Today marks 15 years since the nuclear disaster at Fukushima, Japan. Some parts of the surrounding area are still recovering.
Two villains emerge in this documentary: a historic earthquake, and corrupt people.
Nature is reclaiming abandoned buildings in the exclusion zone surrounding Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, an area that appears frozen in time 15 years after disaster struck.
Japan is still struggling to remove molten fuel debris at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, 15 years after a devastating earthquake and tsunami struck the northeastern part of the country.
After the infamous 2011 explosion of three reactors in Japan’s Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant in Fukushima, the government shut down all nuclear operations. For fifteen years, Japan banished nuclear power, ...
How fast does radiation dissipate following a nuclear disaster? There have only been a handful of reactor meltdowns throughout the history of nuclear engineering, but the 1986 explosion at the ...
Fifteen years after the 2011 nuclear disaster, color-coded radiation maps hang on the wall of Futabaya Ryokan, the family-run ...
Nuclear energy, long stigmatized in Japan following the accident that took place on March 11, 2011 at the Fukushima Daiichi ...
Fifteen years after the Fukushima nuclear disaster shook public confidence in atomic energy, Japan is gradually shifting back toward nuclear power, driven by energy security concerns, rising ...
Elderly innkeeper trying to revitalise her town 15 years after Fukushima disaster - The once-thriving town became deserted after the nuclear disaster ...
From the “Blue Deck” built on higher land within the confines of the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, the reactor buildings where a calamitous accident occurred are visible 80 to 100 meters away.
Fifteen years after the Fukushima disaster, innkeeper Tomoko Kobayashi leads radiation monitoring efforts in Odaka, Japan, as ...
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