ANS wants your VOTE! In WSJ online nuclear energy poll
Voting season is upon us! The Wall Street Journal has an online poll underway:
Voting season is upon us! The Wall Street Journal has an online poll underway:
The latest American Nuclear Society board-approved Position Statement (PS83) is titled "U.S. Global Nuclear Leadership Through Export-Driven Engagement." This statement highlights a paradigm shift that is occurring within ANS, as global macroeconomic issues force the recognition that clean energy is imperative for continued global development.
Voting season is upon us! The Wall Street Journal has an online poll underway:
Implementation of the energy policy announced last week will keep reactors running well into the second half of the 21st century.
The weekly Carnival is the collective voice of blogs by many of the Internet's foremost nuclear experts and advocates, who continue each week to tell the story of nuclear energy around the World Wide Web.
The 121st weekly Carnival of Nuclear Energy Bloggers is up at Next Big Future.
The question is how big is the bird and will any of the proposed deals fly?
Findings could be significant for other reactors
Vermont Yankee's annual NRC performance review for the previous calendar year was held May 23, in Brattleboro Union High School, within 10 miles of the plant. In previous years, annual reports and state meetings have been held here, and in the Vernon Elementary School, across the road from the plant. The town of Vernon stopped hosting plant-related events due to behavior of some attendees.
I, Akira Tokuhiro, recently traveled to Japan to meet Wade Allison (professor emeritus of physics, Oxford University, UK) and David Wagner (Tokyo-based risk communication expert and consultant). A number of concerned scientists had expressed interest regarding the Fukushima accident. Specifically, there was concern regarding the significance and impact in the nuclear world and also the plight of the victims, especially the evacuees and the workers at the plant.
The heat is on across the United States. The nation's 104 nuclear reactors are providing electricity to keep people cool without warming the planet. Nuclear energy can help save habitat for polar bears.
Domestic liability laws and international issues may put limits on the country's ambitious plans to build new reactors
The hard-copy May issue of Nuclear News will soon be in the hands of American Nuclear Society members. It will also be available electronically to members.
View from Vermont
The views expressed in this article are the author's, and do not represent the editorial position of Nuclear News magazine or the policy of the American Nuclear Society.