Not whether, but how fast on CO₂ storage in Norway
The following op-ed by Eivind Berstad, Bellona’s CCS team leader, originally appeared in Teknisk Ukbladet. When the European Free Trade Associatio...
News
Publish date: August 16, 2006
Written by: Vera Ponomareva
News
Relay protection reacted because of the short circuit in the switchyard. As a result, a 330 kW power line was switched off. The first unit reactor was scrammed and switched of the electric network.
The background radiation at the Leningrad Nuclear Power Plant (LNPP) site and neighbouring areas was reported to be within preset limits and did not exceed natural levels, the LNPP’s press service reported.
“Specialists are now investigating the reasons and to find out what repairs are necessary,” Sergey Averyanov, chief of LNPP press-service, told Bellona Web.
According to Averyanov, the repairs may take about two days, though the units themselves do not need to be repaired.
The following op-ed by Eivind Berstad, Bellona’s CCS team leader, originally appeared in Teknisk Ukbladet. When the European Free Trade Associatio...
For the past eight years, disinformation has dominated news around elections all over the world. Despite this, it is still a widely misunderstood con...
A ruling by the European Free Trade Association Court that Norway’s continental shelf falls under the European Economic Area Agreement could dramatic...
Bellona held a seminar on countering Russian disinformation in the Arctic at the Arctic Frontiers international conference in Norway