At the present time there is no possibility of fusion plants anywhere in the world, the next phase is the building of a large experimental plant in France (ITER), which will move research on, but still not designed to produce useful power. In my view this is at least 50 years away, before useful power plants could be built.
Not until such plants have been designed and a working prototype built, probably in the US or Europe. I would guess another 50 years development will be required before that
No, a nuclear power plant producing electricity is an example of nuclear fission, not fusion. In nuclear fission, the nucleus of an atom is split, releasing energy, whereas in nuclear fusion, atomic nuclei combine to release energy.
they have never built one
Nuclear fusion does not currently occur in nuclear plants. Nuclear plants use nuclear fission, where atoms are split to release energy. Fusion reactions, in which atomic nuclei combine to release energy, are not yet used commercially for electricity generation.
There is very little similarity between present day power plants which use nuclear fission, and any possible nuclear fusion plant of the future
risks and benefits of nuclear power
Only the Philippines can answer this
No, because the highest amount of energy needed in a nuclear fusion is 40,000,000 K, which is only known to occur on the sun.
There is only one nuclear power plant in the Philippines. It is located in Bataan and was made in 1973.
In a nuclear power plant, nuclear fission is used to generate energy by splitting atoms of uranium or another fuel. This process releases a large amount of heat, which is used to produce steam to drive turbines and generators to create electricity. Nuclear fusion, on the other hand, is a process where atoms are combined at extremely high temperatures and pressures to release energy, but it is not currently used in commercial nuclear power plants due to the technical challenges involved.
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Fusion produces no radioactive waste, and can yield a constant flow of energy instead of in nuclear fission where a nuclear power plant must be refueled and closed for 40-100 days out of the year.