r/fusion • u/Sun_In_A_Bottle • 14d ago
Why fusion, over everything else?
$15.2 billion in private investment over the past 5 years!
For an industry that is projected to need 1 million workers by 2040, how is the global private workforce roughly ONLY 4,000?!
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u/3z3ki3l 14d ago edited 14d ago
Why only 4,000 workers? Because it doesn’t work yet.
As for why fusion? Because the entire global economy is speculative, and the options everyone’s betting on are:
A) The candle burns to the bottom of the wick, and our planet along with it, or
B) fusion.
Seriously, that’s why. We can stretch our level of production for a few more centuries if we’re careful (and remain lucky with our collective nuclear armaments), but we won’t be able to reverse any of the damage we’ve done to our planet without fusion.
Whereas with fusion then astroid mining becomes more profitable than earthside digging, automation becomes increasingly reasonable in almost all industries, and we can actually reach escape velocity as a society.
Edit/also: As for why $15B in the last five years? Because we’re close. (We think.) And because the first people to do it basically own the future. Not that it would remain truly proprietary, but a few years head start puts the organization that does it in a position of unimaginable wealth and power.