Year in images

In 2025, photographers found an endless source of inspiration in ITER

Whether professional, enthusiast, or occasional, photographers find an endless source of inspiration at ITER. On the worksite or inside the construction buildings, people at work, tools, components, light, reflections, and shadow come together to create a unique environment that appeals to anyone carrying a camera—or even a simple smartphone.

Workers stand on the cryostat base at the bottom of the tokamak assembly pit. The photograph was taken by Kevin Ballant, a design coordinator in the CAD Activities section and the driving force behind the launch of the ITER Photo Group in 2023. The Group organizes workshops and software training sessions, and at the end of this year showcased the work of some of its 80 members in an exhibition held in the lobby of ITER Headquarters. (See the link below for the virtual exhibition.)

The selection of photographs we are offering today as a “Year in Images” recap comes from two sources: the regular documentation of ITER activities by members of the Communication team, and contributions of the recently established ITER Photo Group.

Regardless of their origin, all of the images share the same intent: to convey—through graphic composition or a snapped portrait—the wonderment experienced when walking across the ITER worksite or inside the assembly and plant buildings. 

Attached to its rigging, vacuum vessel module #6 has just rotated 90 degrees and is heading towards his final destination in the tokamak assembly pit. This picture was shot from the height of the overhead crane. (Photo Kevin Ballant)

At ITER, a photographer’s eye can be attracted by many different “objects” or scenes. The handling of the massive components is the most obvious, but details like an array of manifolds or an alignment of bolts, a reflection in a pool of water, an expression on the face of a worker can be equally inspiring. In the spectacular ITER Council Room, a mere meeting is an invitation to press the shutter button.

Photography captures what words have difficulty expressing. Not that words are limited, but in describing the ITER environment, typical vocabulary risks being repetitive: the lifting of a vacuum vessel module, like the upending of a toroidal field coil, is always “awe-inspiring”; a busbar arrangement in the depths of the Tokamak Building or an alley lined with electrical equipment is evocative, inevitably, of an “alien world”…

Although they come with descriptive captions, we hope that the photographs we have selected for our 2025 “Year in Images” stand by themselves and communicate the feeling that inspired them.

Walk virtually through the most recent exposition of the ITER Photo Group "Through the ITER Lens."