Some of the participating artists include: Abbas Akhavan who will exhibit a water fountain created using stacks of dishes pots and cooking pans that explores the politics of hospitality; Zineb Sedira whose large - scale photographs and sugar sculpture references the history of sugar, race, migration and globalization; Tadasu Takamine reflects on the consequences of the catastrophic
nuclear meltdown at Fukushima in a series of performative videos; Asunción Molinos whose work in the show originates for a «pop - up» restaurant she ran in Cairo which dealt with issues related to Egypt's export / import policies and Senam Okudzeto whose work Portes - Oranges features metal sculptures used by Ghanaian fruit sellers to display oranges.
Fifteen years later, Joe remains in a state of depression and confusion at the loss of his wife, convinced that the cause of
the nuclear meltdown at Janjira was covered up by the Military.
Imagine a malware program like the 2010 Stuxnet worm creating
a nuclear meltdown at a power plant.
Diane DiEuliis and Shin Chang - Hoon AAAS / Carla Schaffer Imagine a malware program like the 2010 Stuxnet worm creating
a nuclear meltdown at a power plant.
The nuclear meltdown at Chernobyl 20 years ago this month, even more than my launch of perestroika, was perhaps the real cause of the collapse of the Soviet Union five years later.
If you're ever having a kid - sized
nuclear meltdown at home, pull up a video like this one... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7zPSSLJaXd4!
After the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami led to
nuclear meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant and a release of radioactive material, all Japanese nuclear plants were closed out of safety concerns.
Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda ordered the restart of two idle nuclear reactors Saturday amid widespread public opposition, more than a year after a powerful earthquake and tsunami triggered three
nuclear meltdowns at the Fukushima Dai - ichi Power Plant, and halted all 50 reactors in Japan...
Not exact matches
TOKYO (AP)-- About 1,400 people filed a joint lawsuit Thursday against three companies that manufactured reactors
at Japan's Fukushima Dai - ichi
nuclear plant, saying they should be financially liable for damage caused by their 2011
meltdowns.
On Friday, Dec. 2 U.S. Representative Jerrold Nadler introduced legislation to help prevent a
meltdown at the Indian Point
Nuclear Plant and further safeguard New Yorkers in the event of a catastrophe.
Yukiya Amano, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, has described the struggle to avoid
meltdown at the
nuclear plant's six reactors as a «race against the clock».
It is now clear that
at least one reactor
at Fukushima experienced a full core
meltdown, so what does that mean for similar
nuclear power plants in the U.S.?
The Fukushima cleanup operation is likely to resemble the protracted cleanup
at the Three Mile Island
Nuclear Generating Station in Pennsylvania, where one reactor experienced a partial
meltdown in 1979.
In the wake of the
meltdown at Fukushima Daiichi, the IAEA urged a critical review of
nuclear safety systems
The inspector general's office, they assert, has shied away from challenging the NRC
at exactly the wrong time, with many of the country's 104
nuclear power plants aging beyond their 40 - year design life and with reactor
meltdowns at Fukushima rewriting the definition of a catastrophic accident.
The
meltdown at Japan's Fukushima plant last spring cast the issue of
nuclear safety in stark relief.
A top U.S.
nuclear regulator has now given a dire assessment of Japan's
nuclear crisis, saying that radiation from uncovered spent fuel
at the Fukushima Daiichi plant could force emergency workers to abandon their fight to prevent
meltdowns there
It also triggered the
meltdowns at Fukushima and the evacuation of 150,000 people from within 20 kilometers of the
nuclear plant as well as from areas beyond that were hard hit by fallout.
The March 2011
meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi
Nuclear Power Plant caused extensive human suffering — evacuations, emotional trauma and premature deaths, disrupted jobs and schooling.
Japan still struggles with the effects of a powerful earthquake, devastating tsunami and multiple
meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power plant
In fact, low natural gas prices stalled the U.S.
nuclear renaissance outside Georgia and South Carolina, long before the reactor
meltdowns at Fukushima Daiichi in Japan.
The terrifying
meltdowns and hydrogen explosions
at the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power station in the days following 11 March 2011 made the importance of backup electricity generators painfully clear.
With
nuclear safety in the spotlight since the 2011 reactor
meltdown at Japan's Fukushima plant - which in turn prompted Germany to call time on its entire
nuclear fleet - operators can take no chances with their elderly plants, but the outages get longer and more difficult.
Japan's devastating earthquake caused cooling problems
at one of the nation's
nuclear reactors, and authorities scrambled to prevent a
meltdown
Some 16 months after
meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power plant, operations to remove the
nuclear fuel rods from the site have finally begun
The multiple
meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi
Nuclear Power Plant in March 2011 caused a humanitarian disaster: Upwards of 100,000 people had to be evacuated from within a 20 - kilometer ring around the site.
The shaking evoked memories of the events off the coast of Japan in 2011 that triggered
meltdowns at a
nuclear power plant that the country is still struggling with.
That helps explain why such a large earthquake was unexpected in the region, resulting in catastrophic consequences that included more than 24,000 people dead or missing and fuel
meltdowns in three reactors
at the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power plant on the coast.
Lake Barrett — director of the Three Mile Island
nuclear plant during its decommissioning after a partial
meltdown at the Middletown, Pa., facility in 1979 — says TEPCO will use robots to remotely dig out the melted fuel and store it in canisters on - site before shipping to its final disposal spot.
Seven years after one of the largest earthquakes on record unleashed a massive tsunami and triggered a
meltdown at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power plant, officials say they are
at last getting a handle on the mammoth task of cleaning the site before it is ultimately dismantled.
The top U.S.
nuclear regulator, Gregory Jaczko, gave a dire assessment of Japan's
nuclear crisis yesterday, saying that lethal radiation from uncovered spent fuel above one of the reactors could force emergency workers to abandon their fight to prevent
meltdowns of damaged reactor cores
at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.
Nuclear power fell into a long funk after the partial core
meltdown at the Three Mile Island reactor in Pennsylvania in 1979.
After reading the differing views on
nuclear power across the globe (25 June, p 12), I was saddened to see decisions in Germany, Italy and Switzerland to stop pursuing
nuclear energy, obviously as a backlash following the dangerous
meltdown at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear plant.
CATASTROPHIC
meltdowns of reactors
at the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear plant had less to do with the earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan on 11 March last year, and more to do with the plant owners» and government's failure to anticipate and prepare for emergencies on such an epic scale.
As night fell on Friday in Japan, workers and soldiers continued heroic efforts to douse the potential
meltdown underway
at the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear power plant.
Nuclear reactors
at the Fukushima Daiichi station in Japan are critically endangered but have not reached full
meltdown status.
A study projects 130 future cancer deaths from the
meltdowns at the reactors in Fukushima last year, but does that suggest
nuclear power is safer than fossil fuel alternatives?
TOKYO — On the 4th anniversary of the earthquake and tsunami that triggered
meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi
Nuclear Power Station, there is one bit of reassuring news: A new study concludes that contaminated food was likely kept out of the market.
Radiation levels
at Fukushima Dai - ichi
Nuclear Plant have reached the highest since the 2011
meltdown.
Jack Lemmon plays a shift supervisor
at a
nuclear power plant who narrowly averts a core
meltdown while being surreptitiously filmed by Jane Fonda and Michael Douglas» visiting TV news crew.
★ Diana Thater: «Chernobyl» (closes on Saturday) In this four - walled video projection, the viewer is immersed in layered, shifting images of the decaying buildings, rusting rubble and overgrown fields in and around Prypiat, a Ukrainian city built in the early 1970s for workers
at the Chernobyl reactor and hastily abandoned after the reactor's
nuclear meltdown in 1986.
Human Mask was partially shot on a drone camera in Fukushima in 2011 after the earthquake - triggered tsunami had caused the
meltdown of three
nuclear plant reactors, the evacuation of 300,000 people from the area and
at least 1,600 deaths; the sense of desolation is palpable.
Systems are designed to have a probability of less than one in ten thousand for a core
meltdown in any given year; but that could mean one every 5 years if
nuclear supplied 2 TW of power, or one per year
at the 10 TW or higher level (with roughly 10,000
nuclear plants worldwide).
«Japan is to resume the use of
nuclear power for the first time since last year's triple
meltdown at Fukushima Daiichi power plant after the government on Saturday approved the restart of two idled reactors»
The earthquake also lead to a
meltdown at Fukushima
nuclear power plant, which has become the most severe
nuclear disaster since Chernobyl.
For further information on the prospects for
nuclear energy, see «Fukushima Meltdown Hastens Decline of Nuclear Power,» at www.earth-poli
nuclear energy, see «Fukushima
Meltdown Hastens Decline of
Nuclear Power,» at www.earth-poli
Nuclear Power,»
at www.earth-policy.org.
Before the 2011 accident, in which a tidal wave caused three of the six
nuclear reactors
at the Fukushima Daiichi plant to go into
meltdown, Japan only got 62 percent of its electricity from fossil fuels.
Since then, risk assessment has been used to estimate the probability of a catastrophic
meltdown at a
nuclear power plant, or the probability of a population of grizzly bears becoming locally extinct because too many roads were cut into their forest home, or the probability of children having their IQ lowered by exposure to toxic lead and PCBs in the soil near schools built on a toxic waste dump.
That was the case of the robots built to clean up the
meltdown at the Fukushima
nuclear power plant in Japan.
For more information, see Earth Policy Institute's Wind Indicator and the Plan B Update «Fukushima
Meltdown Hastens Decline of
Nuclear Power,» or visit our Data Center
at www.earth-policy.org.