While Chernobyl put thousands of lives in danger, nuclear energy is still the safest form of energy. In the United States, ...
The Chernobyl disaster in 1986 was the world's worst nuclear accident, with 31 people dying immediately and thousands more ...
Chernobyl’s landscape recovered in unexpected ways, but uneven radiation, hidden harm, and human absence reveal a far more ...
New Scientist on MSN
Chernobyl cooling systems have lost power but meltdown risk is low
An electrical outage at Chernobyl nuclear power plant risks dangerous fuel overheating, but experts say that the chances are extremely slim due to the age of the reactors, which were shut down over tw ...
Oleksiy Breus was in Chernobyl's control room when disaster struck in 1986. Decades later, he shares the harrowing details of ...
The DNA of Chernobyl cleanup workers and others exposed to high doses of radiation showed mutations that were also evident in ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Nuclear reactor kept burning as USSR hurled 600,000 people into the inferno
The explosion at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant turned a routine safety test into a slow-motion war against an invisible ...
YouTube on MSN
Chernobyl: The world's worst nuclear disaster
On April 26, 1986, the No. 4 reactor of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, near Pripyat in the Soviet Union (now Ukraine), exploded, resulting in the worst nuclear disaster in history. The incident ...
While Russia and Ukraine continue targeting each other's energy infrastructure amid their war, backup systems are critical for ensuring safety.
While the claw is considered one of the more iconic pieces of Chernobyl wreckage in the exclusion zone, the real danger is ...
Russia could spark a huge crisis if it strikes a nuclear plant.
Adi Roche highlights the continuing occupation of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant and the recent attack on the Chernobyl ...
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