The disaster at Fukushima last year reignited the nuclear debate and left many wondering if the risks involved in nuclear power were worth the benefits. What Will Work? delves even deeper into the issue by questioning the validity of nuclear power’s supposed cost-free and carbon-free advantages. Maria Carvalho thinks the book provides an illuminating analysis on a rather opaque and technocratic industry. What Will Work? Fighting Climate Change with Renewable Energy, Not Nuclear Power. Kristin Shrader-Frechette. Oxford University Press. December 12, 2011
The nuclear power plant failures at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl in the late 1970s and 1980s spli...
Finding the optimum energy supply system is one of the aims of energy strategy research and nuclear ...
The nuclear issue often excites strong emotions and there are widely differing views as to whether ...
Reviewing nuclear energy and disentangling myth from reality is essential to informing public opinio...
Nuclear power remains controversial on many levels. On the up side, the lifecycle emissions for nucl...
David Buchan’s latest book provides a comprehensive guide to the energy pitfalls and possibilities f...
In Fact and Fiction in Global Energy Policy: 15 Contentious Questions, Benjamin J. Sovacool, Marilyn...
This report takes look at nuclear power and its current use around the world and its potential as a ...
The author examines the challenges and opportunities of nuclear power in meeting the projected large...
The target audience of this book are those with an interest in the nuclear power industry as part o...
As concern for the environment gets greater, particularly in terms of fossil-fuel consumption and ca...
In this paper, I examine how the nuclear incidents at Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and Fukushima im...
The general public has many misconceptions concerning energy sources; for example, how many realise ...
As political solutions to climate change have so far had little impact, some climate change scientis...
Should nuclear energy development be part of a global strategy to reduce climate change? Many people...
The nuclear power plant failures at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl in the late 1970s and 1980s spli...
Finding the optimum energy supply system is one of the aims of energy strategy research and nuclear ...
The nuclear issue often excites strong emotions and there are widely differing views as to whether ...
Reviewing nuclear energy and disentangling myth from reality is essential to informing public opinio...
Nuclear power remains controversial on many levels. On the up side, the lifecycle emissions for nucl...
David Buchan’s latest book provides a comprehensive guide to the energy pitfalls and possibilities f...
In Fact and Fiction in Global Energy Policy: 15 Contentious Questions, Benjamin J. Sovacool, Marilyn...
This report takes look at nuclear power and its current use around the world and its potential as a ...
The author examines the challenges and opportunities of nuclear power in meeting the projected large...
The target audience of this book are those with an interest in the nuclear power industry as part o...
As concern for the environment gets greater, particularly in terms of fossil-fuel consumption and ca...
In this paper, I examine how the nuclear incidents at Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and Fukushima im...
The general public has many misconceptions concerning energy sources; for example, how many realise ...
As political solutions to climate change have so far had little impact, some climate change scientis...
Should nuclear energy development be part of a global strategy to reduce climate change? Many people...
The nuclear power plant failures at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl in the late 1970s and 1980s spli...
Finding the optimum energy supply system is one of the aims of energy strategy research and nuclear ...
The nuclear issue often excites strong emotions and there are widely differing views as to whether ...