
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.
The available energy generation is estimated at around 600 megawatts, the equivalent of two thirds of a nuclear power plant.
After the wretched declarations of the Minister of the Environment, the radioactive water of Fukushima is still looking for a destination, and the drums will soon be full.