News Source: Christian Science Monitor
| 3 months ago
Like many terrorism experts at the time, Rolf Mowatt-Larssen wasn't taking Osama bin Laden too seriously when he said he wanted to obtain a nuclear bomb...Mr. Mowatt-Larssen was working as the Central Intelligence Agency's top counterterrorism expert
News Source: NewKerala
| 4 months ago
Replaying to a question in the Rajya Sabha on Monday, Deora said there are some outstanding issues including finalization of the gas price with Iran. Deora told the house that the energy needs of the country are paramount and that there is no
News Source: Uinta County News
| 5 months ago
The Obama administration committed to a major clean-coal project earlier in June despite knowing that two of its biggest industry partners--American Electric Power and Southern Company--were planning to withdraw financial support for the plant, the
News Source: Uinta County News
| 5 months ago
US DOE clears hurdle to sell its excess uraniun inventory Washington (Platts)--24Jun2009 The US Department of Energy will issue a "no significant impact" finding on its plan to sell portions of its excess uranium inventory in the US uranium market,
News Source: Politico
| 5 months ago
It became a sort of poster child for fiscal responsibility — a clean-coal power plant in Illinois that was one of then-Sen. Barack Obama ’s pet projects. Democrats insisted they were so serious about keeping pork out of the stimulus bill that it
News Source: The Journal Gazette
| 5 months ago
Ohio – Ohio’s environmental agency canceled plans Monday to treat groundwater at a Cold War-era weapons site using federal stimulus money. The state initially planned to give a private company $1.1 million for the work, causing confusion among
News Source: The Columbus Dispatch
| 6 months ago
Ohio's environmental agency said Friday that it is reviewing its decision to use money from President Barack Obama's economic-stimulus package to treat groundwater at a Cold War-era weapons site that was declared cleaned up two years ago. The former
News Source: Uinta County News
| 6 months ago
The end of the Cold War's nuclear weapons buildup means that the U.S. space agency does not have enough plutonium for future faraway space probes -- except for a few missions already scheduled -- according to a new study released Thursday by the