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Date 2005
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Content Type Features (3) News (7)

International menu at ENC
06 December, 2005
The European Nuclear Society’s latest ENC meeting promises to offer much food for thought.

Iran feels the heat
14 October, 2005
The restart of Iran’s uranium conversion facility in Isfahan has triggered a frenzy of diplomatic activity across the globe. By Judith Perera

European Nuclear Conference, 11-14 December 2005 at Versailles, near Paris, France
29 September, 2005
Early registration ends 10 October for ENC 2005.

Foundations for new build
16 September, 2005
The foundation stone laying ceremony for Olkiluoto 3 took place on 12 September.

New Asia-Pacific climate plan mooted
28 July, 2005

Driving for a licence
27 July, 2005
A number of utilities, acting independently or within consortia, are working on licence applications that could lead to the first new US nuclear plants in decades. By Thecla Fabian

Iran powers ahead
27 July, 2005
“We need peaceful nuclear technology for energy, medical and agricultural purposes and our scientific progress. We will continue this,” Iranian president-elect Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in June. By Judith Perera

NDA unravelled
31 March, 2005
The UK Energy Act 2004 formally established the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority as a legal entity. The new organisation, which commences full operation on 1 April 2005, is charged with carrying out a clean-up programme that is currently estimated to cost some £50 billion.

Postcard from Iran
29 March, 2005
“If the Americans succeed in referring Iran’s case to the Security Council, Iran will immediately suspend all its voluntary confidence-building measures,” Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator Hassan Rohani warned at the International Conference on Nuclear Technology and Sustainable Development held in Tehran from 5-6 March 2005. By Judith Perera

Waste strategies compared
05 February, 2005
The purpose of the ‘Comparison of Alternative Waste Management Strategies for Long-lived Radioactive Wastes’ project was to compare strategies that have been adopted or are being considered for the management of spent nuclear fuel and long-lived radioactive waste. By Mark Dutton and Kathy Hillis



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