Tokamak Energy – The Future of Thermonuclear Fusion Power

Chief Scientist and a founder of Tokamak Energy, as well as a member of the executive board, Dr. Mikhail Gryaznevich has joined forces in direct collaboration with Mr. Harley O’Neill, owner of Superyacht.me, in order to be the first to take the initial steps to introduce next-generation possibilities for advance ship fusion designs. History: Nearly 30 years ago, a group of industrial nations agreed on a project to develop a new, cleaner, and more sustainable source of energy. ITER was set in motion at the Geneva Superpower Summit in November 1985, when the idea of a collaborative international project to develop fusion energy for peaceful purposes was proposed by General Secretary Gorbachev of the former Soviet Union to US President Reagan. One year later, an agreement was reached: the European Union (Euratom), Japan, the Soviet Union and the USA would jointly pursue the design for a large international fusion facility, ITER. Conceptual design work began in 1988, followed by increasingly detailed engineering design phases until the final design for ITER was approved by the Members in 2001. The People’s Republic of China and the Republic of Korea joined the Project in 2003, followed by India in 2005. Selecting a location for ITER was a lengthy procedure that was concluded in 2005, when the ITER Members unanimously agreed on the site proposed by the European Union. The ITER installation would be built near Aix-en-Provence in southern France. Further negotiations established the ITER Agreement to detail the construction, exploitation and decommissioning phases, as well as the financing, organization and staffing of the ITER Organization. THE ITER AGREEMENT The ITER Agreement is signed at the Elysée Palace in Paris on 21 November 2006.In a ceremony hosted by French

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