March 7th, 2012

Despite the Fukushima catastrophe in Japan last March, nuclear power is experiencing a rebirth in the United States. Billions of dollars in federal funding has been allocated to develop nuclear capacity; applications are under consideration to build more than a dozen new reactors; and last month, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced approval for the construction of the first new nuclear reactors in more than three decades. 

But what about the nation’s existing fleet of aging reactors? Licensed to operate for 40 years, many of these plants are steadily, if quietly, getting extensions from the NRC. Seventy-one of the nation’s 104 plants already have won approval for 20-year extensions. Watch our new investigation, done in collaboration with Al Jazeera English’s “People & Power,” which takes a closer look into surprising problems in the NRC’s oversight of aging nuclear plants.

May 20th, 2011

Scientists may have found quake warning signal

Scientists may have found a way to predict earthquakes.

According to a team of NASA and Russian space and physical scientists, in the days before the March 11 Tohoku earthquake in Japan, the atmosphere directly above the epicenter rapidly heated up.

In a presentation at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, the researchers presented data indicating that starting on March 3, the electron count in the ionosphere – the upper part of the atmosphere – increased dramatically.

The count reached its peak three days before the temblor struck. Read more from California Watch.

(Photo courtesy NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)

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