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China Building Huge Laser Fusion Research Facility, Analysts Say

Satellite photos show China appears to be building a large laser-ignited fusion research centre in a southwestern city


A Chinese flag is seen atop the Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST), a nuclear fusion reactor dubbed as "artificial sun", in Hefei, Anhui province, China November 14, 2018 (Reuters, China Out).

 

China looks to be building a large laser-ignited fusion research centre in the southwestern city of Mianyang, experts at two US analytical organisations say.

They said the development that could aid nuclear weapons design and work exploring power generation.

Satellite photos – such as the one below – show four outlying “arms” that will house laser bays, and a central experiment bay that will hold a target chamber containing hydrogen isotopes the powerful lasers will fuse together, producing energy, Decker Eveleth, a researcher at US-based independent research organisation CNA Corp, said.

 

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A satellite image of the laser fusion research facility in Mianyang, China (Planet Labs via Reuters).

 

The site has a similar layout to the $3.5 billion US National Ignition Facility (NIF) in Northern California, which in 2022 generated more energy from a fusion reaction than the lasers pumped into the target – “scientific breakeven”.

Eveleth, who is working with analysts at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS), estimates the experiment bay at the Chinese facility is about 50% bigger than the one at NIF, currently the world’s largest.

The development has not been previously reported.

“Any country with an NIF-type facility can and probably will be increasing their confidence and improving existing weapons designs, and facilitating the design of future bomb designs without testing” the weapons themselves, William Alberque, a nuclear policy analyst at the Henry L. Stimson Centre, said.

China’s foreign ministry referred Reuters questions to the “competent authority”. China’s Science and Technology Ministry did not respond to a request for comment.

The US Office of the Director of National Intelligence declined to comment.

In November 2020, US arms control envoy Marshall Billingslea released satellite images he said showed China’s buildup of nuclear weapon support facilities. It included images of Mianyang showing a cleared plot of land labelled “new research or production areas since 2010”.

That plot is the site of the fusion research centre, called the Laser Fusion Major Device Laboratory, according to construction documents that Eveleth shared with Reuters.

 

Subcritical explosive tests

Igniting fusion fuel allows researchers to study how such reactions work and how they might one day create a clean power source using the universe’s most plentiful resource, hydrogen. It also enables them to examine nuances of detonation that would otherwise require an explosive test.

The Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, of which both China and the United States are signatories, prohibits nuclear explosions in all environments.

Countries are allowed “subcritical” explosive tests, which do not create nuclear reactions. Laser fusion research, known as inertial confinement fusion, is also allowed.

Siegfried Hecker, a senior fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and the former director of Los Alamos National Laboratory, another key US nuclear weapons research facility, said that with testing banned, subcritical and laser fusion experiments were crucial to maintaining the safety and reliability of the US nuclear arsenal.

But for countries that have not done many test detonations, he said – China has tested 45 nuclear weapons, compared with 1,054 for the United States – such experiments would be less valuable because they do not have a large data set as a base.

“I don’t think it would make an enormous difference,” Hecker said. “And so … I’m not concerned about China getting ahead of us in terms of their nuclear facilities.”

Other nuclear powers, such as France, the United Kingdom and Russia, also operate inertial confinement fusion facilities.

The size of those facilities reflects the amount of power designers estimate is needed to apply to the target to achieve ignition, said Omar Hurricane, chief scientist for the inertial confinement fusion programme at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, which operates NIF.

“These days, I think you probably can build a facility that’s of equal energy or even more energetic (than NIF) and a smaller footprint,” Hurricane said. But, he added, at too small a scale, experimental fusion does not appear possible.

That other countries operate laser-driven fusion research centres is not a cause for alarm in itself, Hurricane said.

“It’s kind of hard to stop scientific progress and hold information back,” he said. “People can use science for different means and different ends, and that’s a complicated question.”

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.