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Page 18 - தொழில்நுட்ப பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் டென்மார்க் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

NuScale Launches Effort to Deploy Floating SMRs

29 views Danish Firm Plans Floating SMR for Asian Customers South Korea Firms to Manufacture Floating Nuclear Power Plants South Korea / KHNP To Invest $350 Million In SMR Design and Licensing Saskatchewan Indigenous Companies to Explore SMRs NuScale Teams with Canadian Firm to Deploy its SMRs via Floating Platforms SMR developer NuScale Power and Prodigy Clean Energy have agreed to work together to advance their technologies as a baseload clean energy solution for coastal locations and island nations. This week NuScale and Prodigy sign memorandum of understanding (MOU) to support business development for a marine-deployed nuclear generating station powered by the NuScale small modular reactor (SMR). This is the second MOU between the two firms.

7 Groundbreaking and Sustainable Alternatives to Animal Testing

May 12, 2021 06:19 PM EDT In April, Undercover footage that is very disturbing to watch was revealed from a Spanish research facility that experiments on non-human animals. Cruelty Free International (CFI)  released the footage that was recorded at Madrid-based Vivotecnia. It revealed numerous cases of clear cruelty, some of which may have been against the rule. Increasingly, however, scientists are searching for alternatives to such testing. Here are 7 groundbreaking instances. (Photo : Pixabay) 1. Hormone-like Substances Test The German Centre for the Protection of Laboratory Animals (Bf3R), which is among the German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR), has initiated a test to help in identifying the effect hormone-like substances have on human cells. There are various chemicals that can disturb or interfere with the hormones of the human body - the endocrine system - and lead to health problems. These are called endocrine disruptors.

Ancient gut microbiomes may offer clues to modern diseases

 E-Mail BOSTON - (May 12, 2021) - Scientists are rapidly gathering evidence that variants of gut microbiomes, the collections of bacteria and other microbes in our digestive systems, may play harmful roles in diabetes and other diseases. Now Joslin Diabetes Center scientists have found dramatic differences between gut microbiomes from ancient North American peoples and modern microbiomes, offering new evidence on how these microbes may evolve with different diets. The scientists analyzed microbial DNA found in indigenous human paleofeces (desiccated excrement) from unusually dry caves in Utah and northern Mexico with extremely high levels of genomic sequencing, says Joslin Assistant Investigator Aleksandar Kostic, PhD, senior author of a

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