South Korean reactor stops due to mechanical problem Seoul (AFP) Oct 26, 2008 South Korea on Sunday reported one of its 20 nuclear reactors came to a halt due to a mechanical problem. The Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power Corporation said one of its six nuclear reactors in the eastern coastal city of Uljin, 230 kilometres (140 miles) east of Seoul, stopped due to a malfunctioning turbine Sunday afternoon. "It was a simple mechanical problem and there was no leak at all of any radioactive materials," an official at the Uljin power plant told AFP, adding he expected the reactor to resume operations on Monday. He said the 950,000-kilowatt reactor was one of the oldest nuclear power facilities in South Korea. The country's reactors meet 40 percent of its demand for electricity but it plans to build eight more by 2015. Related Links Nuclear Power News - Nuclear Science, Nuclear Technology Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com
India probing radioactive lift button exports New Delhi (AFP) Oct 23, 2008 India's atomic safety body said Thursday that radioactive scrap metal which found its way into buttons installed into lifts in France had been traced back to a western Indian foundry. |
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