News

How to Survive shares what really happens if a nuclear bomb detonates near you and how to survive the fallout. They cover the immediate dangers, radiation exposure, and essential survival steps to ...
A new book by Joe Romm explains why nuclear is not much of a climate solution. A dollar invested in renewables delivers much more carbon-free electricity than a dollar invested in nuclear, writes ...
AI, electrification, and more onshore manufacturing in the US will further drive energy demand. The Department of Energy estimates that the nuclear sector will create 375,000 new jobs by 2050.
President Trump initiates a nuclear renaissance with executive orders to advance reactor designs, aiming to expand US nuclear capacity to 400 GW by 2050.
President Trump on Friday signed executive orders that seek to quadruple the nation’s nuclear power, including by cutbacks to health and environmental considerations. In one such executive order ...
Tangent. The nuclear industry is expected to benefit from a budget bill approved in the House on Thursday. The legislation, referred to by Trump as his “one big beautiful bill” and heavily ...
President Trump is set to sign executive orders to boost the nuclear energy industry by streamlining reactor approvals and reinforcing fuel supply chains, leading to a surge in nuclear stocks.
Among a flurry of executive actions, Mr. Trump directed the nation’s nuclear safety regulator to speed up approvals for new reactors. By Brad Plumer Reporting from Washington President Trump ...
Trump plan for fast-tracking nuclear power takes aim at regulators. The president signed executive orders that threaten to erode the decades-long independence of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Testifying to a Senate committee, National Nuclear Security Administration leaders acknowledged staffing woes after DOGE-led reductions.
China has approved plans to build 10 new nuclear reactors for 200 billion yuan ($27.7 billion), positioning it to surpass the U.S. as the world’s largest nuclear power producer by 2030 ...
While most of the world looked away, a new nuclear arms race has broken out between the US, Russia, and China, raising the risk of nuclear confrontation to the highest in decades.