
Last modified: 2023-06-03 by  zachary harden
 zachary harden
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![[ITER flag]](../images/i/int_iter.gif) 
 
 
 image 
 by Eugene Ipavec, 15 December 2009
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A simple logo and a list of participating countries - or, in one case, a 
	group of countries - appear on the flag of ITER. From ITER’s website (http://www.iter.org/proj/Pages/Default.aspx):
	
"Scientists from all over the world have come together in ITER to work 
	toward a lofty goal: harness the energy produced by the fusion of atoms to 
	help meet mankind's future energy needs. ITER is a large-scale scientific 
	experiment intended to prove the viability of fusion as an energy source, 
	and to collect the data necessary for the design and subsequent operation of 
	the first electricity-producing fusion power plant. Launched as an idea for 
	international collaboration in 1985, the ITER Agreement includes China, the 
	European Union, India, Japan, Korea, Russia and the United States (...)."
	
Technical information is of course found on above website, here I should 
	point out that this new plant is being built at Cadarache in the South of 
	France.
To get back to the flag as it flies above the building site, 
	seen on a clickable photo
	
	http://www.iter.org/org/team/odg/comm/image_galleries/media%20photos_19.jpg) 
	the colours of which ought to visually match those of the logo as found on 
	ITER’s website - any deviation should be ascribed to France’s bright skies! 
	The field of the flag is a rich yellow (egg?) the lower half of which is 
	largely taken up by a white half-disk issuing from the lower horizontal 
	edge; the name "iter" in yellow letters appears on that edge, shifted 
	towards the fly; in the upper hoist corner are placed the names of "china / 
	eu / india / japan / korea / russia / usa" in white letters, arranged 
	vertically and left aligned. 
The local (national) member 
	organizations responsible for ITER support have their own 
logos which may appear on flags and whoever delves into them is bound to 
encounter a number of LOBs. Interestingly, former ITER logo’s may be 
found and these consist of a central name disk or space surrounded by the 
member’s flags of the period:
	http://www.boeing.com/assocproducts/hienergy/graphics/ITER-lgo.gif 
	and http://www.novaphotonics.com/ITER/assets/ITER_logo.png. 
Of course with the 
present flag and colour scheme ITER assumes a character of its own although a 
list of members appearing on an organization’s flag will be frowned upon by 
many.
Jan Mertens, 3 December 2009