LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #811, Monday, (11/18/2024)

NUCLEAR INSANITY AND THE LAST DAYS OF HUMAN DEPRAVITY

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Nov 18, 2024

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Two domed nuclear reactors can be seen along a coastline.

The controversial Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant owned by PG&E

LLAW’s NUCLEAR NEWS & THE IMPACT OF TODAY’S STORY

This article from the “Los Angeles Times” contends that public support for nuclear power plants is growing, and that is true. But it does not mean that more nuclear power plants should be re-erected from past failures or old age nor that new plants, large and/or small should be built.

Not only are nuclear power plants extremely dangerous to public health and safety, they are accident prone, facing everything from human error to natural causes such as weather and earthquakes. They are also subject to terrorist attacks, and the more there are their danger increases exponentially nuclear power plants the more dangerous they become, and are most of all, last but not least, potential weapons of mass destruction in the event of nuclear war. This insane problem has already begun to happen in the Russia/Ukraine war.( in both countries (As for this nuclear plant involvement potential, read the recent and incredibly well=researched book “Nuclear War – A Scenario” by well-known researcher Annie Jacobsen, with a nuclear power plant involved in nuclear war involving the quite predictable and horrifying destruction of the very nuclear power plant that is the subject of this very scenario in the L.A. Times article).

The general public, including our senators and legislators, I am sad to say, is generally unaware of such treacherous potential and how nuclear proliferation could be the groundwork for WWIII, creating a world facing not only dangerous death and destruction, but potential permanently fatal issues around the globe that is nothing short of the extinction of human and other life.

Humanity is playing with a global “fire” that we have no idea how to extinguish. ~llaw

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Has nuclear power entered a new era of acceptance amid global warming?

A nuclear power plant sits along the California coastline.

The Diablo Canyon Power Plant rises along the California coast near San Luis Obispo.

(Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

By Noah HaggertyStaff Writer 

Nov. 18, 2024 3 AM PT

When Heather Hoff took a job at Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant, she was skeptical of nuclear energy — so much so that she resolved to report anything questionable to the anti-nuclear group Mothers for Peace.

Instead, after working at the plant for over a decade and asking every question she could think of about operations and safety, she co-founded her own group, Mothers for Nuclear, in 2016 to keep the plant alive.

“I was pretty nervous,” said Hoff, 45. “It felt very lonely — no one else was doing that. We looked around for allies — other pro-nuclear groups. … There just weren’t very many.”

Today, however, public support for nuclear power is the highest its been in more than a decade as government and private industry struggle to reduce reliance on planet-warming fossil fuels.

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Although a string of nuclear disasters decades ago had caused the majority of older Americans to distrust the technology, this hasn’t been the case for younger generations.

Old-school environmentalists “grew up in the generation of Three Mile Island and Chernobyl. … The Gen Zers today did not,” said David Weisman, 63, who has been involved in the movement to get Diablo Canyon shut down since the ’90s and works as the legislative director of the Alliance for Nuclear Responsibility.

“They don’t remember how paralyzed with fright the nation was the week after Three Mile Island. … They don’t recall the shock of Chernobyl less than seven years later.”

Two domed nuclear reactors can be seen along a coastline.
Public support for nuclear power is the highest its been in more than a decade. Here, the domed reactors of the Diablo Canyon Power Plant rise along the California coast.

(Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times)

Many of these younger nuclear advocates — outwardly vocal on social media sites such as X and Instagram — hope the renewed interest will fuel a second renaissance in nuclear power, one that helps California, the U.S. and the globe meet ambitious climate goals.

“I think we are the generation that’s ready to make this change, and accept facts over feelings, and ready to transition to a cleaner, more reliable and safer energy source,” said Veronica Annala, 23, a college student at Texas A&M and president of the school’s new Nuclear Advocacy Resource Organization.

In the past few months alone, Microsoft announced plans to fund the reopening of Three Mile Island’s shuttered unit to power a data center. Amazon and Google have also invested in new, cutting-edge nuclear technology to meet clean energy goals.

While some advocates wish nuclear revitalization wasn’t being driven by energy-hungry AI technology, the excitement around nuclear power is more palpable than it has been in a generation, they say.

“There’s so many things happening at the same time. … This is the actual nuclear renaissance,” said Gabriel Ivory, 22, a student at Texas A&M and vice president of NARO. “When you look at Three Mile Island restarting — that was something nobody would have ever even thought of.”

Support for nuclear energy in the U.S. has been rising since 2016

Support for nuclear began rising in the U.S. after the Western U.S. energy crisis led to widescale blackouts. It dived after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear accident, and began rising again in 2016.

Support

Public support for nuclear power is the highest its been in more than a decade. Here, the domed reactors of the Diablo Canyon Power Plant rise along the California coast.

(Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times)

Oppose

Fukushima nuclear accident

Russia invades Ukraine, triggering energy crisis

Western U.S. energy crisis leads to widescale blackouts

Gallup

Noah Haggerty

Los Angeles Times

This enthusiasm has also been accompanied by a surprising political shift.

During the Cold War nuclear energy frenzy of the 1970s and ’80s, nuclear supporters — often Republicans — touted the jobs the plants would create, and argued that the United States needed to remain a commanding leader of nuclear technology and weaponry on the global stage.

Meanwhile, environmental groups, often aligned with the Democratic Party, opposed nuclear power based on the potential negative impact on surrounding ecosystems, the thorny problem of storing spent fuel and the small but real risk of a nuclear meltdown.

“In America … it has been highly politicized,” said Jenifer Avellaneda Diaz, 29, who works in the industry and runs the advocacy account Nuclear Hazelnut. “That is a little bit shameful, because we have great experts here — a lot of doctors, a lot of scientists, a lot of engineers, mathematicians, physicists.”

Today, younger Republicans are 11% less likely to support new nuclear plants in the U.S. than their older counterparts. Meanwhile the opposite is true for the left: Younger Democrats are 9% more likely to support new nuclear than older Democrats, according to a poll by the Pew Research Center.

As a result, while Republicans older than 65 are 27% more likely to support nuclear energy than their Democratic peers, Republicans age 18 to 29 are only 7% more likely to support it than their Democratic counterparts.

“Young Democrats and young Republicans may be looking at numbers — but two separate sets of numbers,” said Weisman. “The young Republicans may be looking at the cost per megawatt hour, and the young Democrats are looking at a different number: parts per million of CO2 in the atmosphere.”

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Brendan Pittman, 33 — who founded the Berkeley Amend movement, aiming to get his city to drop its “nuclear-free zone” status — said he’s noticed that younger people have become more open to learning about nuclear energy.

“Now — as we’re getting into energy crises and we’re talking more about, ‘How do we solve this?’ — younger people are taking a more rational and nuanced review of all energy. And they’re coming to the same conclusion: Yeah, nuclear checks all the boxes,” Pittman said.

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“I remember getting signatures on the streets of Berkeley, and I would say most young people — when I said we’re looking to support nuclear energy — they would just stop me and say, ‘Where do I sign?’” he said. “I didn’t even have to sell it.”

Younger Democrats are more likely than others in their party to support more nuclear plants

Share of Americans who favor more nuclear plants

Younger Democrats are more likely to support more nuclear plants, while younger Republicans are less likely to support them.

Noah Haggerty

Los Angeles Times

This newfound enthusiasm has also affected the nuclear industry, where two dominant age groups have emerged: baby boomers who mostly took nuclear jobs for consistent work, and millennials and Gen Zers who made a motivated choice to enter a stigmatized field, advocates in the industry say.

“You get all sorts of different backgrounds, and that really just blooms into all sorts of fresh new ideas, and I think that’s part of what’s making the industry exciting right now,” said Matt Wargon, 33, past chair of the Young Members Group of the American Nuclear Society.

Like the workers themselves, the industry has formed two bubbles: the traditional plants that have been operating for decades and a slew of new technologies — from small reactors that could power or heat single factories to a potentially safer class of large-scale reactors that use molten salt in their cores instead of pressurized water.

At existing plants, younger folks have injected innovation into longstanding operation norms, improving safety and efficiency. At the startups, those who’ve worked in the industry for decades provide “invaluable” knowledge that simply isn’t in textbooks, industry workers say.

Steam rises from two nuclear cooling towers.
Steam rises from the cooling towers of the Alvin W. Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, in Waynesboro, Ga.

(Mike Stewart / Associated Press)

The infusion of new talent and ideas is a significant change from when Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island disaster in 1979 and the Chernobyl meltdown in 1986 devastated the industry. Regulations became stricter, and development on new reactors and new technology slowed to a halt.

False narratives around the technology ricocheted through society. Both Hoff and Avellaneda Diaz recall their parents worrying about radiation affecting their ability to have children. (The average worker at Diablo receives significantly less radiation in a week than a passenger does on a single East Coast to West Coast airplane flight.)

“Radiation is invisible — you can’t see it. You can’t smell it. You can’t hear it,” said Wargon. “And people tend to fear the unknown. … So if you tell them, ‘Oh this power plant has a lot of radiation coming out of it,’ it’s hard to dispel [the misinformation and fear].”

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Only as the memories faded and new generations entered the workforce did the reputation of nuclear power slowly recover.

Advocates also say that college campuses have become a leading space for nuclear advocacy, with Nuclear is Clean Energy (NiCE) clubs popping up at multiple California schools in the past few years.

In August, Ivory held up a big “I [heart] nuclear energy,” sign behind an ESPN college football broadcast. It quickly spread on social media and even caught the attention of the U.S. Department of Energy.

Nuclear advocates say the internet and easy access to accurate information has also helped their cause.

“That was certainly a revolution because right now, it’s super easy to Google it,” Avellaneda Diaz said. “Back then you needed to go to the library, get the book — it was not that easy to get the information or be informed.”

A poll conducted by Ann Bisconti, a scientist and nuclear public opinion expert, found that 74% of people who said they felt very well informed strongly favored the use of nuclear energy in the U.S., whereas only 6% who felt not at all informed supported it.

As such, public outreach and education has become a core tenant of the new nuclear advocacy movement.

“Let’s be real,” Annala said, “our generation has the whole internet at our fingertips … so, just starting the conversations is really the big thing.”

Advocates speculate that the ability to rapidly disseminate information on nuclear energy to combat misconceptions might have helped prevent nuclear energy from becoming politically and culturally toxic after the Fukushima accident, unlike with Chernobyl and Three Mile Island.

While the Texas A&M students were quite young when the disaster unfolded, both Wargon and Pittman were in college in 2011 when an earthquake and tsunami in Japan crippled the power systems at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, triggering a meltdown. Avellaneda Diaz was in high school.

Los Angeles, California-June 15, 2021-Traffic has returned to Los Angeles. Rush hour at the intersection of the 110 and 101 freeways on June 15, 2021. (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)

Climate & Environment

Trump victory puts California clean air initiatives in jeopardy

Nov. 6, 2024

Hoff was working at Diablo Canyon when Fukushima happened. The public scare, in part pushed by the media, almost led her to quit her job.

Instead, after taking the time to analyze the causes of the meltdown and the errors made, she decided to embrace nuclear.

For her, Fukushima was a reminder that nuclear power comes with risk — however small — but that even in a worst-case scenario, operators are skilled at preventing a disaster. (PG&E says a Fukushima flooding episode would be impossible at Diablo Canyon.)

Environmental activists march during a rally marking the 12th anniversary of the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
Environmental activists in Seoul march during a rally marking the 12th anniversary of the Fukushima nuclear disaster.

(Ahn Young-joon / Associated Press)

Today, Hoff writes the emergency protocols for Diablo Canyon and hopes the industry will learn again how to engage with the public.

She said that’s what happened with her when she first — somewhat reluctantly — took a job at Diablo.

“I was a little obnoxious for the first few years,” Hoff said of her constant questioning and search for a critical flaw.

Instead of pushing back against her, the plant welcomed it.


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(Please note that the Saturday and Sunday NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS — unedited —are added to Monday news posts in order to maintain continuity of nuclear news as well as for research for the overall information provided in “LLAW;s All Things Nuclear”.)

There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

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Whenever there is an underlined link to a Category media news story, if you press or click on the link provided, you no longer have to cut and paste to your web browser, since this Post’s link will take you directly to the article in your browser.

A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Monday, (11/18/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

What Putin Has Said About Nuclear Weapons As ATACMS Authorized Against Russia

Newsweek

Putin warned in September that Russia was changing its nuclear doctrine. Biden’s authorization has renewed focus on what that might mean.

Putin’s nuclear weapons are redundant with US weapons allowed to strike in Russia

Forces News

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon says the US decision is better late than never but warns more still needs to be done to secure a Ukrainian victory.

Biden removes long-range missile restraint on Ukraine’s armed forces – Texas Public Radio

Texas Public Radio

For the first time, President Biden has given Ukraine the green light to use powerful American long-range weapons, known as the Army Tactical …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

Has nuclear power entered a new era of acceptance amid global warming?

Los Angeles Times

When Heather Hoff took a job at Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant, she was skeptical of nuclear energy — so much so that she resolved to report …

Rolls-Royce sets sights on providing nuclear power to space missions – Financial Times

Financial Times

… nuclear reactor, a technology it hopes will also provide power for space missions. Jake Thompson, director of novel nuclear and special projects …

Nuclear hype ignores high cost, long timelines | IEEFA

IEEFA

Increasingly, nuclear power is being touted as a solution to meet growing electricity demand, but a new briefing note from the Institute for …

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

Middle East tensions are a crude awakening for Japan’s energy security strategy

East Asia Forum

But the slow reactivation of nuclear power plants that were shut down … emergencies. Since energy supply disruptions affect other importing …

COP29: Event held on “Radiation and Climate Change: New Challenges” – AZERTAC

azertag.az

… Nuclear and Radiological Activity under the Ministry of Emergency Situations (MES). … Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Nijat Aliyev, Head of the …lear War

Nuclear War 

NEWS

What Putin Has Said About Nuclear Weapons As ATACMS Authorized Against Russia

Newsweek

Putin warned in September that Russia was changing its nuclear doctrine. Biden’s authorization has renewed focus on what that might mean.

Kremlin says Biden’s Ukraine missile decision would escalate war, if true | Reuters

Reuters

The Kremlin said that any U.S. decision to allow Ukraine to fire American missiles deep into Russia would mean it was directly involved in the …

Nuclear War Imminent? Putin’s Allies Threaten U.S.-Led NATO After Biden’s ATACMS Nod

YouTube

The recent decision by the U.S. and NATO allies, including France and the UK, to permit Ukraine to strike within Russian territory using …r Power

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

In face of alleged US threats, North Korea calls for expanded nuclear forces – POLITICO

Politico

In face of alleged US threats, North Korea calls for expanded nuclear forces … war against Moscow and expand the scope of U.S. military …

What Putin Has Said About Nuclear Weapons As ATACMS Authorized Against Russia

Newsweek

… attack that poses a critical threat to the sovereignty of Russia, carried out by a nonnuclear power with the participation or support of a nuclear …

North Korean leader calls for expanding his nuclear forces in the face of alleged US threats

AP News

North Korean leader calls for expanding his nuclear forces in the face of alleged US threats ..

Weekend Nuclear News

Saturday’s Media Nuclear News (11/16/24)

Nuclear Power

NEWS

Here’s a look inside the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant – CNBC

CNBC

Constellation Energy plans to restart Three Mile Island’s Unit 1 in 2028 through a power purchase agreement with Microsoft. The plant will be …

Three Mile Island nuclear turning point as Big Tech influence grows – CNBC

CNBC

The fortunes of the nuclear industry have shifted dramatically this year as tech companies seek carbon-free power to meet the electricity …

Biden Wants To Triple Nuclear Energy Capacity, but He’ll Have To Cut Red Tape To Do It

Reason Magazine

The Biden administration has an ambitious plan to triple America’s nuclear power capacity by 2050 from 2020 levels.

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

Giant lasers might spark our fusion energy future | New England Public Media – NEPM

NEPM

All Things Considered. 88.5 NEPM. All Things Considered. Next Up: 6:30 PM … nuclear fusion through the use of the world’s most energetic laser system.

Undeclared Iranian nuclear site was hit by Israeli strikes last month, significantly delaying …

All Israel News

… nuclear sites to avoid an all-out regional war. Despite agreeing to the … things that were kept top secret and known to a very small group …

Fusion energy: Can we really recreate the sun’s power? – NPR

NPR

All Things Considered · Fresh Air · Up First. Featured. The NPR Politics … Instead, the low-level nuclear waste of fusion can decay away in just …

Nuclear War

NEWS

New Report: How to Avoid a Nuclear War With China – Air & Space Forces Magazine

Air & Space Forces Magazine

Air Force long-range strikes would be important in a war with China but must be carefully managed to avoid nuclear conflict, a report states.

‘Doomsday Plane’ Can Protect US Presidents From Nuclear War: Photos – Business Insider

Business Insider

In the event of nuclear war, the E-4B “Nightwatch” plane would serve as the US military’s command and control center.

DOD Sends Report to Congress on the Nuclear Weapons Employment Strategy of the United States

Department of Defense

The 491 Report, submitted in accordance with 10 U.S.C. Section 491, reflects an unclassified description of Presidential nuclear employment Guidance …

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

Russian occupiers damage main power line at Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Plant

The New Voice of Ukraine

Currently, the ZNPP is being powered by a backup line. Repair crews have identified the damage site and are conducting emergency recovery work, …

Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant on the brink of blackout due to Russian shelling – 112

112

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also urged Russia to leave the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant and raised concerns about damage to one …

China will test the most extreme energy in history: It will launch it outside the country

Riazor.org

“The smaller size of SMRs also means smaller areas required for emergency planning. A large nuclear plant will need a radius of 16 kilometres for this …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

US to deter nuclear threats from N. Korea, China, Russia ‘simultaneously’: Pentagon report

The Korea Times

Nuclear threats from the North, China and Russia have come into renewed … war in Ukraine. In a telling sign of their burgeoning cooperation …

Pentagon: China, Russia, North Korea collaborating on strategic weapons threats

Washington Times

American nuclear forces will be required to deter growing nuclear threats posed by a combination of dangers from China, Russia and North Korea at …

U.S. preparing to simultaneously deter nuclear threats from DPRK, China, Russia – Pentagon

Ukrinform

Nuclear threats from North Korea, China, and Russia are back in the … war against Ukraine. Read also: U.S. vows to destroy all Russian …

Sunday’s Media Nuclear News (11/17/24)

Nuclear Power

NEWS

Will Nuclear Stocks Soar in the New Trump Administration? Here’s What Investors Need To Know.

The Motley Fool

nuclear power plant with power lines overhead. Image source: Getty Images. Trump weighs in on nuclear energy. In his first term, Trump supported …

Big tech eyeing cleaner energy to run power-intensive data centres for AI – YouTube

YouTube

Silicon Valley is putting big money into nuclear energy projects to power their ambitious AI plans. Some of the biggest players there are eyeing …

Nuclear energy: Why Trump administration could be a net positive for India’s SMR push

The Indian Express

The most common type, though, are light water reactors, which are very similar to traditional nuclear power plants being built in Russia, France and …

NPR

LIMA, Peru — President Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping on Saturday agreed that any decision to use nuclear weapons should be controlled by …

President Biden shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Lima, Peru, …

You know, this was an opportunity for them to take stock of their relationship after four years of President Biden stewarding it along with President …

BBC

The fear of nuclear war forced nations to come together to stop the spread of atomic weapons. Could a similar idea curb the use of fossil fuels?

… nuclear weapons, according to the White House … Zelenskiy says Ukraine must do everything to end war next year. 32 min …

More from this section ; Poland scrambles fighter jets over massive Russian missile attack on Ukraine. 17/11/2024. 3 min. read ; Ahead of G20 summit, …

The Washington Post

… emergency power shutdowns and nationwide rolling blackouts. … Although Ukraine’s nuclear plants were not directly impacted, several electrical …

Quote: “The transmission system operator [Ukrenergo] has urgently introduced emergency power outages. … Pivdennoukrainsk Nuclear Power Plant prepares …

Energy.. Framatome’s accident-tolerant fuel sets operational record in Swiss nuclear reactor · Prabhat. an hour ago. 0. 4. Energy.. Hydrogels …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

Commentary | Israel, Iran, and Nuclear War: A History of the Future

israeldefense.co.il

Part two of a two-part article, which explores Israel’s complex strategic calculus in facing an Iranian nuclear threat, and the chilling scenarios …

Ukrainians are doing the United States a good service by dying for them — Jeffrey Sachs

EADaily

… threats, since these countries possess thousands of nuclear warheads. … And do you know how much we talk about the nuclear threat posed by this war?

Taleghan 2 Obliterated: How Israel is Thwarting Iran’s Homegrown Nuclear Threat

SOFREP

Taleghan 2 Obliterated: How Israel is Thwarting Iran’s Homegrown Nuclear Threat … An aerial view captures the aftermath of a devastating Israeliekend News

Nuclear Power

NEWS

Will Nuclear Stocks Soar in the New Trump Administration? Here’s What Investors Need To Know.

The Motley Fool

nuclear power plant with power lines overhead. Image source: Getty Images. Trump weighs in on nuclear energy. In his first term, Trump supported …

Big tech eyeing cleaner energy to run power-intensive data centres for AI – YouTube

YouTube

Silicon Valley is putting big money into nuclear energy projects to power their ambitious AI plans. Some of the biggest players there are eyeing …

Nuclear energy: Why Trump administration could be a net positive for India’s SMR push

The Indian Express

The most common type, though, are light water reactors, which are very similar to traditional nuclear power plants being built in Russia, France and …

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

Biden and Xi take a first step to limit AI and nuclear decisions at their last meeting – NPR

NPR

LIMA, Peru — President Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping on Saturday agreed that any decision to use nuclear weapons should be controlled by …

Biden and Xi take a first step to limit AI and nuclear decisions at their last meeting – KJZZ

KJZZ

President Biden shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Lima, Peru, …

On-the-Record Press Gaggle by APNSA Jake Sullivan on President Biden’s Meeting with …

The White House

You know, this was an opportunity for them to take stock of their relationship after four years of President Biden stewarding it along with President …

Nuclear War

NEWS

We stopped nuclear weapons spreading. Is it time to the same with fossil fuels? – BBC

BBC

The fear of nuclear war forced nations to come together to stop the spread of atomic weapons. Could a similar idea curb the use of fossil fuels?

Biden, Xi agreed that humans, not AI, should control nuclear weapons, White House says

Reuters

… nuclear weapons, according to the White House … Zelenskiy says Ukraine must do everything to end war next year. 32 min …

Biden, Xi agree that humans, not AI, should control nuclear arms – Euractiv

Euractiv

More from this section ; Poland scrambles fighter jets over massive Russian missile attack on Ukraine. 17/11/2024. 3 min. read ; Ahead of G20 summit, …

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

Russia launches one of its fiercest missile and drone attacks at Ukraine’s infrastructure

The Washington Post

… emergency power shutdowns and nationwide rolling blackouts. … Although Ukraine’s nuclear plants were not directly impacted, several electrical …

Russia’s latest large-scale missile attack targets Ukraine’s power grid – Ukraine’s Energy Ministry

pravda.com.ua

Quote: “The transmission system operator [Ukrenergo] has urgently introduced emergency power outages. … Pivdennoukrainsk Nuclear Power Plant prepares …

Beijing’s base in South China Sea cuts emergency response time by 50%: Study

Interesting Engineering

Energy.. Framatome’s accident-tolerant fuel sets operational record in Swiss nuclear reactor · Prabhat. an hour ago. 0. 4. Energy.. Hydrogels …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

Commentary | Israel, Iran, and Nuclear War: A History of the Future

israeldefense.co.il

Part two of a two-part article, which explores Israel’s complex strategic calculus in facing an Iranian nuclear threat, and the chilling scenarios …

Ukrainians are doing the United States a good service by dying for them — Jeffrey Sachs

EADaily

… threats, since these countries possess thousands of nuclear warheads. … And do you know how much we talk about the nuclear threat posed by this war?

Taleghan 2 Obliterated: How Israel is Thwarting Iran’s Homegrown Nuclear Threat

SOFREP

Taleghan 2 Obliterated: How Israel is Thwarting Iran’s Homegrown Nuclear Threat … An aerial view captures the aftermath of a devastating Israeli ..

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