Morning Overview on MSN
Deep borehole nuclear waste disposal gains validation from new tests
The United States has roughly 90,000 metric tons of spent nuclear fuel sitting in temporary storage at reactor sites across ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
World’s first commercial-ready deep borehole nuclear waste disposal inches closer to reality
The world’s first commercial-ready deep borehole nuclear waste disposal solution is inching closer to ...
As we continue to agonize over the fate of highly radioactive nuclear waste — and local cities throw their weight behind an effort to move San Onofre’s to higher ground on Camp Pendleton — we’d like ...
Finland is weeks from licensing the world's first permanent nuclear waste repository. Here's what it means for the global ...
A robust, federally supported recycling program could reduce volumes of long-lived radioactive waste from the civilian nuclear power fleet by more than 95%, according to the Energy Innovation Reform ...
US radioactive waste disposal technology developer Deep Isolation has called for nuclear waste disposal to be included in the National Association of State Energy Officials' Advanced Nuclear First ...
Deep Isolation Nuclear, Inc. (“Deep Isolation” or the “Company”), a leading innovator in nuclear waste disposal technology, ...
The core module being lowered at China's Linglong One, the world's first commercial SMR, installed in 2023 in Changjiang, China. Holtec International has shuttered their plans to store nuclear waste ...
The award under the ARPA-E SCALEUP Ready programme will enable full-scale field testing of Deep Isolation's Universal ...
U.S. scientists are developing an innovation that could reduce nuclear waste storage time by 99.7%, transmuting long-lived radioactive materials into shorter-lived isotopes. The Jefferson Lab project, ...
Nuclear energy is one of the most polarizing topics when it comes to ways of generating electricity. On one hand, there are those who believe nuclear is a much better alternative to fossil fuels and ...
This thunderclap — so obvious, yet so elusive — comes in a new bipartisan plan penned by an esteemed group of nuclear experts, including Allison Macfarlane, erstwhile chair of the U.S. Nuclear ...
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