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Long-term strategy calls for up to 10 new reactors in Canada
Canada has launched a Nuclear Energy Strategy, a long-term vision of its nuclear power potential that includes plans to deploy up to 10 new large-scale reactors in the country by 2040.
The June 22 announcement, along with ongoing projects at Darlington and Bruce Power, further confirm Canada's ambitions to expand its nuclear power presence not just domestically but also abroad. Four pillars stand at the heart of the country’s Nuclear Energy Strategy: new nuclear builds in Canada, maintaining its status as a top nuclear supplier and exporter, expanding uranium production, and continuing nuclear fission and fusion innovations.
Rainer W. Kühne, Roman E. Sioda
Fusion Science and Technology | Volume 27 | Number 2 | March 1995 | Pages 187-189
Technical Paper | Special Section: Pulsed High-Density Systems / Nuclear Reaction in Solid | doi.org/10.13182/FST95-A30376
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
An extended micro hot fusion scenario attempts to explain the burst processes of cold fusion reports and unsuccessful experiments. A heuristic model requires only 10 m3 of palladium deuteride to release a power of 1 GW for a long time. This might facilitate future commercial use of cold fusion.