Fukushima, still radioactive land 60 km from the plant
60 km from Fukushima the soil still has high levels of Chlorine-36 despite the reclamation: low risk for humans but reflections on nuclear power remain.
60 km from Fukushima the soil still has high levels of Chlorine-36 despite the reclamation: low risk for humans but reflections on nuclear power remain.
The IAEA is working with Japanese laboratories to test the safety of fish near the Fukushima nuclear power plant, where radioactive water is discharged into the sea.
A new study finds radioactive micro particles still present in a Fukushima building monitored six years after the nuclear disaster.
Images from a remote-controlled probe show piles of molten nuclear fuel at the bottom of the melted core of a Fukushima reactor.
The IAEA team in charge of inspecting the situation in Fukushima strongly doubts that the timing of the remediation will be respected.
Available power generation is estimated at about 600 megawatts, the equivalent of two-thirds of a nuclear power plant.
After the unfortunate declarations of the Minister of the Environment, the radioactive water from Fukushima is still looking for a destination, and the barrels will soon be full.
Beijing plans floating nuclear power plants in the South China Sea. For Washington, they threaten regional stability in an already tense area.
The extraordinary importance of Japanese government investments in seismic safety and citizen education.
With the launch of 55 new nuclear reactors and ambitious projects, China is aiming for a more sustainable and autonomous energy mix.
New low-cost mussel-shaped devices to monitor radioactivity in the seas, thanks to a team of scientists from Hong Kong.
The 100% renewable energy goal by 2035 continues: Germany shuts down its last power plants, and its nuclear age.
Minnesota nuclear plant admits leak of 400.000 gallons of radioactive water: event was kept under wraps for months.
Dozens of ready-made projects and available funds, but strong opposition from associations and public opinion: is the new nuclear power good or not?
The effects of nuclear tests, officially stopped for decades, are still present in nature and also end up on our table. A study in Nature Communications shows us this in all its evidence.
Latro, a "scorpion" to manage nuclear waste and other useful robots like him are bread for our future, but they can only arise from the public sector.
Thierry Gaugain's first "solo" concept is a jaw-dropping yacht of the future: Project L redefines all the standards of the sector.
Cellulose nanofibers are light, resistant, printable and recyclable: what are we waiting for to make wooden cars? In Japan they are thinking about it.
Super Typhoon Hagibis will make landfall tomorrow, hopefully not on land. In addition to the damage, Japan can absorb the energy with new turbines, the Magnus VAWT.
Atomic gardens? Simple: plant metal bars loaded with isotopes in the middle of the garden, expose it to radiation and mute the DNA of the plants. Nice, huh?