Police-escorted heavy truck carrying nuclear waste Castor container on closed German motorway at dusk.
Police-escorted heavy truck carrying nuclear waste Castor container on closed German motorway at dusk.
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First nuclear waste transport from Jülich to Ahaus underway

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The first transport of highly radioactive nuclear waste from Jülich to the interim storage facility in Ahaus began on Tuesday evening. A heavy goods vehicle carrying a Castor container is escorted by around 2,400 police officers. Motorway sections in North Rhine-Westphalia are temporarily closed.

A heavy goods vehicle carrying a THTR/AVR-type Castor container has left the site in Jülich and is traveling along a roughly 170-kilometer route to Ahaus, as reported by dpa journalists. Authorities have not disclosed the exact route. A spokesperson for Münster police, leading the operation, announced short-term closures of motorway sections in North Rhine-Westphalia. On the A44 towards Mönchengladbach between Jülich-West and Jackerath junction, a warning appeared: a heavy transport is underway, and overtaking is not possible, according to NRW traffic ministry's Verkehr.NRW portal. The convoy includes dozens of police vehicles, with a total of 2,400 officers deployed, mainly at the start and destination. Preparations have been underway for months, supported by court decisions in January and March 2026, as well as test runs at the end of 2023. The Castor container, about 2.70 meters high and weighing around 27 tonnes, holds fuel elements from Jülich's AVR experimental reactor, which operated from 1967 to 1988. These consist of 288,161 tennis ball-sized fuel elements and 124 fuel-free graphite pebbles managed by Jülich Nuclear Waste Disposal Company (JEN). Radiation outside the container measures 0.04 microsieverts per hour, well below legal limits, JEN emphasizes. «The transports do not cause any significant additional radiation exposure for people in the vicinity,» states a JEN study. The transport permit runs until the end of August 2027, with further trips planned.

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X discussions report the start of the first highly radioactive nuclear waste Castor transport from Jülich to Ahaus, escorted by around 2,500 police officers amid motorway closures. Media and journalists highlight the massive security operation and anticipated protests. Environmental groups argue it poses risks without safety gains, while a nuclear safety expert dismisses their claims, stating the Ahaus facility is superior. Police unions express concerns over officer overload for the 152 planned transports.

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US Air Force C-17 unloads pioneering 5-megawatt microreactor at Hill Air Force Base, Utah, in first military airlift of portable nuclear tech.
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US military airlifts unfueled 5-megawatt microreactor from California to Utah in first-of-its-kind move

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The Pentagon and the Department of Energy flew an unfueled, 5-megawatt microreactor built by California startup Valar Atomics on a C-17 from March Air Reserve Base in California to Hill Air Force Base in Utah on Feb. 15, 2026, in what officials described as the first such airlift aimed at speeding deployment of portable nuclear power for military and civilian use.

The police union GdP anticipates up to 4,500 officers for the nuclear waste transport from Jülich to Ahaus in North Rhine-Westphalia. Landeschef Patrick Schlüter compared the effort to football derbies. Interior Minister Herbert Reul would prefer to skip the transports if possible.

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Scientists at CERN have successfully transported antimatter by road for the first time, moving 92 antiprotons around a 4-kilometre loop on the laboratory's campus near Geneva, Switzerland. The 20-minute journey on a truck marks a key test for a planned antimatter delivery service across Europe. Researchers say this breakthrough will enable more precise experiments on the elusive particles.

Construction workers in Nuremberg's Lichtenreuth district discovered a 250-kilogram WWII bomb. About 370 people were evacuated before the device was safely defused that evening. A city spokesperson confirmed there were no incidents.

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A Chinese team has finished constructing a steep spiral ramp leading to the underground Beishan Laboratory, where nuclear waste will be secured for thousands of years. Located in the Gobi Desert, the facility represents a key milestone in handling high-level radioactive waste.

Four people were injured in a multi-vehicle crash on the A9 highway in the Kulmbach district. Two sustained minor injuries, while two others were seriously hurt. Police estimate the property damage at least 180,000 euros.

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Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings (Tepco) began sending electricity from its Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant in Niigata Prefecture to the Tokyo metropolitan area for the first time in about 14 years on Monday. The No. 6 reactor, restarted earlier this year, started generating and transmitting power at 10 p.m. Further inspections are planned ahead of potential commercial operations.

 

 

 

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