How the U.S. and South Korea Can Power the Globe with Nuclear Energy
South Korea’s capabilities coupled with U.S. research and capital could answer many of the world’s most pressing energy questions.
South Korea’s capabilities coupled with U.S. research and capital could answer many of the world’s most pressing energy questions.
South Korea’s hard-earned opportunity to regain its position in global nuclear power exports should be carefully managed and leveraged.
South Korea’s political establishment struggles to reduce the country’s reliance on nuclear energy given the country’s economic demands.
South Korea reaffirms its strategic relationship with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) with a high-level visit to the country.
Delays with the formal audit of a nuclear reactor raises questions on whether the government is too hastily pushing its green energy platform.
Lucrative fossil fuel projects and lingering domestic concerns around nuclear power pose challenges for Seoul’s ecological aspirations
Concerns about the release of radioactive material from damaged reactors, and concerns regarding potential exposure of populations living downwind of the reactors, focuses on the radioactive isotope cesium-137 (Cs137).