By Alec Hively June 6, 2026 3:47 pm EST
China's tokamak reactors, referred to as "artificial suns" for their mimicry of the plasma fusion occurring in the sun's core, have the potential to generate massive amounts of low-cost clean energy at scale. Beijing's most advanced effort is the Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST),
a nuclear fusion reactor capable of burning six times hotter than the sun. Operated by the Institute of Plasma Physics, Beijing expects its reactor to record its
first fusion ignition experiment in 2027, a milestone that would make EAST
the world's first self-sustained reactor, in which plasma can burn without external heating sources.
In a fusion reactor, scientists combine two positively charged nuclei to generate mass energy and heat. However, because of the nuclei are both positively charged, reactors must generate enough power to overcome the magnetic forces repelling them. Tokamaks are cylindrical reactors that address these challenges by electrically charging these hydrogen nuclei, turning them into a dense plasma. However, said plasma is incredibly unstable, requiring the plasma to reach densities capable of generating self-sustaining heat. To do so, tokomaks must operate at unfound scales, generating temperatures 150 million degrees Celsius, roughly 10 times that of the sun's core, and magnetic fields hundreds of thousands times larger than Earth's.
The EAST tokamak is just one of several fusion projects on the horizon for Beijing, which has invested an estimated $6.5 billion in the technology since 2023. A pillar of its most recent Five-Year Plan, China's fusion industry has harnessed an entrepreneurial spirit mirroring that of Silicon Valley, riding a wave of public investments, coordinated research efforts, and concerted supply chain developments to soar past global competitors. However, Western firms are fast on its heels. In the United States, for instance, roughly 42 companies have garnered $8 billion of capital to pursue the technology, constituting roughly half of global investment.
Fusion forward
Since its establishment in 2006, EAST has grown into the preeminent fusion reactor project, accomplishing several key milestones on its way towards achieving sustained fusion reactions. In January 2025, for instance, EAST set a record for the longest "high-quality burn" in plasma fusion history. Lasting 1,066 seconds, the reaction more than doubled the previous record set by EAST in 2023. During the experiment, EAST reached temperatures of 100 million degrees Celsius. A year later, researchers broke a major density barrier known as the Greenwald limit, which describes the mathematical limit to the number of atoms within a plasma before the reaction becomes unstable.(Shortly after, a different
70-year-old nuclear problem was also solved.) The record proved that plasma could remain stable at extremely high densities, a major milestone towards widescale operability.