In the coming months, the Indonesian Government will begin restricting waste shipments to landfills to ensure that organic waste is processed at the source through composting or other treatment ...
Finland’s FiR 1 research reactor and OK3 laboratory in Otaniemi have been released from regulatory control after successful decommissioning.
Nuclear power provides nearly 10 percent of the world's electricity and roughly a quarter of global low-carbon electricity. Yet if the world is to achieve the goals of the United Nations' Sustainable ...
US military airlifts crucial technology in push to test burgeoning energy source: 'Today is history'
"The American nuclear renaissance is to get that ball moving again, fast, carefully, but with private capital, American ...
Morning Overview on MSN
DOE-backed project aims to cut nuclear waste hazard to 300 years
The U.S. Department of Energy is betting $40 million that scientists can shrink the danger window of spent nuclear fuel from ...
Deep Isolation Nuclear, Inc. (“Deep Isolation” or the “Company”), a leading innovator in nuclear waste disposal technology, will share insights on the deployment readiness of its Universal Canister ...
Argentina's plan to revive uranium mining, led by President Milei to boost energy security, faces strong opposition from residents concerned about environmental impact and the likelihood that the ...
GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (KJCT) — Mesa County is expressing interest in the U.S. Department of Energy’s request for information on potential host sites for Nuclear Lifecycle Innovation Campuses, which ...
The brine-laden water produced during oil and gas extraction operations in the U.S. Permian Basin poses an operational constraint. The region generates more than 20 million bpd of produced water, ...
Millard County’s ancient salt dome could be “ideal” location for storing radioactive material, per state reports.
Japan is looking into using a remote deserted Pacific island nearly 2,000 kilometers (1,250 miles) from Tokyo as a site for ...
10don MSN
Scientists don't just want to neutralize radioactive waste—they want it to power our future
Virginia-based Jefferson Lab is leading a project to transform nuclear waste into usable electricity while also drastically reducing its radioactive life.
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