Jacobs wins new contract to support UK fusion programme

03/01/2023

Jacobs has been awarded a contract to support the UK’s fusion energy research programme. The United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) has appointed the company on much of its new Plant Maintenance and Operational Support Services (PMOSS) framework. 

Subject to competition under the framework, Jacobs’ project delivery professionals will be embedded in client teams at the UKAEA, the UK’s national fusion laboratory, to work on some of the world’s most advanced research into machine design, robotics, materials science and fusion fuel.

“Assisting the UKAEA to realise the enormous potential of fusion for generating safe, sustainable and low-carbon electricity delivers on our commitment towards a clean energy future,” said Jacobs Energy Security and Technology Senior Vice President Karen Wiemelt. “Fusion power would be a new source of safe, non-carbon-emitting and almost limitless energy, which makes this endeavour one of the keys to creating a more connected and sustainable world.”

“Delivering fusion energy is a quest – one of the biggest scientific and engineering challenges of them all, but the rewards will be enormous. Putting fusion electricity on the grid has the potential to provide ‘baseload’ power, complementing renewable and other low-carbon energy sources as a share of many countries’ energy portfolios,” said the UKAEA Chief Technology Officer Tim Bestwick.

The PMOSS framework focuses on key UKAEA-led programmes, including the Tritium Advanced Technology (H3AT) facility, which will open at UKAEA next year, aimed at exploring fuel storage, breeding and recovery techniques for future fusion powerplants. Jacobs’ specialists will also be available to support other UKAEA facilities, such as Remote Applications in Challenging Environments (RACE), which tests and designs robotic and remote solutions, the Material Research Facility (MRF), which researches specialist materials that can withstand extreme conditions, and the Fusion Technology Facility (FTF) at Culham and in Rotherham, which will test fusion components in realistic conditions.

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