Andy Skuce
Carbon
capture and storage, or CCS, has been touted as a way to reduce
atmospheric CO2. But how realistic is it to build CCS facilities on a
scale large enough to combat climate change?
Perry World House
While
international law strongly proscribes the use of neuroweapons,
loopholes exist. Governments should use an upcoming conference to curb
the spread of arms that target the central nervous system.
South Asian dilomacy must rest on trust
Jayita Sarkar, Rabia Akhtar, Mario E. Carranza
India
and Pakistan are going to have to figure out how to trust each other,
which is hard to do when they’re always depending on Washington to
settle their fights. Rabia Akhtar posts her second entry in our debate on reducing South Asia’s nuclear dangers.
How many nuclear warheads does the United States need?
Frank von Hippel
Bulletin Board of Sponsors
member Frank von Hippel has a single, central question about nuclear
weapons that journalists and citizens should consider asking the 2016
presidential candidates. A free-access article in the September/October digital journal
Jodi Lieberman
The Roundup is an indispensable daily listing of nuclear-related news. Read it on the website or sign up to have it delivered to your inbox!
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Amy E. Smithson
International
inspectors have now put the capstone on previous reports implicating
the Syrian government in gross violations of the Chemical Weapons
Convention. How will the nations of the world react?
Magdalena Stawkowski
Kazakhstan’s
leadership has done little to address pressing humanitarian issues at
Semipalatinsk, failing to provide adequate funding for environmental
clean up and adequate security for the former Soviet nuclear testing
site.
xkcd webcomic
A history of Earth’s average temperature, from the webcomic xkcd. ‘Nuff said.
Ta Minh Tuan, Parris H. Chang, Raymond Jose Quilop
Barack
Obama is reportedly considering a no-first-use policy for the US
nuclear arsenal. Proponents of the move say it would de-escalate
potential nuclear crises but, in much of Asia, the idea has thrown
Washington's security guarantees into doubt. The debate continues.
What We're Reading
What We’re Reading is a new blog at the Bulletin featuring short posts about articles you’ll want to see. This week we look at how hydropower, long thought of as "clean energy," emits more greenhouse gases than anyone realized, and at Russia's nuclear rhetoric: is it alarming or just ridiculous?
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In Chicago in November? You still have time to reserve a place or a whole table at the Bulletin's 2016 Annual Dinner, set for Monday, November 14, at the Chicago Cultural Center. We are expecting another sold-out event, so make your reservations today!
A Bulletin podcast
Join Julian Borger of the Guardian,
as he moderates a conversation with Suzanne DiMaggio and Mark
Fitzpatrick about the implications of North Korea’s most recent nuclear
test.
Eric
Schlosser's film Command and Control, based on his 2013 book of the
same title, opens today at the Gene Siskel Film Center. After the 8
p.m. show, join the MacArthur Foundation in a special discussion with
the Bulletin's Rachel Bronson and Eric Schlosser, both of whom will be in attendance.
North
Korean missile tests, tensions with Russia, and our own expensive plans
to modernize the US nuclear arsenal have escalated public concern about
nuclear security.
The consequences of climate change threaten people, crops, and domestic stability--yet through it all the Bulletin steadily focuses on facts, reasoned arguments, and viable solutions. To keep it up, we need your support.
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growing network--and we are counting on your engagement and support. Please give today.
About the Bulletin
For more than 70 years the Bulletin has
engaged science leaders, policy makers, and the interested public on
topics of nuclear weapons and disarmament, the changing energy
landscape, climate change, and emerging technologies.
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