kazakh delegation 2 nefThe representatives of the nuclear institutions of Kazakhstan who visited ITER on 21st February 2017 stated it simply and clearly: they are very interested in collaborating with ITER. The largest of the Central Asian republics (5.5 times the size of France), Kazakhstan has immense mineral resources and a strong scientific and technological infrastructure inherited from its Soviet past and expanded since the country's independence in 1991.

Kazakhstan also has a tokamak that happens to share with ITER the same "godfather": Evgeny Velikhov, the Russian scientist who was instrumental in the launching of the ITER Project in the mid-1980s, and who played a similar role a dozen years later for the Kazakhstan Material Testing (КТМ) tokamak.
 
ITER and Kazakhstan go back a long way. Kazakhstani personnel and institutions were involved in the early ITER design phase during the Soviet period, and as early as 2007 the country expressed an intention to continue its participation in the project. Over the past ten years, several delegations from Kazakhstan have visited ITER. Last Tuesday, on 21st February 2017, the proposal for collaboration was renewed. In the discussion that took place with ITER Director-General Bernard Bigot, Erlan Batyrbekov, director of the Kazakhstan Nuclear National Center, offered to establish a legal cooperation framework between ITER and the institution he heads.( Erlan Batyrbekov was accompanied by Alexandr Vurim, Deputy-Director of the Institute of Atomic Energy, and Vladimir Vityuk, Head of Laboratory). Among other things, this collaboration would enable the ITER Organization to access the KTM facility for the testing of plasma-facing materials.

The ITER Agreement is open to any nation that wishes to contribute to the project. Considering that ITER now has an overall project schedule through First Plasma (2025) and the start of Deuterium-Tritium fusion power experiments (2035), an increasing number of countries are considering cooperation.

For this reason, ITER is evaluating the creation of a specific "ITER Partner" status that would be differentiated from full ITER Member status. The unanimous consent of the ITER Council is naturally required for any such collaboration or partnership.
 
On a related note, the World Fair on "Future Energy" will open in June in Kazakhstan's capital, Astana. Kazakhstan's fusion program will be one of the centrepieces of the country's 5,000 m² pavilion; ITER will also be substantially represented at the Fair as an international exhibition within the French pavilion, featuring mockups, videos, and newly developed animations. The Chinese Domestic Agency will also feature ITER in a display in the Chinese pavilion, where it will unveil a new ITER Tokamak model.
 
Source: iter.org
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Research projects carried out at the IPPLM are funded by the Polish Ministry of Education and Science, the National Science Centre and by the European Commission within the framework of EUROfusion Consortium under grant agreement No 101052200. Financial support comes also from the International Atomic Energy Agency, European Space Agency and LaserLab Consortium as well as from the Fusion for Energy Agency.

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