458 most people didn't care about the invention of computers at the time Look what happened anyway
Didn't think the B1M could get better. Keep it up Fred
@TheB1M
2 жыл бұрын
Hahaha, thanks! We have some HUGE things planned this year!
@kristen457
2 жыл бұрын
When a British talks of violation of "sovereignty a nation" to India, it sounds nothing less than pathetic.
@RedRocketthefirst
2 жыл бұрын
@@TheB1M you guys are awesome
@TheJttv
2 жыл бұрын
Fred and team.
@danielduvernay3207
2 жыл бұрын
I agree 100%
I had no idea this was being built. It makes me feel good that so many countries have come together to build it. I am baffled how humans can build something so complicated.
@Chris.Davies
Жыл бұрын
Replace "complicated" with "stupid" and your comment is correct! Tokamaks are stupid, and will NEVER produce power for humanity. That much is obvious to any person who researched the topic.
@Markos581973
9 ай бұрын
Fools gold. we will blow our selves up before we take the next step in energy.
@ulrickkamdem9728
9 ай бұрын
wtf , i didn't ask for that. if that blow up , i am dead and my family too
@Markos581973
9 ай бұрын
@@ulrickkamdem9728 good
@henriqueferreira5165
9 ай бұрын
@@ulrickkamdem9728 it is actually really really safe. if there is a containment breach the plasma will expand and cooldown to a point where fusion will stop basically instantly before any real damage is done
You was totally in your element here Fred, good to see...very exciting times, fantastic job once again by you and the B1M team....👌🏿
Blows me away how you routinely out-perform Discovery Channel, History Channel, NOVA, etc. all these traditional outlets with your quality videos. High production, well-crafted script, informative... on and on. Been a fan for years, looking forward to the next one!
@tiestokygoericprydz3963
2 жыл бұрын
He probably has a lot of friends I'm jealous of his life honestly
@iampotates
2 жыл бұрын
Well he doesn't strictly focus on aliens or ghosts. Looking at you history channel.
@goldenhorde6944
Жыл бұрын
It's pop science with flashy useless graphics, of course it's gonna be easy content when you describe building it as legos, melodramatize it as a 'star', pepper the script with "basically"s and "kinda"s to sound more relatable and can't even be bothered to explain the difference between gas and plasma.
@iampotates
Жыл бұрын
@@goldenhorde6944 you're not wrong.
@Aninjacow100
Жыл бұрын
@@goldenhorde6944 This channel is information enterntainment, of course its exaagerated and simplified. You framing this as a negative thing is disengenuous when hundreds of thousands of people now know about this project that didn't before, and have a basic understanding of the fundamentals of its operation. You are not the target audience of this video.
I love your channel so much Fred, and you just may be inspiring me to get back to making videos. I have over 200 career mentorship videos for engineering students and have been back in the engineering industry for two years. I am getting the KZread itch again and have been learning a looottttt about nuclear, concrete's role in our worldwide carbon footprint, how close we are to starting a Moon colony, etc. Hope to meet you one day!
Fantastic video, I hope you can do this as a series to keep up to date with what’s going on every six months to a year.
The video has perfectly captured the sense of awe that paradigm shifting projects of such scale should rightfully inspire. I've always found ITER fascinating, but this video brought tears to my eyes.
@luismackenson
2 жыл бұрын
If you like vidéo about ITER look the vidéo of Mr bidouille, a french youtuber Who explain with à friend the mécanic and the physic of ITER The vidéo is in french but there are probably subtile
@zz-ic6dx
2 жыл бұрын
me too, seeing the scale of this project and what humans can accomplish made me very emotional
My dad helped with the design for parts of this project. Specifically around 3:10 you can see the assembly platform he designed. It’s really cool to see my dads work in a B1M video ❤️
@OoVeRCrAmEeR
2 жыл бұрын
@@frank1fm634 are you Jacob's dad ?
@Drie237
2 жыл бұрын
That is really cool!
@Poffdwudd30
2 жыл бұрын
@Cool Baby aight
@dislikecounter6392
2 жыл бұрын
Nuclear is a waste of time... your dad should be working with hydrogen power plants and using an actual sustainable clean power source instead of a very dangerous power source with the capability for catastrophic failure..
@uniformdremora
2 жыл бұрын
@@dislikecounter6392 the world will change completely before we need to, so don't worry.
As always, very informative and great content. 🥂 heres to more years for B1M
Absolutely amazing....and the way you guys bring " concepts" accross to viewer's....is nothing short of fantastic...good luck to your channel... thanks for sharing...!!
This brings back memories of my youth, working at a nuclear power plant and having assignments like working underneath the newly installed reactor on the sacrificial shield walls, the refueling pools, containment vessel and condenser units. What an amazing work environment for a new, 19 year old apprentice boilermaker! From a hundred feet below grade to hundreds of feet above- every day was a new opportunity to learn and improve my skills. After a lifetime of work across North America, I still get a chill down my spine when I see an exciting construction project like ITER.
@TexasRiverRat31254
2 жыл бұрын
Same here brother! As a young welder I worked on a nuke in TX welding big bore pipe supports, then they put me up near the polar crane rail,(900 feet above grade), welding supports to the inside of the containment. What really amazed me was the view of the people below looking like ants and that there were carpenters with big enough B**ls to build the ladders and the platform for me to work on safely. Dumbest thing the US did was to stop building nukes and the related components. When they were replacing main steam components it all had to be brought in from France. Spineless politicians on both sides caused that!
@rymarsrs8552
2 жыл бұрын
@@TexasRiverRat31254 Fascinating
@tatradak
2 жыл бұрын
You should tell your story... Fascinating...
@kor2597
Жыл бұрын
How did you become engineer at 19
@briangarrow448
Жыл бұрын
@@kor2597 I wasn’t an engineer. As I stated in my story, I was an apprentice boilermaker. I was in a craft union. Hope that clears that up for you.
Very informative, and nicely done video. The ingenuity behind this mega project gives me chills!!! Thanks Fred for letting us see the insides (and the future) of this engineering/science wonder!! 🙏🏻😇 more power to your channel.
Didn't think the B1M could get better. Keep it up Fred. Didn't think the B1M could get better. Keep it up Fred.
Nice to see you covering this project! It is so monumental both on an engineering level and on a potentially world changing way but so underrepresented and underreported in media when everyone is talking about clean energy. Everyone of their publication always go under the radar, maybe with your coverage they’ll get a bit more visibility!
@lasuzzoeaglegaming
2 жыл бұрын
its because people are still in the 1970s mental state of "nuclear bad."
@tobene
2 жыл бұрын
Is it really underreported? Experimental fusion reactors exist since decades and they will most likely not be commercially viable for just as long. It sadly won't be ready in time to address climate change
@jfbeam
2 жыл бұрын
Not so "under" anything... this thing has been creeping along for decades. As for "clean energy", many many tones of fossil fuels have been burned making and transporting the thousands of tones of stuff to and around the site. And it is *not* designed to put energy into the grid. Nor is it licensed to do so -- it is an _experimental_ reactor. (they aren't 100% sure it's even going to work -- i.e. net positive.) If one counts the (massive) carbon footprint of building it, it'll take decades to break even. (much more so than "dirty" fission plants, which in the US takes years to build and go on to operate for 30-50-or more years. granted, if it works, it won't produce any radioactive waste, _but we have fission designs that don't, too_ -- nobody's making those either.) I'd like it to work, and genuinely hope it does, but I expect we're still many generations away from cracking that nut. Stars achieve fusion through gravity, and sheer volume. There's no way we can create that sort of density on human scales.
@seankilburn7200
2 жыл бұрын
I’m not sure about underreported. There is plenty of coverage for this topic. It just doesn’t make the headlines because progress is slow.
@jsn1252
2 жыл бұрын
Well, these fusion experiments are still nowhere close to a Q total of 1, i.e the whole reactor breaking even. Then it has to produce a surplus of energy at a feasible price point. We don't even know if economically viable fusion is actually possible.
Love seeing international projects such as this. Love seeing countries come together and do something good for humanity. More is needed.
@stevefink6000
2 жыл бұрын
How much fossil fuels were used in the construction, transport, and production of the materials. And after "decades" before the first viable watt of power is produced, how long will it take to offset all that carbon emisions into the atmosphere? Id bet no one is talking about those numbers, if they are even being collected. Looks like another globalist grift to feed construction companies, banks, univerities, and transportation companies decades worth of tax money.
@Forbidden-Pre-Workout
Жыл бұрын
Lmao politicians are in bed with lobbyists.
@manuel.camelo
Жыл бұрын
@@Forbidden-Pre-WorkoutI was thinking the same.
@Markos581973
9 ай бұрын
liberal fool
@AttilatheThrilla
9 ай бұрын
They took 22 billion dollars from humanity for this..
I love this style of documentary’s🔥💪🏻 y’all gotta make more stuff like that. Definitely got urself a new subscriber haha
Next video: We visited the international space station to check out the engineering!!
@TheB1M
2 жыл бұрын
Haha, so up for that!
@orfeas8
2 жыл бұрын
literally my thoughts. I wish to see this
@MasterCakeX5
2 жыл бұрын
@@TheB1M If you have enough money - it is possible now
@elscruffomcscruffy8371
3 ай бұрын
We check in on the Mars Rover
I never knew ITER idea started that long ago. Hope this incredible piece of mega-machine-structure achieve its intended goal. For that day that future would be a lot brighter, figuratively and literally.
@RM-el3gw
2 жыл бұрын
yeah, it's impressive... Sadly we're still 30 years away from fusion power (like that joke says). No kidding. Hopefully this trend starts to truly diminish once ITER is up and running.
@naturalkind5591
2 жыл бұрын
Currently planning first light in 2027 aswell, we're getting closer and closer!
@chriswestwood3289
2 жыл бұрын
Because America did not have technology and skills and didn't want spend money either, just like its space program - in the name of international but really to take over other's technology and control.
@edwardcardozo8325
2 жыл бұрын
@@chriswestwood3289 Cry more
@my3dviews
2 жыл бұрын
@@RM-el3gw I think that 30 years from now is even still a pipe dream. The extreme cost of building this experimental reactor that may produce more energy than it consumes shows just how difficult sustaining a fusion reaction is. It may also be that the cost of building a fusion reactor can never be paid by the power that it generates.
What a brilliant video, both in its presentation but also message. It's so easy for us to condemn dirty energy, but it is the pursuit of solutions like this that will be the bringer of real, world-altering, change. Well done Fred and your team.
at first i gawked at the 22 billion price tag but, after hearing the logistical and scientific challenges - I think 22 billion might be fairly cheap for such an endeavour. The optimist in me wishes we could throw even more money and manpower to expedite the process however much more we could.
@hydromic2518
2 жыл бұрын
It is especially since the US military pays $100 billion or more for new military jets
@ayoCC
2 жыл бұрын
each member nation is granting money to domestic universities for research on each part that makes ITER
@cconnors
2 жыл бұрын
Its also over decades not just one lump sum. Harvard's endowment fund could pay for ITER.
@SuperSMT
2 жыл бұрын
The problem is what will successive commercial scale reactors cost? This $22 billion reactor will produce 500MW of electricity for just minutes at a time. It's purely experimental. The proposed DEMO reactor could follow, which would actually produce useable energy for the grid, but it will have to be even bigger than ITER. It should be easier to build with all the lessons learned, but how much easier really? Could it ever get cheap enough to the point it's worth doing?
@SuperSMT
2 жыл бұрын
@@hydromic2518 For thousands of them, though $400 billion is going to buy 2,500 F-35s which will be in service until at least 2070
Main members : China, EU , India, Japan, Russia, South Korea, USA. Others: Australia, Canada, Kazakhstan, Switzerland, Thailand, UK
ITER is such a hope for the earth and humanity! Also, the video is an excellent summary of the project, great job!
Great content. Really hope this project works as planned.
As brilliant and crucial ITER is, its also sad to know that most people don't even know it exists. Thank you so much for doing your bit in sharing these incredible projects with the world.
@namelastname4077
Жыл бұрын
nobody needs to know about it because it's just a psysics experiment. it's a prototype
@Majenta_Turkeysandvichs
Жыл бұрын
@@namelastname4077 An experiment, perhaps, but one with readily apparent real-world boons. Wider public knowledge can only help, and if people cared more about where our electricity came from we wouldn't be destroying our atmosphere.
@NazriB
5 ай бұрын
Lies again? Net Flix New Foodcourt
Been following ITER since learning about it in school 20 years ago (!) and I’m glad I will get to see this finally switch on soon and make a better world for our children
@martinw245
2 жыл бұрын
Well not exactly. ITER will never add power to the grid. Its a step toward that goal though. And worth remembering that huge tokamak reactors aren't the only approach to fusion. There are other, smaller scale alternatives, like General fusions approach and First Light Fusions projectile approach who have just had a major breakthrough.
@Muonium1
2 жыл бұрын
@@martinw245 First light fusion is simply a scam. They produced 50 neutrons using a dozen pounds of gunpower. It's simply ridiculous and there is no pathway to ignition or breakeven in such a scheme. A literal high school kid could build a Farnsworth fusor in their garage that would produce 100 times more neutrons from fusion continuously every second. First light is a grift to extract money from gullible clueless startup investors.
@foofung9961
2 жыл бұрын
@@martinw245 oh yeah projectile fusion... I've been hearing a lot about First light within the last month but maybe that's because I live near to where they are located
@martinw245
2 жыл бұрын
@@foofung9961 First Light have just had their first confirmed fusion reaction. Lots of work to be done, but with billions being spent around the world and so many companies involved, I think the breakthrough will come. I recall even the Lockeed Martin Skunk Works were working on a fusion reactor, not sure if they still are.
@nicolasmaldonado1428
2 жыл бұрын
If you need something that big and expensive, you can't but question the viability of this endeavor. Even more so when you understand that this is only the first step, after ITER, they have to build DEMO, and then after DEMO they may or may not have plans for PROTO. But PROTO is the real one that produces net energy. Geothermal energy has similar challenges, but it is more feasible, and once you start it, it's really free and really clean energy, just like solar but without the night problem. ITER needs tritium, and tritium is radioactive.
I am in awe of what humans are capable of when they work together peacefully toward a common goal! The size and complexity of this project gives me chills, my mouth is open and I become speechless. As a safety professional I can not imagine the daily challenges in supervising and managing such a project. What an honor to work on this and participate in history that will change the future dramatically. Can’t wait for this technology to be developed.
@NondescriptMammal
10 ай бұрын
Except there is no assurance that it will ever be made to work. It might utterly fail. Nobody knows.
@weedylock
9 ай бұрын
it will change future dramatically but not in a good way, you are getting too exited my friend lol
@henriqueferreira5165
9 ай бұрын
@@weedylock could you elaborate?
@redegg7530
6 ай бұрын
@@weedylock elaborate how this is not going to be a good thing? If you're talking about weaponization of nuclear fusion, it's been done half a century ago.
Such a goose bumps when they stated that multiply nations working together to achieve this ASAP. What a beautiful thing 😍👏🏼
Great to see you bring more attention to this, in comparison to renewable energies fusion research and the whole industry is quite underfunded so I hope this video brings peoples interest more to it!
@andimoraru5539
2 жыл бұрын
Nuclear fusion research is underfunded compared with the fossil fuel industry. Intentionally or not, I'm not the one to speculate. What is clear, the world is highly dependent on oil for this moment in time.
@zombiekiller515
2 жыл бұрын
There's a reason. It's always 20 years away. This will take too long to develop to prevent climate change. Renewables are seeing more investment because they work right now.
@leafrika6520
2 жыл бұрын
I think the cost of it and materials aren't helpful either, too much room for failure, probably makes it harder to fund and its quite a complex concept getting engineers behind it could also be a factor, I'm happy with the progress though truly amazing work.
@sinanbean766
2 жыл бұрын
Renewables energy is underfunded as well. Only Fossil Fuels and Nuclear fission are funded enough.
@MacMe95
2 жыл бұрын
Fusion almost sounds too good to be true. 🧐Reminds me of perpetual motion devices 😂
I'm from Marseille (south France) i've been there and it is very impressive. One thing you didn't mention is that it's going to be the Heaviest manmade structure ever, relative to the size, there have been a huge levelling of the ground with deep steel tubes
@honkhonk8009
2 жыл бұрын
look at all that machinery and components densley packed inside. Never saw a building that big, and that denseley packed before lol.
@carbon1255
2 жыл бұрын
@Zaydan Naufal I'm not sure, I think some of the soviet submarines perhaps. Perhaps some imploded ones on the sea bed too. On a serious note, for its size there are a plenty of minature structures much denser. you'd have to have special parameters for this.
@amblincork
Жыл бұрын
If they had told us more about the building and spent less time on superficial comments
So glad I found this channel Right up my street and so brilliantly presented and explained Very interesting
Exciting! I wish them luck with finishing the project! Sounds really important for the peaceful future.
To be more clear, right now they're looking to make the fusion process energy positive at the reactor level, but that positive amount of energy still needs to be converted to electricity (such as via steam turbine), so that's like another order of magnitude efficiency increase that's required.
@carbon1255
2 жыл бұрын
@@rayc1557 The process of producing cryogenic temperatures in itself produces a huge amount of heat- It isn't as doomy as you might think - simply the energy loss from the other systems would produce a decent energy output, provided the reaction is self maintaining and the reactor can survive to run for more than a few seconds intact.
@SprikitikBowwowwow
Жыл бұрын
@@carbon1255 k
Congrats bro. You went from a small channel to getting invited to tour some of the most inspirational and influential construction projects on this planet. Proud of you.
I love who humble the manager is : "I'm the grand master of this'
The thing they quote it : "Hard" not Impossible, is what makes me positively excited
This is just astonishing. My dad used to help design elements of fission reactors and would frequently visit Caderache (where ITER is situated). Since dad died back in the 1990s I have lost touch with developments, but this is amazing, especially when compared to the Culham JET project in the UK.
@mlc4495
2 жыл бұрын
Such a great story. Sorry about your dad, he sounded cool.
@pigmentpeddler5811
Жыл бұрын
I love reading thoughtful comments from accounts with usernames like "Horse Nuts"
The best type of energy ever
I work at a fusion research lab, so cool to see a reactor finally being made
@thisguy976
Жыл бұрын
What projects do you think can be undertaken and achieved if fusion is achieved and we have non-exhaustive energy? How far can humanity go in technological advancement?
I'm subscribed to a lot of global news subreddits and follow our state media quite closely and never have I heard of that mega project. That's amazing!
I wonder what happens when we have low cost energy? Would it lead to betterment, aside from yes, that it can produce power pretty much with no carbon at all essentially helping with the global warming scene.
@JeffBilkins
2 жыл бұрын
The fossil-fuel billionaires and tech bro's will find a way to screw this up and extract even more wealth.
@kostasmira2933
2 жыл бұрын
@@RoseJetExhaust Yes of course. As always. I am from Greece and here politicians are retarded as always. So i don't expect much for the next 5-10 years.
@noahmichelsen3774
2 жыл бұрын
I hope it is going to be possible, but some of the most powerful people in the world still want fossil fuels because of the money. But I don’t hope it is going to be a problem
@Malfoy1594
2 жыл бұрын
Its low cost energy for governments, not the people paying for the electricity.
@VanDerPol
2 жыл бұрын
I am also sceptical about low cost energy. The market will ultimately decide. And even if fusion will work in the future, will it be economically competitive with the current renewables?
I could literally not think of a better video. Thank you B1M, for bringing attention to this marvel of engineering, one of the greatest united human endeavors of our time
@901blitz
2 жыл бұрын
I can think of an endless list of better ways to invest research money. How in the world is fusion power ever going to be economic when the facility you need to achieve fusion power requires roads and bridges to rebuilt just so components can be brought to site! Yes, I'm sure things will get smaller and simpler but will they really get that much similar where they can compete with solar, wind and energy storage solutions? All of which are getting cheaper by the month as well. Fusion power in the 21st century feels like the Wright brothers proclaiming they will fly to Alpha Centauri after having completed their first flight across a grassy field in the 20th century. There's a world of difference between taking your first step and running a marathon at the Olympics. Love to see the billions spend of ITER have gone to things that will actually mitigate the climate crises.
@dislikecounter6392
2 жыл бұрын
Sorry but Hydrogen fuel cells and power plants are the answer to energy problems seeing as the majority of the world is made of water... Nuclear is a waste of time and very dangerous with the potential to do serious harm as we have seen in the past..... nuclear fusion meltdowns would be even worse. Only morons support nuclear power it is not sustainable and has horrible waste products which contaminate for ages.... Hydrogen fuel cells produce.. water... and run off oxygen and hydrogen.. Not to mention Hydrogen is ridiculously abundant on this planet no matter where you go......
@tankatim13
2 жыл бұрын
More nuclear ☢️ energy globally.
@tankatim13
2 жыл бұрын
@生活有滋有味 better then hydrocarbons
@tankatim13
2 жыл бұрын
@生活有滋有味 😂
I’ve been very lucky to visit a few nuclear reactors and other power stations with my university, and to this day I still can’t get the sheer scale of these monumental structures
Being from the south of France, I was raised knowing that ITER was right there and I've always been amazed and a little scared of what was happening nearby! So cool to see that the future is in good hands. Those good news show that humans are resilients and not only bad things are happening in this world!
If nuclear energy can be conquered, we will become much more advanced.
@allftw2677
2 жыл бұрын
@UNO_____2️⃣2️⃣ no
@L8ugh1ngm8n1
2 жыл бұрын
We conquered nuclear energy decades ago. We can build efficient, safe, low waste fission reactors and manage the waste that they produce and that are considered as part of the renewable infra-structure but it seems that the 'developed' world has lost interest. Most likely because until recently, it was cheaper and easier to just buy our energy producing fuel from Russia.
@SC-yy4sw
2 жыл бұрын
@@L8ugh1ngm8n1 No but you see, we can't actually be decarbonizing the grid with proven tech that actually already produces already 10% of global electricity. We can't because... uh... we just can't ok ??? What we need to do is rely on intermittent sources and wait for 2100 for fusion to be scalable. Then Greenpeace can do a campaign to equate fusion with thermonuclear weapons and make sure no fusion plant is ever built.
@VictorNewman201
2 жыл бұрын
@@L8ugh1ngm8n1 Ask the Ukrainians around Chernobyl how it felt conquering nuclear energy. There is a reason why so many Ukrainian children, even born today, are cancer patients.
@L8ugh1ngm8n1
2 жыл бұрын
@@VictorNewman201 Chernobyl wasn't anyone conquering nuclear energy it was an example of what happens when any industry is overseen by incompetence, lack of understanding, poor design, poor workmanship, lack of training and mis-information. But more power to you for rolling out one of the oldest and most tired tropes against nuclear fission.
Delighted for you Fred, that you could tell us (with such genuine enthusiasm and excitement) this story of wonder and hope. Showing us as you always do on this channel what amazing things we can create, especially when we collaborate.
I work in and love the construction industry! Your focus on transformative projects that were unbeknownst to me brought me to your channel. However, your thought-provoking, down to earth, and human focused perspectives is why I'm a subscriber for life.
The complexity in terms of scope, engineering and project coordination gobsmacks my mind..
Fred, it would be very interesting seeing the affects of war on infrastructure and the sheer amount of rebuilding that needs to happen afterwards. Do you think B1M will have any videos on this in the future?
@katherandefy
2 жыл бұрын
What a great topic request!
@steeldriver5338
2 жыл бұрын
I second this! It gives a country the opportunity to revamp the way it's cities were designed before the war. I know Europe took that opportunity after WW2.
@Ozymandias1
2 жыл бұрын
Russia is still involved in ITER. They didn't expell them nor remove any components made in Russia.
@oleksandrbyelyenko435
2 жыл бұрын
@@Ozymandias1 that's bad
@keshavjha9455
2 жыл бұрын
@@oleksandrbyelyenko435 It might be bad, but its unavoidable, modern nuclear physics has more soviet input than the USA. Even the tokamak is a soviet design. You can't do this without Russian scientist's help.
I'm actually so happy for Fred to be able to enjoy these sites and projects in real life. this channel has had a massive and truely deserved growth, keep it up :)
fantastic video, outstanding host! really enjoyed this a great deal.
8 months later, and a research plant in the US has managed to produce net positive energy for the first time ever. Using a different method, and only for 4 microseconds, but it was accomplished all the same.
That "we have delivered" sticker on the side of the building must be a *massive* font
Your production quality and explanations is so good absolutely love these videos. 😍
@lucasrem1870
2 жыл бұрын
see how the Nazi build the Gaz chambers, 'Kopff und Zonen' horros shows get hts, only freaks on KZread!
I can't wait to see this happen 50 years from now! 🤗
Oh, I love ITER and always follow the construction progression. I'm from Padua and here we have a part of the project with the tests MITICA and SPIDER. Thanks to share this project with all of your follower!
Great to see you presenting on camera! Had no idea this emormous project was taking place. Thanks for the info.
So brilliant and wonderful ,love to see so many countries coming together to do do something great and useful such humanity ❤
As a Chemical Engineer this Video is like a Treat for me. Thanks... 🙏🙏
The power of the sun in the palm of my hand
How have I never heard of this before? Thanks for bringing this out to everyone who didn't know!
@yvonneplant9434
2 жыл бұрын
There seems to be more of an effort to focus on how tribal people can be rather than this which shows how if we can work together we can solve so many of our problems.
great video guys! Thanks!
Just awe inspiring. Wow. Hope I'm around to see it come to fruition.
8-year old me that discovered nuclear energy in old Yugoslavian encyclopedia is sheading tears of joy inside of 37-year old me, who can't believe how much good stuff you managed to squeeze in less than 10 minutes. This proect, among with other fusion attempts, is the epithomy of everything science and engineering should be about - ambitious, immense projects with an obvious purpose of eleveting our existence and pushing human kind further. Best KZread channel, by far. Fred, you are a gem.
Love how Fred is clearly geeking out while being there haha. This video is especially important because it gets people excited about the FUTURE! These kinds of narratives are more impactful than we give them credit for I think...
you’re content is lights out!
what a great video! really well explained! fantastic job!
Wow this channel is really going places! Can't believe how far you've come even in just a year or so since I've been watching.
Your videos are of professional quality mate. Well done. Thank you.
@TheB1M
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!!
@miroslavmilan
2 жыл бұрын
What do you mean? He is a professional :)
@remi_gio
2 жыл бұрын
It’s not iTER like iPad but ITER (pronounced eater) … like the lady who was interviewed and actually works there said…. and how we call it on the continent… but ok… guess it’s the same with Wnglish and American pronounciation of IRAQ… right?
Humanity coming together to solve an existential problem for a future more fantastic than anything before it.. More of this, please.
I have placed a reminder notice in my calendar, ten years from now, to come back to this video where i shall post "Well, THAT aged well" followed by a smiley emoticon.
So awesome! Thank you for showing us all some of the most amazing projects in the world and explaining them so comprehensive and concisely!
We need ITER now more than ever.
It's worth saying that while fusion energy would be beyond revolutionary in many ways, fission is already essentially carbon free and with danger statistics generally in the same range as wind and solar power, despite "harmful" nuclear waste. Truthfully, if we built enough nuclear plants to sustain most of our energy needs right now, there wouldn't be all that much of an issue (certainly far less than the issues associated with using fossil fuels for power). The amount of waste produced would be quite manageable and so in many ways, fission is already capable of many benefits that fusion is often credited with, for the most part. Certainly not all- fusion energy as I said originally would be more than a revolution. As far as necessity dictates for our current energy situation though, fission would be sufficient if the general public stopped thinking nuclear waste was green goo and that reactors go off like atomic bombs when there is any minor error (they don't do that at all, it's impossible). While I love fusion and think it 100% deserves as much funding as it reasonable, fission could fix fossil fuels within the time that fusion might or might not only be proven, let alone turned into commercially viable energy plants. Fusion is the energy of the future, and right now we need to be using the energy of today--fission, wind, solar, etc--to get rid of the energy of the past, as soon as reasonably achievable.
@hamisyum1016
Жыл бұрын
Yep, Chernobyl fairly much screwed up fission for the rest of the world. It's cheap, almost green, and gives more than enough energy to last us a while.
@lc9245
Жыл бұрын
@@hamisyum1016 nope. It’s Fukushima and nuclear weapon. When Chernobyl happened, the number of operating fission plants didn’t go down for the next few years, it was still increasing. The Western nations largely viewed Chernobyl as “those dirty Soviets with their inferior technology and intelligence have it coming, the superior West will never have such thing happen to us”. Only after Fukushima was there a dip in nuclear power generation around the world. The possibility of developing nuclear weapon from nuclear power also prevented many countries from having their own nuclear plant, which hampered the development of the nuclear power industry as a whole.
@hamisyum1016
Жыл бұрын
@@lc9245 Fair point, however where I live, Chernobyl is more commonly talked about than Fukushima.
@lc9245
Жыл бұрын
@@hamisyum1016 Mostly because of Western propaganda which emphasises the failure of the perceived enemy and hides the failure of allies. Although Chernobyl was truly disastrous and an important lesson, it is more prominent in the media, strategically much less so, because of what I mentioned. Meanwhile, Fukushima empowered the anti-nuclear faction, because it occurred in the sophisticated and advance Japan which made it relevant to policymakers, combining with cheaper renewable, created the perfect storm for the death of nuclear power industry. I also attributed drastic actions to rising progressives politics, which made drastic policy changes more popular and acceptable.
@hamisyum1016
Жыл бұрын
@@lc9245 Ok. I don't know much about the topic. Thanks for giving me an inside into a different perspective.
Thank you B1M
Really inspiring! Thanks for working so hard to take us places we can only imagine otherwise.
I only have one complaint. I wish you would do a series on this. Break down all the different systems and engineering challenges and do a video on each of them. Then check out different companies who are also trying to produce fusion energy. This is so big and so important to literally everyone on this planet.
@seankilburn7200
2 жыл бұрын
There are many other videos covering this topic on KZread and I doubt they have the time and resources to create an entire series on this technology. It’s also worth remembering that they aim to keep these videos as accessible as possible so going into great depth is unlikely.
@MrGottaQuestion
2 жыл бұрын
It would be an unending series of videos as Fusion is so unworkable that one system has to be built on top of another system to try to get a work-around for the problem introduced by the last sytem. And still it will be "50 years off" from a functional reactor in 50 years, just like it was 50 years ago.
Thats so freaking cool OMFG, Im just speechless. The power of a tiny star!!!
the irony of fears of nuclear fissure over nuclear fusion, where "we are creating a little sun" oddly doesnt seem to ring the same kind of alarm bells, really goes to show how much media coverage matters and in what light it does.
@angelus77300
Жыл бұрын
Because you can stop nuclear fusion whenever you want, you cannot stop nuclear fission once started til there re combustible
the production quality of B1M only rises, this is beautiful
That is called real "engeneering Marvel". That's why I love engeneering so much ..
It always amazes me what humans can do when they come together and priorities are in order . Beautiful when we work together for the betterment of humankind.
It's awe-inspiring and also somewhat terrifying. I sure hope they have truly puzzled out how to control the reaction.
Since I took up interest about nuclear fusion in 1989, I've been following with keen interest on the developments in the field thus far. And then I came across this most excellent, instructional presentation. Thank you.
@ckh420
Жыл бұрын
How do you get energy out of it?
@cardinalblack5964
Жыл бұрын
@@ckh420 They haven't got to that part yet - hence my interest in fusion. Until they can stabilize the plasma inside the donut, you can't get energy out of it. Say they stabilize the plasma. It's my guess they'd have to come up with some heat transfer process. specifically, I assume they'd opt for steam turbines - with water being plentiful and steam technology being well demonstrated.
@QTwoSix
5 ай бұрын
It's always boiling water
You sounded so proud to be presenting this. I remember school science telling me that fusion wasn't even possible, so I never expected to hear about it in my lifetime.
@ZettyLad
2 жыл бұрын
Who told you that? Bruh, that school is something
@althejazzman
2 жыл бұрын
@@ZettyLad I mean theoretically possible, but it wasn't possible to create it.
my first video from you guys. auto subscribed!
Very impressive project, with multiple nation involvement.
You really stepped up your channel. Another fantastic video!
Very well explaining such a complicated yet interesting topic
Really Liked the Animations. I wish I could have this kind of animation in my school.
I love the idea that all countries in the world are working together on this...
I know someone who works for ITER and i'm really envious of him and not just because he now lives in the south of France :)
@blablabla6975
2 жыл бұрын
What is his take on how long this is still going to take? Can't imagine they get it done 2025
B1M continues to be one of the most informative and best produced channel on KZread!
I love and respect all the information and details on your video. Thank you for explanation
B1M: 10x hotter than the core of the Sun. Paris Hilton: That's hot.
Fred, thank you for showing us a glimpse of ITER project. I’ve been reading a couple of papers and journals about fusion energy. Really hoping this project will succeed and be used as our carbon-free source of energy for the future. The way you expressed yourself on the last few clips of this video, I couldn’t help but feel as excited as you are for this new technology! Keep it up B1M!
Worked on the ITER project for a couple of years. Fantastic science experiment, not such a great model for a future power plant. Smaller, higher pressure, spherical tokamaks are the most economical approach in my opinion.
Update: We just recently created a reaction that makes more energy that it takes to make a reaction. THIS IS HUGE!!!
This is a very well-explained video and the ITER project could represent our next big hope.