The Fantasy of Reviving Nuclear Energy
The nuclear industry has a long history of failing to deliver on its promises.
By Stephanie Cooke
The nuclear industry has a long history of failing to deliver on its promises.
By Stephanie Cooke
The watchdog agency did not attribute blame, but its head said the strikes at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant “significantly increase the risk of a major nuclear accident.”
By Marc Santora
A light-water reactor could provide more weapons-grade plutonium, abetting the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s vow to expand his nuclear arsenal.
By Choe Sang-Hun
Russia targeted power systems last year and recent attacks suggest a return to that strategy, raising anxiety among Ukrainian civilians and officials.
By Marc Santora and Matthew Mpoke Bigg
By exaggerating the risks from Japan’s discharge of treated wastewater, Beijing hopes to cast Japan and its allies as conspirators in malfeasance, analysts say.
By Motoko Rich and John Liu
Si ese país, una fuerza cultural y económica respetada, puede desechar agua contaminada de Fukushima sin afrontar ninguna consecuencia, ¿qué detendrá a otros países?
By Azby Brown
If Japan dumps its tainted Fukushima water in the ocean, what’s to stop other countries from doing the same?
By Azby Brown
In the face of regional and domestic objections, the country plans to proceed with a discharge at Fukushima that will eventually reach more than a million tons of water.
By Motoko Rich and Hisako Ueno
The International Atomic Energy Agency’s final report declared the treated water from the destroyed nuclear plant had met its safety standards. Critics continue to demand more transparency.
By Motoko Rich and Choe Sang-Hun
The destruction of a dam endangered the main source of water used for the critical task of cooling reactors and spent fuel rods at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine.
By Matthew Mpoke Bigg
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