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Japan targets remote island as potential nuclear waste dumping ground
Japan has identified Minamitorishima, a remote and uninhabited coral atoll in the western Pacific, as a potential site for ...
The island is surrounded by a coral atoll and is only 0.6 miles wide. Nuclear power is on the rise around the world, but with ...
Japan is looking into using a remote deserted Pacific island nearly 2,000 kilometres (1,250 miles) from Tokyo as a site for ...
Throughout the past century, nuclear technology has become a core fascination of the scientific world. Numerous countries have explored its potential and implemented it in medicine, energy, and, ...
The government will seek permission to begin assessing Minami-Torishima island in Tokyo's Ogasawara village as a candidate ...
Fifteen years on from its worst-ever nuclear accident, Japan is welcoming nuclear power back into its energy mix. Senior ...
As Japan takes the final steps toward restarting the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant, the world’s largest nuclear facility, familiar debates are resurfacing: reactor safety, seismic risk, and ...
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Does Nuclear Waste Ever Go Away?
Nuclear power plants are used primarily to generate electricity, and while they're often thought of as a cleaner energy source, there is a drawback. These power plants produce waste. This waste is ...
Independent research conducted by a consortium of five Japanese organizations confirms the viability of photonuclear transmutation for nuclear waste remediation, Nuclear Solutions, Inc. (OTCBB:NSOL) ...
The underlying structural obstacles have made a genuine nuclear power revival impossible – but Japan’s government seems ...
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