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A nuclear power plant in Byron, Illinois. Taken by photographer Joseph Pobereskin (http://pobereskin.com). カレンダー
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Latest Posts / 最新記事
- US Spent $98,000 Per Minute on Nuclear Weapons in 2023, New Report Says via Truthout 2024/06/17
- 1億4000万円かけた対策は「ポーズ」と住民は見透かす 要支援者向け「被ばく防止施設」に担架が入らない via 東京新聞 [後編] 2024/06/11
- 海に流していいのげ 2024/06/03
- 被爆者らのゲノム解析 放影研方針、次世代への影響調査 via 日本経済新聞 2024/03/04
- 「おなか張る」から、亡くなるまで4カ月…生身の人間を苦しめたトロトラスト 知識ゼロから始まった「日本初の薬害」の取材 via 信濃毎日新聞 2024/02/29
Discussion / 最新の議論
- Leonsz on Combating corrosion in the world’s aging nuclear reactors via c&en
- Mark Ultra on Special Report: Help wanted in Fukushima: Low pay, high risks and gangsters via Reuters
- Grom Montenegro on Duke Energy’s shell game via Beyond Nuclear International
- Jim Rice on Trinity: “The most significant hazard of the entire Manhattan Project” via Bulletin of Atomic Scientists
- Barbarra BBonney on COVID-19 spreading among workers on Fukushima plant, related projects via The Mainichi
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Top Topics / TOPトピック
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Choose Language / 言語
Search Results for: France
The EU is doing well on green power- as the UK exits via Renew Extra Weekly
February 01, 2020 With Climate Change at the top of the agenda, the EU aims to be the first carbon neutral continent, working towards net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, with a new climate law being enacted soon. That’s taken some fighting for and fiddling, given the opposition from … Continue reading
No long-term prospects in Japan for reusing, storing spent MOX fuel via The Mainichi
There are no prospects that spent mixed-oxide (MOX) fuel, made by reprocessing spent nuclear material, can be further reprocessed and reused for nuclear power generation in accordance with the Japanese government’s energy policy. Storing such fuel for a long period … Continue reading
Hinkley point C: Will the most expensive building project in the world grind to a halt? via True Publica
By Paul Brown: The edifice already heading for the status of the largest and most expensive construction project in the world, the Hinkley Point C nuclear power station in the UK, is dragging its builder, the French giant EDF, into ever-deeper debt: … Continue reading
EU leaders include nuclear energy in green transition via Japan Times
BRUSSELS – European Union leaders agreed Friday that nuclear energy will be part of the bloc’s solution to making its economy carbon-neutral by 2050, allowing them to win the support of two coal-dependent countries. EU heads of state and government agreed … Continue reading
The Tantalizing Nuclear Mirage via The American Prospect
Many see nuclear power as a necessary part of any carbon-neutral mix. The reality isn’t so simple. BY ALEXANDER SAMMON DECEMBER 5, 2019 […] So does the Green New Deal need nuclear to achieve its lofty goals? Does zero-carbon energy infrastructure … Continue reading
Pope expected to deliver powerful message on nuclear weapons via The Asahi Shimbun
By MASATO TAINAKA/ Staff Writer Roman Catholics and atomic bomb survivors in Japan are fervently hoping the first papal visit in nearly 40 years will help trigger a sharp shift in thinking by the nuclear powers. Francis, 82, will be … Continue reading
Why South Africa Gave up Its Nuclear Weapons Forever via The National Interests
by Robert Farley Key Point: The old apartheid government caved to foreign pressure and didn’t want the newly-elected government to gain control of the weapons. Why did South Africa decide to build nukes, how did it build them and why did it … Continue reading
Antarctica Is Still Releasing Radiation from Cold War Nuclear Tests via Popular Mechanics
There’s 10 times as much chlorine as normal in some regions. By David Grossman Scientists studying Antarctic ice have made a surprising discovery: manmade chlorine remains at unusually high levels within parts of the ice. The chlorine stems from nuclear testing in the 1950s … Continue reading
Enter a single keyword The 7 reasons why nuclear energy is not the answer to solve climate change via Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation
Mark Z. Jacobson Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Director, Atmosphere/Energy Program, Stanford University There is a small group of scientists that have proposed replacing 100% of the world’s fossil fuel power plants with nuclear reactors as a way to … Continue reading
フランスが再び原発に注目、突然の方針変換はなぜ? via MIT Technology Review
by James Temple フランス現地メディアが、フランス政府が大手電力会社に大型原子炉6基の建設計画を策定するよう指示したと報じた。フランスは原子力発電大国だが、福島第一原発の事故以降の世論に押されて縮小を表明していただけに、政府の突然の方針転換に驚きの声があがっている。 原子力分野からの後退を表明して数年たった現在、フランスが突如6基の大型原子炉を建てようとしている。 10月14日に仏ル・モンド紙は、主要な国営エネルギー会社であるフランス電力(EDF)に対し、フランス政府が3つの原子力発電所の新造計画を策定するように指示したと報じた。各発電所は、EPR(欧州加圧水型炉)を2基ずつ備える。この第3世代の原子炉は150万人分の電力を生み出し、事故が発生すると自動で停止して冷却する。 (略) カーネギーメロン大学の原子力研究者であるジェシカ・ラブリング研究員によれば、フランスは2030年までに、老朽化した約15基の原子炉を停止する計画だ。したがって原子炉を6基建設しても、国内の原子力発電所で作られる電力の割合が必ずしも増えるわけではない。電力需要が今後数年間で増えるとなれば、なおさらだ。 一方で、フランスが今年の夏に、2050年までのカーボンニュートラル(炭素中立)達成を誓ったばかりであることに注目するエネルギー専門家もいる。この取り組みは経済全般にわたる。つまり電力分野のみならず、農業や輸送、重工業などでも気候汚染を削減する必要があるということだ。したがって政府は現時点で排出ガスがゼロの電力を失いたくないのだろう。さらに、原子力発電所は、重要な産業プロセスの動力として利用できる熱も生み出す。 それでもフランスが、初期費用や開発リスクを大きく削減できる可能性のある小型のモジュラー型原子炉ではなく、大型のEPRを推し進めようとしていることに驚く声も上がっている。 全文はフランスが再び原発に注目、突然の方針変換はなぜ?