Scientists use light-emitting crystals and solar panels to turn the latent energy in nuclear waste into microbatteries.
A coalition of the world's biggest companies and largest energy users signed a pledge Wednesday in Houston to support a ...
Major companies such as Amazon and Google on Wednesday signed a pledge to support the goal of at least tripling the world's ...
Try to fathom the power of 1 million nuclear power plants. Now, imagine there is a way to pack the equivalent of that into ...
Major technology and energy companies have pledged to support wider use of nuclear power, as surging demand from data centers ...
The pledge is nonbinding, but highlights the growing support for expanding nuclear power among leading industries, finance ...
Amazon.com, Meta Platforms, and Alphabet unit Google signed a pledge Wednesday to triple the global nuclear power supply by ...
Tech giants Amazon, Google, and Meta, among other large energy users, have pledged their support to triple global nuclear ...
Among companies and banks pledging their support Wednesday to increase the world’s nuclear energy capacity — Amazon, Meta, Google, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America.
The study, led by scientists at Ohio State University, demonstrates how ambient gamma radiation from nuclear waste can power microelectronics. While the current output is limited to small sensors, ...
A similar pledge was signed by more than a dozen financial institutions in September, backing goals set during negotiations at COP29 in 2023.
Roxby Hartley, Climate Risk Director at EcoEngineers, discusses how nuclear energy could provide the low-carbon reliable power needed for modern technology ...
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