• The Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant consisted of six General Electric (GE) light water boiling water reactors (BWRs). (wikipedia.org)
  • The charts are cross-referenced to the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) "Roadmap" plan to bring the nuclear reactors and the spent fuel pools at the Fukushima Daiichi plant to a stable cooling condition and to mitigate radioactive releases. (iaea.org)
  • Although faced with a growing public backlash against all things nuclear, the nation's 54 reactors are already slowly making a comeback. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • In addition to the moratorium, the German government immediately ordered the definitive shutdown of the two oldest nuclear power reactors, in operation since the mid 1970s. (globalissues.org)
  • Five other nuclear power reactors, in operation since the late 1970s, were also closed down, albeit only temporarily -- one plant has been out of service for several months, due to technical problems. (globalissues.org)
  • According to official figures, the 17 nuclear power reactors generated 23 percent of all energy consumed in Germany. (globalissues.org)
  • The European Union (EU) also announced that it will be carrying out 'stress tests' on all 143 nuclear reactors in operation in the member countries. (globalissues.org)
  • A week after a towering tsunami smashed into the atomic power plant on the Fukushima coast, sparking meltdowns in some reactors, Nihei sent his family away from the clouds of radiation many believed were pouring forth. (medindia.net)
  • Its three operating reactors were the same type and vintage as those at Fukushima, and were under the same weak regulatory oversight. (popsci.com)
  • Kuwait pulled out last month of a contract to build four reactors, Venezuelan froze all nuclear development projects and Mexico dropped plans to build ten reactors," The Guardian reports. (progressive.org)
  • As reactors were built along Japan's coastline, the labs were delegated to certify that fish supplies remain safe despite wastewater discharge from the nuclear plants. (cbsnews.com)
  • At the time of the disaster, Japan depended on 54 functioning nuclear reactors for a huge portion of its power. (rt.com)
  • Six reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi are currently being dismantled as part of a cleanup process that takes decades and is complicated by technological challenges and radioactive waste. (rt.com)
  • GE designed the Fukushima reactors. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • South Korea's 21 reactors provide almost 40 percent of the country's electricity, and it is becoming a major nuclear exporter in the world energy industry. (thebulletin.org)
  • Nuclear safety is a far more established concept than the security of nuclear reactors. (thebulletin.org)
  • However, Fukushima has proven that reactors are not 100 percent safe. (thebulletin.org)
  • The Fukushima Daiichi reactors are GE boiling water reactors (BWR) of an early (1960s) design supplied by GE, Toshiba and Hitachi, with what is known as a Mark I containment. (world-nuclear.org)
  • The new policy says Japan must maximise the use of existing nuclear reactors by restarting as many of them as possible and prolonging the operating life of old reactors beyond their 60-year limit, and by developing next-generation reactors to replace them. (breakingnews.ie)
  • Most nuclear reactors in Japan are more than 30 years old. (breakingnews.ie)
  • Nuclear energy accounts for less than 7% of Japan's energy supply, and achieving the government's goal of raising its share to 20%-22% by 2030 will require about 27 reactors, from the current 10 - a target some say is not achievable. (breakingnews.ie)
  • We petition Japan's Nuclear Regulation Authority to declare a moratorium on its review of electric utility applications to restart nuclear power reactors, and, give top priority to undertaking measures to address the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident. (change.org)
  • In February 2023, the Cabinet approved Japan's new Green Transformation strategy, which entails the development and construction of next-generation reactors, as well as the restarting of existing reactors and the extension of nuclear power plant operations. (greenpeace.org)
  • However, the decommissioning process and ultimate disposition of reactors No. 1, 2, and 3 of the Fukushima Daiichi, which suffered meltdowns, remains unobtainable. (greenpeace.org)
  • But Takahara said the scarcity of information from inside the nuclear reactors makes planning and development of the necessary robotic technology and a facility for the melted fuel removal extremely difficult. (kron4.com)
  • And now only 9 of its 54 nuclear reactors are back online. (kunc.org)
  • The Great East Japan Earthquake that occurred on March 11, 2011 caused the Fukushima Daiichi NPS to lose all power, which led to the loss of the stable cooling function of the reactors. (go.jp)
  • Reactors at nuclear power plants were badly damaged and resulted in radiation leaking into the surrounding Fukushima Prefecture. (who.int)
  • At that point, a process called core oxidization started occurring rapidly, creating corrium-a lava-like mixture of materials that forms inside a nuclear reactor during a meltdown-which generated huge amounts hydrogen inside the building until it finally exploded. (aps.org)
  • The components that form the backbone of nuclear safety in an operating power plant - for example the primary circuit pumps or the reactor pressure vessel - are now irrelevant. (world-nuclear-news.org)
  • Although the announcement of the tests was greeted by practically all European instances, environmental and energy experts pointed out that the risks represented by nuclear power go beyond the mere operation of the reactor systems. (globalissues.org)
  • An International Atomic Energy Agency investigator examines Reactor Unit 3 at the damaged Fukushima Daiichi plant, May 27, 2011. (popsci.com)
  • A "core meltdown" might have occurred at reactor 2 Fukushima Daiichi. (planetsave.com)
  • The nuclear and industrial safety agency (NISA) has tried to circulate the coolant by steam instead of electricity, but NHK reported that attempts to lower the temperature inside the reactor chamber have not worked well. (planetsave.com)
  • A hydrogen explosion at the number 3 reactor at the Fukushima No 1 nuclear injured 11 people. (planetsave.com)
  • The video above is of the second nuclear reactor explosion at the Fukushima Daiichi in Japan. (planetsave.com)
  • Japan's plan to release nuclear waste - treated radioactive water - from the crippled Fukushima reactor into the ocean has its supporters but is causing ripples in the Pacific. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Sometime in the next few months, more than a million tonnes of treated radioactive water from Japan's ruined Fukushima nuclear reactor will begin to be pumped into the Pacific Ocean. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • The words "nuclear reactor," "radiation," and "safety" have new resonance. (thebulletin.org)
  • On the "security" front, a person with malicious intent and access to nuclear power plants could re-create similar conditions to the Fukushima disaster that all lead to a meltdown and radiation leaks: damage to a reactor's cooling system, inability to supply outside power into the reactor, and damage to the diesel generator. (thebulletin.org)
  • A Japanese engineer who helped build reactor 4 at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant said such plants are inherently unstable, urging Taiwan to ditch atomic energy for renewable resources. (japantimes.co.jp)
  • This cramped crawl space is the heart of a nuclear reactor in the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, site of the most severe radioactive hotspot in the world. (cnet.com)
  • Which reactor technologies will be approved after Fukushima? (uxc.com)
  • UxC has carefully reviewed all available information on China's nuclear energy activities from both primary and secondary sources in order to produce the most fact-based, credible assessments for the country's reactor expansion and fuel cycle development. (uxc.com)
  • In order to accurately forecast China's nuclear reactor growth after Fukushima, we analyze all key issues, including the new policy and regulatory framework, reactions by industry, impacts on the reactor supply chain, financing, and human resources, as well as individual nuclear plant projects and related reactor technology choices. (uxc.com)
  • Additional key developments will include the expected passage of a new Atomic Energy Law as well as a new Nuclear Safety Regulatory Regime, which will determine the manner and pace of the next phase of reactor construction in the country. (uxc.com)
  • Given China's critical position in the world nuclear markets - representing roughly 50% of all likely new reactor growth through 2020 - understanding the ongoing developments in China will be crucial in predicting the future path of our global industry. (uxc.com)
  • The Japan Times is reporting that "six people are set to sue Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings Inc. (Tepco) over thyroid cancer that they claim they developed due to exposure to radioactive substances released from the 2011 triple reactor meltdown at its stricken Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant. (beyondnuclear.org)
  • 1] The high levels of radiation pose challenges for on-site work, and there remains no feasible plan for the removal of hundreds of tons of nuclear fuel debris from the reactor buildings. (greenpeace.org)
  • The reactor buildings of Unit 1, Unit 2, and Unit 3 of the Fukushima Daiichi NPS still contain "fuel debris," which is melted fuel mixed with structural materials that has solidified. (go.jp)
  • March 11 marks the anniversary of Japan's 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor disaster. (cdc.gov)
  • Among the losses was the damage to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor that lost onsite power and was unable to cool the reactor cores. (cdc.gov)
  • The Tuesday session was titled "Drowning in Carbon: The imperative of nuclear power," however, the focus turned to fallout from the nuclear disaster. (aps.org)
  • Despite the passing of time, the nation remains far from recovered, as it continues to struggle not only with reconstructing the damaged regions - but also in dealing with the nuclear fallout triggered by the disaster. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • Japan has partially lifted an evacuation order in one of the two hometowns of the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant for the first time since the 2011 disaster. (theage.com.au)
  • The central area of Okuma town, Fukushima, Japan, where evacuation orders have been partially lifted for the first time since the 2011 disaster. (theage.com.au)
  • TEN years after Japan's Fukushima nuclear disaster , life in the region is finally edging back to normal. (newscientist.com)
  • From a nuclear disaster that some warn could leave part of Japan a hollow shell for generations, Mikio Nihei's family is split by his need to work and their fear of radiation. (medindia.net)
  • The world's worst nuclear disaster in a generation is officially recorded as having killed no one. (medindia.net)
  • The 2011 disaster delivered a devastating one-two punch to the Fukushima plant. (popsci.com)
  • Instead, the seafood samples will be checked for radiation -- part of Japan's fight to restore confidence in its food supply after the Fukushima nuclear disaster . (cbsnews.com)
  • The goal is part of a wide scale effort to push nuclear forward after the industry was all but obliterated in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima disaster. (rt.com)
  • Now, nuclear has even finally managed to outpace the production of renewable energy plants in Japan (with the exception of hydroelectric power) for the first time since the 2011 disaster, thanks to major campaigning by the industry itself along with government support. (rt.com)
  • Yes, this is a just a tiny fraction of the 54 nuclear power plants that were powering Japan until 2011, but it's still much more than many experts expected after the lasting devastation of the Fukushima disaster and the subsequent widespread resentment of nuclear plants. (rt.com)
  • It was the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • However, it is undeniable that Japan's nuclear disaster has sounded alarm bells around the world. (thebulletin.org)
  • It may be difficult to avoid a nuclear safety discussion at the summit next year, considering the gravity of the disaster and its potential life consequences, coupled with what was a growing global demand for nuclear energy to mitigate climate change. (thebulletin.org)
  • The Fukushima disaster provides the impetus to bring more to the table than nuclear security: Nuclear safety and radioactive materials could be discussed, as well. (thebulletin.org)
  • The Fukushima disaster is a "safety" concern, while unauthorized entry to a nuclear power plant, sabotage, or a terrorist attack fall under "security. (thebulletin.org)
  • The safety and security of nuclear power plants could be included in the summit agenda in light of the Fukushima disaster, as well as Seoul's rising role as a major nuclear exporter. (thebulletin.org)
  • Mitsuhiko Tanaka, arriving in Taipei on Tuesday with a delegation of Diet members for a six-day visit, told a press conference Wednesday that the 1986 Chernobyl disaster changed his views on nuclear power. (japantimes.co.jp)
  • Nuclear expert David Lochbaum and award-winning journalist Susan Stranahan discuss the weaknesses in nuclear regulation and whether the US has the proper safeguards to protect its citizens from a similar disaster. (truthout.org)
  • To clean up the worst nuclear disaster in history. (cnet.com)
  • Five years after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, residents in communities near the crippled plant are coping with how their lives have changed. (cbc.ca)
  • But these days, few people visit their 154-year-old home, which is now a stone's throw from a sprawling nuclear waste dump set up after the Fukushima disaster on Japan's northeast coast five years ago. (cbc.ca)
  • LONSDORF: Yeah, so a lot of people think of Chernobyl when they think of nuclear disaster, which is also in Ukraine. (kpbs.org)
  • And she's also spent a bunch of time in Fukushima studying the disaster there. (kpbs.org)
  • CHANG: Well, if a nuclear disaster does happen, can you just give us an idea of what the long-term consequences could be, given what we've seen in Fukushima? (kpbs.org)
  • Anti-nuclear sentiment and safety concerns rose sharply in Japan after the 2011 Fukushima disaster, and restart approvals have since come slowly under stricter safety standards. (breakingnews.ie)
  • They are represented by campaigning lawyers Kenichi Ido and Hiroyuki Kawai (pictured), who praised the courage it took for the defendants to come forward, given the scale of the Japanese government's dismissal and denial that thyroid cancers were caused by the nuclear disaster. (beyondnuclear.org)
  • The plaintiffs, from Fukushima Prefecture, were all children, ranging from six to 16 years of age, at the time of the nuclear disaster. (beyondnuclear.org)
  • Given the scale of the disaster at the Fukushima nuclear plant, it should instead prioritize all its efforts to reduce the risks to the environment and public health from the Fukushima plant. (change.org)
  • Tokyo , Japan - Today marks the 12th anniversary of the Great East Japan Earthquake and the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, both of which inflicted immeasurable damage on Japan. (greenpeace.org)
  • 2] Given these issues, the promotion of nuclear power at this time ignores the reality of the on-going nuclear crisis at Fukushima Daiichi and is a complete disregard for those who have suffered and continue to suffer the consequences of the 2011 nuclear disaster. (greenpeace.org)
  • TOKYO (Reuters) - Twelve years after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, Japan has started to release treated radioactive water into the sea, a key step in the process of decommissioning the stricken plant, but much tougher tasks lie ahead, such as molten fuel removal. (yahoo.com)
  • In 2016, the government doubled to 21.5 trillion yen ($148.60 billion) its estimate of the costs of responding to the Fukushima disaster, including compensation, decommissioning and decontamination efforts. (yahoo.com)
  • CHANG: So it has been almost 10 years since this earthquake, this deadly tsunami and this nuclear disaster hit Japan all at once. (kunc.org)
  • I mean, Japan got nearly a third of its energy from nuclear power before this disaster. (kunc.org)
  • They are saying that it could take up to 40 years to clean up the Fukushima disaster, and meanwhile countless innocent people will develop cancer and other health problems as a result of exposure to high levels of nuclear radiation. (rinf.com)
  • We are talking about a nuclear disaster that is absolutely unprecedented, and it is constantly getting worse. (rinf.com)
  • Comparison of mortality patterns after the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant radiation disaster and during the COVID-19 pandemic. (bvsalud.org)
  • What are the political effects of a nuclear disaster? (lu.se)
  • The Italian decision to abandon nuclear power is very similar to the one made by the German government after the 2011 Fukushima disaster. (lu.se)
  • On September 19 in Tokyo, about 60,000 people, including refugees from Fukushima Prefecture, held a rally called Goodbye Nuclear Power Plants," Akira Tashiro reported for The Progressive in the December/January issue . (progressive.org)
  • In Fukushima Prefecture, the decision was taken in November 2011 to decontaminate 11 municipalities evacuated after the accident and the 40 non-evacuated municipalities affected by lower levels of radioactivity. (world-nuclear-news.org)
  • While a part of the evacuation zone in Fukushima Prefecture has been gradually lifted, other areas remain highly contaminated and unsafe to inhabit. (greenpeace.org)
  • In this photo provided by Cabinet Public Affairs Office, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida eats the seafood from Fukushima prefecture at lunch at the prime minister's office in Tokyo, Japan, Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2023. (yahoo.com)
  • Kishida and the three ministers had sashimi of flounder, octopus and sea bass, caught off the Fukushima coast after the water release, along with vegetables, fruits and a bowl of rice that were harvested in the prefecture, Economy and Industry Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura, who was at the meeting, told reporters. (yahoo.com)
  • Effective half-life of 134Cs and 137Cs in Fukushima Prefecture when compared to theoretical decay models. (cdc.gov)
  • Thirty-five fixed dose-rate monitors were used to record dose rates at 1 mo intervals from the time of installation in Fukushima Prefecture in April 2012 until December 2018 and were used to estimate the effective half-life for radiocesium contamination based on external radiation dose rates. (cdc.gov)
  • 106 Criticisms have been made about the public perception of radiological hazards resulting from accidents and the implementation of evacuations (similar to the Chernobyl nuclear accident), as they caused much more harm than they prevented. (wikipedia.org)
  • Italy, which phased out nuclear power in 1987 after the catastrophe of Chernobyl, is the only leading industrialised country without nuclear energy. (globalissues.org)
  • According to the studies conducted in Europe after the Chernobyl nuclear accident and as confirmed by studies conducted in Japan after the FDNPP accident, the 137 Cs deposited on forests is expected to circulate within the forest ecosystems. (nature.com)
  • CHANG: And why do experts keep talking about Fukushima as a comparison to the Zaporizhzhia plant, as opposed to, say, like what happened at Chernobyl? (kpbs.org)
  • Few of the most known are accidents in Chernobyl and Fukushima nuclear power plants. (lu.se)
  • To measure pre-Chernobyl attitudes to nuclear power, I use municipality-level voting outcomes from the 1980 referendum on the future of nuclear power in Sweden. (lu.se)
  • First, the decline in support for nuclear power after Chernobyl was more pronounced in high-fallout areas, which is in line with the increase in MP support. (lu.se)
  • Fishermen and residents of Fukushima and five other prefectures along Japan's northeastern coast filed a lawsuit Friday demanding a halt to the ongoing release of treated radioactive wastewater from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea. (ap.org)
  • With a nuclear meltdown underway at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Complex in Japan, a previously planned session at the March Meeting on the future of nuclear energy took on a decidedly different tone than the presenters had planned, and one of the presenters, Toshikazu Suzuki, of Japan's National Institute of Radiological Science, was forced to cancel because of his role in the nuclear remediation efforts at the ailing plant. (aps.org)
  • The meltdown of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant saw locals evacuate the area. (newscientist.com)
  • Now, eight years later, Japanese nuclear is still nowhere close to meeting its production levels from before the Fukushima meltdown, but it has been making a slow and steady comeback. (rt.com)
  • Well, if a meltdown does occur at Zaporizhzhia, it might look like something akin to Fukushima. (kpbs.org)
  • As of April 2012, there were 1,331 spent fuel elements remaining at the disabled Japanese nuclear power plant, where a meltdown occurred on March 11, 2011. (statista.com)
  • The Fukushima plant suffered triple meltdowns, compared to the single fuel core meltdown at Three Mile Island, which means the debris retrieval operation will be much larger and more complicated this time around. (yahoo.com)
  • Treated radioactive wastewater has accumulated since the March 2011 meltdown at the nuclear plant caused by a massive earthquake and tsunami. (yahoo.com)
  • It also destroyed the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station and released radioactive materials over a large area. (popsci.com)
  • In April 2021, the government of Japan decided on a policy to discharge ALPS (Advanced Liquid Processing System) treated water stored at the site of the Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings (TEPCO) Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station (hereinafter "Fukushima Daiichi NPS") into the sea, in order to safely and steadily proceed with the decommissioning of the Fukushima Daiichi NPS for the reconstruction of Fukushima. (go.jp)
  • Thousands of Japanese residents are still waiting to be evacuated from Fukushima as the government and the Fukushima Daiichi power plant management held discussions on Wednesday over the efforts to bring down the two-month nuclear crisis to an end. (ibtimes.com)
  • In the aftermath of Fukushima crisis, energy experts have reaffirmed that Germany could do without nuclear power by 2015, without having to suffer any power shortages. (globalissues.org)
  • But what would a nuclear crisis like Fukushima look like in a war zone? (kpbs.org)
  • The move is a major reversal of its phase-out plan following the Fukushima crisis. (breakingnews.ie)
  • The crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi site continues with no end in sight. (change.org)
  • Rather than trying to resuscitate a nuclear industry that remains in crisis and which cannot meet the real energy needs of Japan or the climate emergency, the Japanese government should implement the transition towards a sustainable future with renewable energy as rapidly as possible. (greenpeace.org)
  • Japan's Fukushima region transformed from rural haven to ravaged wasteland when the earthquake and tsunami struck in March 2011. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, 150 miles northeast of Tokyo, was severely damaged by the earthquake and tsunami with its crucial cooling systems knocked out, resulting in a series of explosions, meltdowns - and the world's worst nuclear accident in 25 years. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • Masuda was superintendent of the Fukushima Daini nuclear power plant at the time of the Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami. (world-nuclear-news.org)
  • The period coincides with the so-called moratorium on nuclear power the government in Berlin decreed Mar. 14, within days of the magnitude 9 earthquake, followed by tsunami that devastated the northeast coast of Japan, and severely damaged the Fukushima nuclear power plant. (globalissues.org)
  • Author Najmedin Meshkati holding an earthquake railing in a Fukushima Daiichi control room during a 2012 site visit. (popsci.com)
  • On March 11, 2011 the largest earthquake ever recorded in Japan (9.0-9.1 Mw) caused a devastating tsunami to crash into the Japanese coastline, causing no fewer than three meltdowns at the Fukushima nuclear plant, in addition to hydrogen-air explosions, the release of radioactive material, and a lasting, distrust of the safety of nuclear energy throughout Japan and across the globe . (rt.com)
  • Every few weeks, since the March 11th earthquake, tsunami, and ongoing nuclear crises in Japan, we've been checking in with a few teachers there. (edtechtalk.com)
  • The so-called Fukushima 50 are all repeatedly being exposed to dangerously high radioactive levels as they attempt to restore vital cooling systems following the earthquake and tsunami on March 11. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • The Fukushima plant was destroyed in the 2011 earthquake and resulting tsunami. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • BLANK_AUDIO] In 2011, a 9.0 earthquake triggered a tsunami with 50-foot waves that devastated the plant's powers supply so it could not longer cool all the nuclear rods. (cnet.com)
  • In 2011, Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was destroyed by a 9.0 magnitude earthquake. (yahoo.com)
  • Seawater samples taken from near the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, damaged by a massive March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami, are seen at Mothers' Radiation Lab Fukushima, known as a citizens' testing center Tarachine, in Iwaki, northeastern Japan on Friday, Aug. 25, 2023. (woodtv.com)
  • The Great East Japan Earthquake, which occurred in Tohoku, Japan on 11 March 2011, was followed by a devastating tsunami and damage to nuclear power plants that resulted in radiation leakage. (who.int)
  • The Fukushima Daiichi plant began discharging the treated and diluted wastewater into the Pacific Ocean on Aug. 24. (ap.org)
  • A 2021 study shows that eating a lifetime's worth of Fukushima fish caught entirely within a few kilometres of the wastewater outlet amounts to 0.02 micro-sieverts of tritium radiation. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Japan is about to release contaminated wastewater from its failed Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific Ocean because it's running out of storage space. (yahoo.com)
  • TOKYO (AP) - Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and three Cabinet ministers ate Fukushima fish sashimi at a lunch meeting Wednesday, in an apparent effort to show that fish is safe following the release of treated radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant that began last week. (yahoo.com)
  • According to Yonhap news agency, the Presidential Office cafeteria this week was serving Korean fish, whose demands have fallen due to concern about the impact of the release of the wastewater from the Fukushima plant. (yahoo.com)
  • IWAKI, Japan (AP) - Fish auction prices at a port south of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant were mixed amid uncertainty over how seafood consumers will respond to the release of treated and diluted radioactive wastewater into the ocean. (woodtv.com)
  • Fukushima lost power and the backup generators were also out, that's what caused the meltdowns. (kpbs.org)
  • The Fukushima nuclear accident was a major nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Ōkuma, Fukushima, Japan which began on March 11, 2011. (wikipedia.org)
  • No adverse health effects among Fukushima residents or power station workers have been documented that are directly attributable to radiation exposure from the accident. (wikipedia.org)
  • The accident triggered widespread evacuations, large economic losses and the eventual shutdown of all nuclear power plants in Japan. (popsci.com)
  • Kiyoshi Kurokawa chaired an independent national commission , known as the NAIIC, created by the Diet of Japan to investigate the root causes of the Fukushima Daiichi accident. (popsci.com)
  • Those reviews and many others concluded that Fukushima was a man-made accident , triggered by natural hazards, that could and should have been avoided . (popsci.com)
  • Most of the area contaminated by the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident is covered by forest. (nature.com)
  • Under unusually conservative radiation safety limits enacted in the wake of the Fukushima accident in March 2011, a reading of more than 100 bequerels per kilogram triggers an automatic ban. (cbsnews.com)
  • Radioactive leak impedes Japanese fishing, again 02:19 Amassing the results of tens of thousands of samples like this, Japan's Fisheries Agency says ocean and fish contamination has sharply declined since the March 2011 nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. (cbsnews.com)
  • Following the March 2011 accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, the Japanese government launched decontamination work in the surrounding area. (world-nuclear-news.org)
  • The study - Effectiveness of landscape decontamination following the Fukushima nuclear accident: A review - is the result of an international collaboration led by Olivier Evrard, researcher at the Laboratory of Climate and Environmental Sciences at Université Paris Saclay. (world-nuclear-news.org)
  • The feedback on decontamination processes following the Fukushima nuclear accident is unprecedented because it is the first time that such a major clean-up effort has been made following a nuclear accident,' said Evrard. (world-nuclear-news.org)
  • The Fukushima accident gives us valuable insights into the effectiveness of decontamination techniques, particularly for removing caesium from the environment. (world-nuclear-news.org)
  • Leslie Mabon from the Open University in the UK has visited Fukushima about a dozen times since the accident. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • LONSDORF: Well, there has been an uptick in cancer rates in the area in Fukushima, but it's really, really hard to prove whether cancer comes directly from an accident like this or not. (kpbs.org)
  • This comprehensive report analyzes China's current nuclear industry status and prospects for the future in light of the Fukushima accident in Japan of March 11, 2011. (uxc.com)
  • Although no other country in the world still comes close to matching China's ambitions for nuclear power expansion, the Fukushima accident has already created extensive ripple effects throughout the country's nuclear program. (uxc.com)
  • We are citizens who want to stop releasing any more radioactively contaminated water into the ocean from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident site. (change.org)
  • We ask your cooperation for this petition so that Tokyo Electric, the Japanese government, and the Nuclear Regulation Authority will responsibly implement measures to deal with the Fukushima accident and these radioactive discharges into the Pacific Ocean. (change.org)
  • It has now been more than four years since the start of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident on March 11th 2011. (change.org)
  • The Japanese government and Tepco must make all efforts to reduce the environmental threats from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident. (change.org)
  • Prime Minister Shinzo Abe must meet his Tokyo Olympic commitments and get the Fukushima accident site under control. (change.org)
  • We petition the Japanese government to promptly disclose all information not just in Japanese but in multiple languages related to radioactive water contamination due to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident. (change.org)
  • Here are the challenges facing the government and plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco) as they try to draw a line by the middle of the century under the world's worst nuclear accident since Chornobyl. (yahoo.com)
  • That was the worst nuclear plant accident before the 1986 Chornobyl tragedy in Ukraine, then part of the Soviet Union. (yahoo.com)
  • Immediately following the accident, an evacuation order was issued to approximately 81,000 residents in twelve municipalities in the vicinity of the Fukushima Daiichi NPS. (go.jp)
  • Though no direct health hazards caused by radiation , such as acute radiation injury , were observed following the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident , indirect deaths have been reported, including those caused by initial emergency evacuation and relocation, medical disruption, and psychological and social health effects. (bvsalud.org)
  • Evacuated after the Fukushima Nuclear Accident: A Retrospective Cohort Study. (who.int)
  • French and Malgache (and Japanese and English nuclear accident, handwashing in a pandemic). (bvsalud.org)
  • As a direct consequence of the accident, the Italian government decided to begin to shut down the country's nuclear power plants in 1988. (lu.se)
  • They also worried about problems for future generations, which may relate to problems with long-term final storage of nuclear waste, rather than to the risk of a new accident. (lu.se)
  • Not so long ago, Fukushima was a quiet rural region of Japan, renowned for its green mountains, hot springs and sweet summer peaches. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • Today, however, the Fukushima region, in northeast Japan , has more sinister associations: it has achieved global notoriety as home to one of the world's worst nuclear disasters in modern history. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • Prime Minister Shinzo Abe says Japan is open to receiving overseas help to contain widening radioactive water leaks at the crippled nuclear plant in Fukushima, with leaks and mishaps reported almost daily. (smh.com.au)
  • Japan recently set up an organisation among major utilities and nuclear experts to discuss decommissioning, including several advisers from countries such as France and Britain and Russia. (smh.com.au)
  • Now appointed head of the Fukushima Daiichi Decontamination and Decommissioning Company, Masuda is equally direct in setting his priorities: "Our promise to the prime minister of Japan is that we should reduce the risk this financial year [ending March 2015]. (world-nuclear-news.org)
  • Japan itself has seen stirrings of anti-nuclear energy sentiment over the past year, the first such significant mobilization ever. (progressive.org)
  • A group of plaintiffs and supporters, demanding revokation of TEPCO's treated water discharge plan, head to the Fukushima District Court to file a lawsuit, in Fukushima, northeastern Japan, Friday, Sept. 8, 2023. (ap.org)
  • Nuclear energy in Japan may be making a significant comeback, it is just not going to be able to meet the government's lofty production goals for 2030, according to a recent Reuters report. (rt.com)
  • Fearing the end of the Japanese nuclear sector entirely, thanks to the well-founded public fear and unceasing oceans of bad press, Japan even went so far as to turn to coal in their desperation to make up for the energy production loss. (rt.com)
  • Japan instated much more stringent safety measures, and the nuclear industry has been slammed with countless lawsuits, among other setbacks. (rt.com)
  • The nuclear revival is especially visible in rural Japan, where most of the nuclear plants are located and support among locals, many of whom would be employed by the reopened plants, is growing steadily. (rt.com)
  • This is a starkly meagre beginning if Japan is to somehow reach the government's 2030 goals, which would require a whopping 30 nuclear power plants. (rt.com)
  • The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Wahei and Sadako Nagayama don't have many visitors at their home in Naraha, a town 20 kilometres from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in northeastern Japan. (cbc.ca)
  • Some experts fear the plant could melt down in a way similar to what happened in Fukushima, Japan, over a decade ago. (kpbs.org)
  • Japan has adopted a new policy promoting greater use of nuclear energy to ensure a stable power supply amid global fuel shortages and to reduce carbon emissions. (breakingnews.ie)
  • However, the Japanese government is focusing much of its efforts on the restart of nuclear plants in Japan. (change.org)
  • Two years ago Prime Minister Shinzo Abe declared that the situation at the Fukushima nuclear site was "under control" when he was trying to secure Japan as the host for the 2020 Olympics. (change.org)
  • In 2019, a private think tank, the Japan Center for Economic Research, said compensation, decommissioning and decontamination costs were expected to reach 41 trillion yen in a scenario in which Fukushima water was diluted and discharged into the sea. (yahoo.com)
  • OKUMA, Japan (AP) - At a small section of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant's central control room, the treated water transfer switch is on. (kron4.com)
  • In Japan, the release of the water has faced fierce opposition from fishing groups that fear it will further hurt the reputation of seafood from the Fukushima area. (yahoo.com)
  • CHANG: Well, I am curious - how does Japan view nuclear power now? (kunc.org)
  • A lot of people in Japan are just against nuclear power now. (kunc.org)
  • And all this week, she'll be bringing us her reporting from Fukushima, Japan. (kunc.org)
  • 16. A senior researcher of marine chemistry at the Japan Meteorological Agency's Meteorological Research Institute says that "30 billion becquerels of radioactive cesium and 30 billion becquerels of radioactive strontium" are being released into the Pacific Ocean from Fukushima every single day . (rinf.com)
  • Faced with a litany of problems, challenges and delays, Tokyo Electric Power Co, operators of the nuclear plant, have spent months working to bring it into a state of cold shutdown and claim to have at last succeeded. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • Japan's nuclear regulator orders TEPCO, the operator of the crippled Fukushima power plant to draft in additional workers if needed to plug leaks of radioactive water from its tanks. (smh.com.au)
  • The unfolding catastrophe at the Japanese nuclear power plant Fukushima has forced a number of European countries to radically rethink their energy policies and eventually renounce nuclear power. (globalissues.org)
  • Carl Schlyter, member of the European Parliament representing the Swedish Green party, pointed out that the risks of nuclear energy 'include the whole production chain, from the exploitation of uranium mines, to transport, waste treatment and plant security. (globalissues.org)
  • But Japan's fragile economy means Nihei feels unable to leave his job in a car parts factory in Fukushima City, some 60 kilometres (37 miles) from the nuclear plant, so he stayed behind in the family home when his wife and two daughters -- now three and five -- fled for Tokyo. (medindia.net)
  • TOKYO (AP) - The operator of the wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant said Monday that it has safely completed the first release of treated radioactive water from the plant into the sea and will inspect and clean the facility before starting the second round in a few weeks. (ap.org)
  • On Monday, a team of South Korean experts from the Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety, under an agreement between South Korea and the U.N. nuclear agency, visited an IAEA office set up at the Fukushima plant to monitor the release and share information, the IAEA said in a statement. (ap.org)
  • Post-Fukushima, running a nuclear plant has become harder in many ways. (rt.com)
  • And both of these teachers might have something to say to teachers who live near Tokyo, south of TEPCO's damaged Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear-power plant. (edtechtalk.com)
  • A nuclear expert has warned it could be a 100 years before fuel rods at Japan's stricken Fukushima nuclear plant are safe. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • It it has emerged that the U.S. is readying a team of nuclear workers to fly out to the stricken plant. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • The company was approached by sub-contractors for the General Electric-Hitachi U.S. nuclear plant. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • The thought of a team of U.S. nuclear experts riding in to save the day at the Fukushima plant brings to mind the exploits of heroic American firefighter Red Adair. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • NHK World reports, as fears grow over the safety of the nuclear plant continues. (planetsave.com)
  • France's Institute for Radiological Protection & Nuclear Safety (IRSN) estimated that maximum external doses to people living around the plant were unlikely to exceed 30 mSv/yr in the first year. (world-nuclear.org)
  • Their town of Naraha, 20 kilometres from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, was under an evacuation order until September 2015. (cbc.ca)
  • The Nagayamas were far enough inland to be spared, but the waves inundated the nuclear plant, causing hydrogen explosions that blanketed their town in radioactive particles. (cbc.ca)
  • Tadaaki Niitsuma has no trouble pointing out cracked walls in his family's 250-year-old farmhouse in Iwaki, 60 kilometres south of the crippled Fukushima plant. (cbc.ca)
  • Twenty-five kilometres north of the nuclear plant, Katsunobu Sakurai looks out his office window and over his redeveloping city. (cbc.ca)
  • A delegation of inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency is on its way to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in southern Ukraine today. (kpbs.org)
  • It is the largest nuclear power plant in all of Europe. (kpbs.org)
  • In Fukushima, it took weeks with an international effort to stabilize the plant, and that's just not possible in this war right now. (kpbs.org)
  • France's La Hague reprocessing plant released 10,000 TBq of tritium as liquid in 2021, while the Fukushima plant will annually release just 2.2 TBq. (yahoo.com)
  • Today, however, I want to promote two excellent things I found that help understand the ongoing problems at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. (keithhennessey.com)
  • オンライン署名 · Stop Radioactive Contamination of the Pacific Ocean from the Fukushima nuclear power plant site! (change.org)
  • This statistic represents the number of nuclear fuel elements that remain stored at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. (statista.com)
  • At Three Mile Island (TMI), the U.S. nuclear plant in Pennsylvania that partly melted down in 1979 after a failure, fuel debris was kept under water during retrieval work, providing a shield against radiation. (yahoo.com)
  • But the law requires the soil stored at the interim site, located next to the tsunami-wrecked power plant, to be moved out of Fukushima within 30 years from when it began operating in 2015. (yahoo.com)
  • It took days for the damage to trigger multiple explosions at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, sending radioactive material into the air and forcing more than 100,000 people to evacuate their homes. (kunc.org)
  • Displaced people after Fukushima nuclear power plant emergency in 2011. (cdc.gov)
  • The flooding led to widespread damage of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, which released radiological contamination. (cdc.gov)
  • The fourth was to assist with the evacuation and screening of inpatients with radiation exposure in Fukushima. (who.int)
  • Officials and reports say thousands of crank calls from China have targeted Fukushima government offices and the nuclear plant's operator. (yahoo.com)
  • The TEPCO President Masataka Shimizu and other top officials sought for forgiveness from the angered residents of Fukushima, who were allowed to pay a brief visit to their previous homes and were provided protective equipment and allowed to spend couple of hours, Japan's Environment Ministry reported. (ibtimes.com)
  • TEPCO, in a statement, discussed about a six to nine month-plan to bring down the nuclear calamity and restore normal cooling. (ibtimes.com)
  • Despite fishing within sight of these tanks, fishers in Fukushima feel they are the last to know every time TEPCO or the Japanese Government make a decision about the next step in their management plans for this water," he said. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Tepco, the Japanese government, and the Nuclear Regulation Authority have continuously failed to undertake effective countermeasures to deal with liquid radioactive discharges. (change.org)
  • We petition the Nuclear Regulatory Authority to instruct Tepco to implement the above. (change.org)
  • We petition Tepco and the Japanese government to go back to the drawing boards and undertake a fundamental reassessment of measures to address the radioactive water contamination at the Fukushima Daiichi site including the issues of the "ice wall" and water containing tritium. (change.org)
  • It escaped the worst of the nuclear fallout but not damage from the tsunami and quake. (cbc.ca)
  • The report concludes with detailed analysis of the near- and long-term fallout from changes after Fukushima along with an evaluation of the key strengths and main challenges for China's future nuclear power growth and fuel cycle programs. (uxc.com)
  • The decrease in support for nuclear power can, thus, be explained by voters in fallout-affected areas reporting to be significantly more worried about adverse consequences of nuclear power. (lu.se)
  • But another big challenge that lies ahead in 2012 is the government's stance in relation to nuclear power. (telegraph.co.uk)
  • Merkel's nuclear power moratorium defers for three months the government's own decision last Sept. to prolong on average by 12 years the lifespan of all 17 nuclear power plants operating in the country. (globalissues.org)
  • The catastrophe of Fukushima has foiled the Italian government's plans to build four new nuclear power plants before 2020. (globalissues.org)
  • The ridiculous U.S.-India nuclear agreement that brought India back into nuclear respectability has enhanced the Indian government's appetite for nuclear energy. (progressive.org)
  • The Fukushima catastrophe has indeed left a deep imprint on German national politics. (globalissues.org)
  • In the year since the Fukushima nuclear catastrophe, a number of countries-but not enough-have sworn off nuclear energy. (progressive.org)
  • In the three months following the catastrophe, 53 percent of fish sampled off Fukushima showed radiation levels surpassing the safety limit of 100 bequerels per kilogram. (cbsnews.com)
  • The next few years will be critical for China's nuclear energy program as a new President and a new Premier will both be inaugurated, and any final action in the nuclear power arena is expected to await the transition to the new state leadership. (uxc.com)
  • He said that currently the US produces 800 Terawatt hours (TWhr) from nuclear power plants, but that in order to meet the President's stated goals, that number would have to grow to 2500 TWhr. (aps.org)
  • Achieving that amount of electricity from nuclear plants would require a $10 billion investment over the next five years, Reis said. (aps.org)
  • Environment minister Norbert Roettgen said Mar. 31, that during the three-month period ending next June, the government will verify safety and technical standards in all nuclear power plants, by simulation of earthquakes, inundations, and accidents or attacks with airplanes. (globalissues.org)
  • We have to find out whether our nuclear power plants can resist those kinds of incidents, (and) what risks we could be facing,' Roettgen said during a press conference in Berlin. (globalissues.org)
  • These tests could lead to shutting down several nuclear power plants. (globalissues.org)
  • During an intervention at the EU Environment Committee Mar.16, energy commissioner Gunther Oettinger said, the EU's 143 nuclear plants will be subjected to a European safety test and 'stress tests' taking into account risks such as earthquakes, flooding, aircraft crashes, cyber or terrorist attacks, cooling systems and their stability and local electricity supply failure. (globalissues.org)
  • Yet another country, Italy, also suspended its decision to build new nuclear power plants. (globalissues.org)
  • Federal inspectors say Wisconsin's nuclear power plants should be able to cool some key areas of the plants, following any explosion or fire. (wpr.org)
  • Najmedin Meshkati served as a member and technical adviser to a committee appointed by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences to identify lessons from this event for making US nuclear plants safer and more secure. (popsci.com)
  • As long as commercial nuclear power plants operate anywhere in the world, we believe it is critical for all nations to learn from what happened at Fukushima and continue doubling down on nuclear safety. (popsci.com)
  • Immediately after, the number of functioning nuclear plants dropped to zero, and in the intervening years only 8 began producing again, all of which had to secure new operating permits. (rt.com)
  • Regional nuclear utilities throughout the island nation have been fighting back relentlessly since 2011 against a tide of lawsuits (and winning) and have spent a lot of time and money appealing to the towns where nuclear plants are based in order to bolster public support for bringing nuclear back to life. (rt.com)
  • While things are steadily improving for Japanese nuclear, it is nevertheless expected that as few as six nuclear power plants will restart operations over the next five years. (rt.com)
  • She's a senior researcher in the Institute for Safety Problems of Nuclear Power Plants at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. (kpbs.org)
  • The first is Maggie Koerth-Baker's simple and clear post, Nuclear energy 101: Inside the "black box" of power plants . (keithhennessey.com)
  • Maggie wrote this respond to a reader who wrote "The extent of my knowledge on nuclear power plants is pretty much limited to what I've seen on The Simpsons . (keithhennessey.com)
  • Natural disasters can test the limits of manmade protections of nuclear plants. (cdc.gov)
  • The number of new nuclear power stations entering the construction phase fell dramatically last year compared with previous years," The Guardian states. (progressive.org)
  • Dr John Price, a former member of the Safety Policy Unit at the UK's National Nuclear Corporation, said radiation leaks will continue and it could take 50 to 100 years before the nuclear fuel rods have cooled enough to be removed. (dailymail.co.uk)
  • On 16 March, Japan's Nuclear Safety Commission recommended local authorities to instruct evacuees under 40 years of age leaving the 20 km zone to ingest stable iodine as a precaution against ingestion ( e.g. via milk) of radioactive iodine-131. (world-nuclear.org)
  • OK, so can we just start in Fukushima because you were there right before the pandemic started, touring villages that are still mostly empty 10 years out or more than 10 years out. (kpbs.org)
  • And as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Bill Foege noted so many years ago [in a personal communication], the notion of using nuclear weapons in war should be considered such an unthinkable idea that it is alien to planet Earth. (medscape.com)
  • I mean, has what happened in Fukushima shifted people's views on it? (kunc.org)
  • Well, NPR's Kat Lonsdorf has spent time in both Fukushima and Ukraine and joins us now to discuss the risks. (kpbs.org)
  • Nuclear accidents are bound to happen someday, only that we don't know when they will happen," he said. (japantimes.co.jp)
  • Nobody wants to add additional radiation to the oceans, if only because of sympathy with local Fukushima fishermen ," he said. (cosmosmagazine.com)
  • Off-site releases of radioactive materials contaminated land in Fukushima and several neighboring prefectures. (popsci.com)
  • In Tokyo, a sign at a Japanese-style bar warning "the Chinese" that it's only serving food from Fukushima caught the attention of a Chinese V-tuber, who called police complaining about the "nationality discrimination" against the Chinese by singling them out. (yahoo.com)
  • and the US government is interested in the environment, safety, national security and economic well-being, all of which are affected by nuclear energy. (aps.org)
  • A decade later, the nuclear industry has yet to fully to address safety concerns that Fukushima exposed. (popsci.com)
  • We are scholars specializing in engineering and medicine and public policy , and have advised our respective governments on nuclear power safety. (popsci.com)
  • In its report, the commission concluded that Japan's Nuclear Safety Commission had never been independent from the industry , nor from the powerful Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry, which promotes nuclear power. (popsci.com)
  • A recent Union for Concerned Scientists report chides the authorities for not implementing much-needed safety measures even after Fukushima and excoriates the nuclear industry for using cheap, substandard safety equipment. (progressive.org)
  • In considering the implications of Fukushima for the 2012 Seoul Nuclear Security Summit, many experts in the United States would probably argue that there are none - their fundamental point being that it is a security summit, not a safety summit. (thebulletin.org)
  • The fundamental difference between nuclear "safety" and "security" lies in the human factor. (thebulletin.org)
  • As a representative of states that do not possess nuclear weapons or fissile materials, South Korea could spur an active discussion on the security and safety of radioactive sources. (thebulletin.org)
  • There are also increasing calls for a mechanism to deal with the safety and security of stored spent nuclear fuel. (thebulletin.org)
  • And I should say, something that's nice in all of this is that some of the safety systems that are new Zaporizhzhia came in response to what happened at Fukushima. (kpbs.org)
  • One month after being put in charge of decommissioning Fukushima Daiichi, Naohiro Masuda talked to World Nuclear News about his priorities for the site and its workforce. (world-nuclear-news.org)
  • 5. A vast field of radioactive debris from Fukushima that is approximately the size of California has crossed the Pacific Ocean and is starting to collide with the west coast. (rinf.com)
  • China at least put a temporary pause in the aftermath of Fukushima, and citizen protests have slowed projects down since then. (progressive.org)
  • 12. BBC News recently reported that radiation levels around Fukushima are " 18 times higher " than previously believed. (rinf.com)
  • What are the impacts on the leading nuclear industry companies? (uxc.com)
  • South Korea is a non-nuclear weapon state that has proven to be a responsible member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and a host of other international regimes and institutions. (thebulletin.org)
  • The company had recently released an error-prone assessment of tsunami hazards at Fukushima that significantly underestimated the risks . (popsci.com)
  • In other words, the threat of a "dirty bomb" that disperses radioactive materials is far greater than that posed by a nuclear device, although such threat certainly could come from beyond a state's borders. (thebulletin.org)
  • In order to reduce the risk of radiation from the contaminated water, the Fukushima Daiichi NPS is using a purification system called ALPS (Advanced Liquid Processing System) to remove radioactive materials. (go.jp)
  • Regarding releases to air and water leakage from Fukushima, the main radionuclide from among the many kinds of fission products in the fuel was volatile iodine-131, which has a half-life of 8 days. (world-nuclear.org)
  • In February 2015, it was revealed that heavily contaminated water had been entering the ocean from the trenches at the Fukushima site. (change.org)
  • Tritium tests were being conducted on water samples, including seawater samples off the Fukushima Daiichi that the lab has been collecting independently since 2015. (woodtv.com)
  • Every single day, 300 tons of radioactive water from Fukushima enters the Pacific Ocean. (rinf.com)
  • 15. At this point, 300 tons of contaminated water is pouring into the Pacific Ocean from Fukushima every single day. (rinf.com)
  • The tanks used to store the treated water take up a great deal of space, making it difficult to secure the site to allow the decommissioning of the Fukushima Daiichi NPS. (go.jp)
  • Each of the speakers took time to reiterate their belief that nuclear power was imperative to America's future. (aps.org)
  • Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors have demanded for the first time that the country end its reliance on nuclear power. (progressive.org)
  • At the same time, it hasn't backed off its enthusiasm for nuclear power. (progressive.org)
  • You spent a lot of time in Fukushima. (kunc.org)
  • The at the time recently established MP had a high-profiled anti-nuclear agenda. (lu.se)
  • 13. An EU-funded study concluded that Fukushima released up to 210 quadrillion becquerels of cesium-137 into the atmosphere. (rinf.com)
  • Nuclear fuel elements refer to fuel rods and other physical objects composed of the fuel material. (statista.com)