News

Japan has begun the controversial process of dumping contaminated water from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant into the ...
Japan pledged to take credible and transparent measures to ensure the quality and safety of its aquatic products meet China’s ...
At the request of the Japanese side, China and Japan held a new round of technical exchanges in Beijing on May 28 regarding ...
Fourteen years since one of the worst nuclear accidents in history, Japan is getting creative in the effort to convince ...
Japan said it plans to use some of the soil removed from near the contaminated Fukushima nuclear plant on flower beds outside Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s office to show it is safe to reuse.
Officials say that the contaminated soil from Fukushima is harmless. To demonstrate this, the beds in front of Prime Minister Ishiba's office are filled with it.
YouTube star Derek Muller built an 18-million-subscriber YouTube empire by challenging misconceptions about science. Now his ...
about 1.5 tons of contaminated water flowed out of a water purification facility at the plant through an air exhaust opening in February 2024. Akira Ono, president of Fukushima Daiichi ...
RADIOACTIVE soil from Fukushima will be used outside Japan’s government buildings in a bid to persuade the country that the soil is safe. Japan’s government revealed the bold move on ...
The United Nations human rights experts have written to the Japanese government to express their concerns about the release ...
While a lot remains unknown about how microplastics affect our health, scientists in Japan and around the world broadly agree ...