French President Nicolas Sarkozy called on Thursday for a reform of global nuclear standards by the end of the year during a first visit by a foreign leader to Japan since the earthquake and tsunami that triggered its atomic disaster.

G-20 chairman Sarkozy said France wants to host a meeting of the bloc

The recent devastation that has impacted the people of Japan has been described as of epic proportions of many kinds: loss of lives, loss of private properties and public assets; economic set back; and nuclear emergency.

Japan ordered an immediate safety upgrade at its 55 nuclear power plants on Wednesday in its first acknowledgement that standards were inadequate when an earthquake and tsunami wrecked one of the facilities nearly three weeks ago.

Adding to the evidence of radiation leakages around the crippled nuclear complex, 240 km north of Tokyo, readings showed radioactive iodine in the sea off the plant a

Radiation Level At Record High
Tokyo: Radioactive iodine thousands of times higher than the permissible safety limit was discovered on Wednesday in the sea near the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, Japan

The Chernobyl disaster still has much to tell us about the long-term risks of low-level radiation exposure. But only if the necessary follow-up studies are supported. (Editorial)

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v471/n7340/full/471547a.html
 

Reassurances from ‘experts’ on the safety of nuclear power will not wash,
says Colin Macilwain. The Fukushima crisis raises genuine questions.

http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110330/full/471549a.html
 

In a week that has seen little good news about the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactors, the latest data on radioisotope fallout from the plant is so far offering a glimmer of hope.

http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110330/full/471555a.html

Twenty-five years after the nuclear disaster, the clean-up grinds on and health studies are faltering. Are there lessons for Japan?

http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110330/full/471562a.html

Japan's government vowed Tuesday to overhaul nuclear safety standards once its radiation-leaking reactor complex is under control, admitting that its safeguards were insufficient to protect the plant against the March 11 tsunami.

The struggle to contain radiation at the complex has unfolded with near-constant missteps, including two workers drenched Tuesday with radioactive water despite wearin

Stressing, in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear accident, that the government was committed to ensuring the safety of Indian nuclear power plants, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Tuesday said steps would be taken to make the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB)

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