Lessons Learned from the ITER Project Experience

Kathy McCarthy

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Tuesday, February 27, 2024

12:00pm

NW17-218 Hybrid

PSFC Seminars

Abstract: At the international ITER site in France, civil construction is complete, machine assembly is underway, plant systems are being installed and commissioned, and technical challenges are being resolved. In parallel, US ITER is continuing to complete fabrication and deliveries for ITER across 12 sub-systems. This experience offers a wide range of practical lessons learned for other fusion projects, whether next generation machines or a fusion pilot plant. This presentation will review key lessons from US ITER’s experience and highlight additional learning from the international project.

Bio: Kathy McCarthy joined the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in 2020 after three years as Laboratory Director and Vice President for Science and Technology for the Canadian Nuclear Laboratories, where she oversaw a staff of 650 and grew the labs’ commercial work. She previously held a variety of engineering and leadership roles at Idaho National Laboratory (INL), including Director of Domestic Programs in INL’s Nuclear Science and Technology Directorate, Director of the Light Water Reactor Sustainability Program Technical Integration Office, and National Technical Director for the Systems Analysis Campaign for DOE Office of Nuclear Energy’s Fuel Cycle R&D Program.

McCarthy began her career in fusion technology with a focus on liquid metal blanket designs. She was a participant in the US DOE US-USSR Young Scientist program, which included experience at the Efremov Institute in Leningrad, Russia, the Latvian Academy of Sciences in Riga, Latvia, and the Kurchatov Institute in Moscow, Russia, and was also a Guest Scientist at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Karlsruhe, West Germany.

McCarthy earned her Ph.D. in nuclear engineering from the University of California, Los Angeles, with a major field of fusion engineering and minor fields of nuclear science and engineering and physics. She was inducted into the National Academy of Engineering in 2019 and named an American Nuclear Society (ANS) Fellow in 2021. She has also received two ANS presidential citations plus the 2022 Fusion Power Associates Leadership Award, 1996 ITER US Home Team Leadership Award, and the 1994 David Rose Award for Excellence in Fusion Engineering. McCarthy served on the Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee from 1999 to 2013 and on the US ITER Technical Advisory Committee from 2010 to 2013, and has held numerous ANS leadership positions.