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Media Appearances

    • TV/Radio Broadcast

    Cause for Concern at Japan’s Damaged Fukushima Nuclear Plant

    • March 16, 2011
    • CBS

    In Japan’s damaged Fukushima nuclear plant, six spent fuel pools and three reactor cores have the potential to release significant radiation into the atmosphere.

    • TV/Radio Broadcast

    Unclear Whether Exposed Spent Fuel Rods Will Catch Fire

    • March 16, 2011
    • NBC

    Conditions at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear reactors, damaged by the devastating earthquake and subsequent tsunami, remain tense, as water levels around the spent fuel rods in one reactor continue to drop, exposing the rods to the air.

    • TV/Radio Broadcast

    Nuclear Situation in Japan Getting Worse?

    • March 16, 2011
    • Fox News

    As Japanese plant operators attempt to cool the remaining reactor cores at the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant, they must work with limited information, since the reactor buildings are highly radioactive, making it too dangerous to send workers in to get more accurate readings.

    • TV/Radio Broadcast

    Increasing Concern for Japan's Nuclear Plant Workers

    • March 16, 2011
    • MSNBC

    As radiation levels fluctuate at the Daiichi reactors in Fukushima, there is increasing concern about the amount of radiation workers at the plant are being exposed to and how much radiation is leaking into the surrounding area.

    • TV/Radio Broadcast

    Radiation Leak Fears Rise in Japan

    • March 15, 2011
    • CBS

    While it is becoming increasingly difficult for the Japanese to contain the smaller amounts of radiation escaping from the nuclear energy plants damaged by the earthquake and tsunami, a catastrophic release of radiation remains extremely unlikely.

    • TV/Radio Broadcast

    Japan's Ongoing Nuclear Crisis

    The fire in the spent fuel pool in Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant and the explosion inside another reactor have opened more pathways for radiation to be released, prompting the nuclear industry to reconsider whether their designs for reactors are sufficient to withstand significant natural disasters.

    • TV/Radio Broadcast

    Japanese Containment Vessel at Nuclear Reactor 2 May Be Breached

    • March 15, 2011
    • MSNBC

    The damage done to Japan’s nuclear reactors by the earthquake and subsequent tsunami should prompt the nuclear industry to reevaluate the magnitude of natural disasters that the reactors should be designed to survive.

    • TV/Radio Broadcast

    Chernobyl-Style Meltdown 'Not Possible' in Japan

    • March 14, 2011
    • Deutsche Welle

    Given that the Japanese have one of the most advanced nuclear power programs in the world, there is bound to be a serious reevaluation of whether nuclear power programs around the world are capable of dealing with massive geological events like the earthquake that hit Japan.

    • TV/Radio Broadcast

    Japan's Nuclear Situation Takes 'Grim Turn'

    • March 14, 2011
    • NBC

    While substantial core melting in the Japanese nuclear reactors damaged by the earthquake and following tsunami may create the risk of a large release of radiation into the environment, it is also possible that any amounts of radiation released would be relatively small.

    • TV/Radio Broadcast

    Japan's Nuclear Disaster

    • March 14, 2011
    • MSNBC

    Between the challenge of cooling the fuel rods at damaged Japanese nuclear energy plants and a potential breach in the containment vessel that surrounds the overheating nuclear core, it is becoming increasingly difficult to keep radiation from being released into the environment.

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