From Monday to Friday, BigItalyFocus provides an information overview, ranged from development aid to made in Italy
(May 15) "I work in the European Agency for the development of fusion energy (www.f4e.europa.eu), where I'm in charge of the department that deals with the definition of contracts to build components for the Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor ITER, which is under construction in southern France. This is the largest international research project in the world, with the participation of Europe, U.S., China, India, Japan, South Korea and Russia. The project, worth about a billion euros per year, is carried out by companies and laboratories in the 27 EU member countries and Switzerland." So says Leonardo Biagioni, aeronautical engineer in Barcelona since 2008. "I've studied in Pisa where I graduated in Aeronautical Engineering. After a period in the United States, at Syracuse University, and again in Pisa, at the Scuola Normale, I finally got a Ph.D. in aerospace engineering, also in Pisa." Biagioni, 43 year from La Spezia, deals with industrial contracts for European components of the ITER project, he lives in Spain with his family, that follow him. "Barcelona is very similar to an Italian city and, in many ways, is better. For me and my family, life in Barcelona is a good one and we have no integration problems. We have no intention of returning to Italy at the moment because we don't see any interesting perspectives in there." According to Biagioni, "the phenomenon of 'new migration' is a one-way movement: those who leave, they don't want to come back." (Gil/Red)
ITALIAN RESEARCH AND THE “FAST” PROJECT
"The research and technological development of nuclear fusion represent real opportunities for growth and innovation, and will become crucial for future energy needs" but "Europe is still working on a 'road map' of the European program nuclear fusion" and "Italy needs to decide if wants to operate in this strategic sector." This is in the presentation of the workshop "The nuclear fusion research and its industrial consequences. A case study in the Italian industry". The debate was focused on the proposal to develop in Italy a new major fusion experiment, called FAST, which aims to solve physics and technology issues for fusion reactors.