Published on Mar 11, 2014 On March 11, 2011 a magnitude 9.0 earthquake shook the coast of Japan triggering a tsunami that created the most disastrous nuclear spill since Chernobyl. The Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant catastrophe caused the m
Published on Jan 16, 2014 PROVIDED BY HTTP://CNNNEXT.COM As officials declare more and more water zones in West Virginia safe, CNN tested the water to find out how safe it is. LIKE US HTTP://FACEBOOK.COM/CNNNEXT FOLLOW US HTTP://TWITT
http://www.euronews.com/ Japan's new prime minister Shinzo Abe has visited the stricken nuclear site at Fukushima, just three days after he was sworn in. Despite strong reservations from the industry's new regulator, the government hopes
PROVIDED BY HTTP://CNNNEXT.COM Published on Sep 10, 2015 Severe floods have hit Japan - sending tonnes of radiation-contaminated water from the Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean That's been confirmed by the facility's operator, Tokyo
Published on Jan 9, 2014 provided by http://cnnnext.com Part 1: Nightline was given rare access to Japan's shuttered power plant and surrounding areas. Part 2: Radiation experts test Pacific Ocean waters surrounding the plant for sig
3/10/13 Forests that cover 70 percent of Japan's Fukushima Prefecture have been found to contain high concentrations of radioactive cesium - not only in the fallen leaves and soil, but in the trees themselves. This suggests that radiation
PROVIDED BY HTTP://CNNNEXT.COM Japan is breaking its own radioactive records - as huge amounts of beta-ray emitting substances have been discovered at another reactor at the crippled Fukushima power plant. Meanwhile the government says the
Provided by http://cnnnext.com Luck has not turned around for now-deserted Fukushima, Japan. Two years after enduring an earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster, the area is still radioactive and leaking contaminated water into the sea. I
PROVIDED BY HTTP://CNNNEXT>COM More than two years have passed since the Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster, and Japanese authorities are still trying to contain radioactive water from leaking out into the Pacific Ocean. While it coul
provided by http://cnnnext.com More than two years after the nuclear meltdown in Fukushima Prefecture, thousands of refugees, desperate to return home, are losing confidence in the Japanese government's cleanup efforts.
PROVIDED BY HTTP://CNNNEXT.COM Four years on from the Fukushima disaster our panel of experts discuss the future of nuclear power. With firsthand accounts from the disaster zone, we look at the reputation of nuclear power in Japan and beyon
PROVIDED BY HTTP://CNNNEXT.COM Published on Aug 12, 2015 Just over four years after the worst nuclear disaster in its history - Japan is once again using nuclear power. This is a huge mistake.
PROVIDED BY HTTP://CNNNEXT.COM Published on Nov 3, 2015 Kevin Kamps, Beyond Nuclear, joins Thom. It's been nearly 5 years since the Fukushima nuclear reactor in Japan suffered a massive meltdown after a tsunami hit the plant. And a new stat
PROVIDED BY HTTP://CNNNEXT.COM The Japanese government has decided to spend public funds of about 47 billion yen, or 470 million dollars, to deal with the massive buildup of radioactive water at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear powe
Published on Jun 8, 2014 PROVIDED BY HTTP://CNNNEXT.COM The unused plutonium was neither revealed in the country's 20-12 nor 20-13 reports to the I-A-E-A. It was blended with uranium into a mixture known as MOX, a mixed oxide fuel, that c
PROVIDED BY HTTP://CNNNEXT.COM Published on Aug 10, 2015 Japanese officials say the country will begin restarting its nuclear power program, after a two-year shutdown sparked by public fears following the Fukushima Daijichi nuclear disaster