2009-05-11 08:15 (Downloadable files) Studsvik has signed an agreement with Bruce Power in Canada for the treatment of 32 steam generators. The total order value is estimated at approximately SEK 250 million
Studsvik of Sweden has signed a contract with Finland's Teollisuuden Voima Oyj (TVO) for the dismantling and metal recycling of old heat exchangers from the Olkiluoto nuclear power plant. Studsvik's facility near Nyköping, Sweden, melts metal scrap, such
Publicerad 26 juni 2002 Studsvik AB har tillsammans med Washington Group International Inc, WGI, startat ett amerikanskt bolag för att bearbeta federalt kärnavfall. Det nybildade bolaget heter Thor Treatment Technologies och ägare är Studsviks dotterbola
American countervulture or counterculture hero gone made in his old days, now promoting nuklear power and whole earth catastrophe: "reason: You use the word pragmatist in the subtitle of your new book. But that presumes we agree on the goals we're pragmat
03 November 2010 The European Commission has today released its long-awaited proposed nuclear waste directive, which would tell European Union (EU) member states to develop plans to store radioactive waste in safe repositories." "Today's nuclear waste dir
"Why isn't every government, every philosopher, every theologian, everywhere in the world discussing Onkalo and its implications? I don't know, but they should see this film." Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian, Thursday, 11 November, 2010
Mikaelbook's comment:: "History is a nightmare from which we are trying to awake", Stephen said (or something close). But it is doubtful whether we will ever wake up - despite the efforts of a few wise men and women like Gorbachev and Raisa, his wife.
Gives backgroun, but is partly outdated, because: "unlike all of the other reactors in trouble, Unit 3 (of Fukushima I) has been using plutonium-based MOX (mixed oxide) fuel since September 10, 2010. (www.nirs.org)
By Zoltán Dujisin, CHERNOBYL, Apr 30, 2011 (IPS) "The sarcophagous is welcome, but officials who say that this will solve the problem are not telling the truth: It will remain dangerous as long as there are 185 tons of nuclear fuel in it, fuel that is not
Deutsche Welle 28.11.: "Starting in 2012, no German nuclear waste will be sent to France for reprocessing, with the waste simply being stockpiled instead. Nuclear waste reprocessing extracts reusable elements like plutonium and uranium, but does not reduce the radioactivity of the waste. Germany's anti-nuclear movement is considered one of Europe's strongest. Protesters oppose the transport on several grounds, saying it poses a threat to residents and the environment near the train's path in the event of an accident or an attack." They also say such transports draw attention to what they see as atomic energy's biggest unsolved problem: the disposal of waste. The waste being transported to the site at Gorleben will remain potentially hazardous for thousands of years.