A Swiss company named Exlterra, in collaboration with Ukraine’s SSE Ecocentre, has developed a revolutionary technology called the Nucleus Separation Passive System (NSPS) to clean up radioactive contamination at Chernobyl.
This system uses high-velocity positrons to break down radioactive isotopes without disturbing the soil or using chemicals.
Thanks to this breakthrough:
Airborne radiation dropped by 47%
Soil radiation dropped by 37%
The estimated cleanup timeline has been reduced from 24,000 years to just 5 years
Experts hail this as a historic achievement with global potential, offering new hope for reclaiming radiation-affected zones like Fukushima.
This system uses high-velocity positrons to break down radioactive isotopes without disturbing the soil or using chemicals.
Thanks to this breakthrough:
Airborne radiation dropped by 47%
Soil radiation dropped by 37%
The estimated cleanup timeline has been reduced from 24,000 years to just 5 years
Experts hail this as a historic achievement with global potential, offering new hope for reclaiming radiation-affected zones like Fukushima.
A Swiss company named Exlterra, in collaboration with Ukraine’s SSE Ecocentre, has developed a revolutionary technology called the Nucleus Separation Passive System (NSPS) to clean up radioactive contamination at Chernobyl.
This system uses high-velocity positrons to break down radioactive isotopes without disturbing the soil or using chemicals.
Thanks to this breakthrough:
Airborne radiation dropped by 47%
Soil radiation dropped by 37%
The estimated cleanup timeline has been reduced from 24,000 years to just 5 years
Experts hail this as a historic achievement with global potential, offering new hope for reclaiming radiation-affected zones like Fukushima.
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