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  • IAEA Completes Integrated Safety Assessment for Research Reactors Follow-Up Mission in Belgium

    An International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) team of experts observed enhanced safety since a previous review mission in 2023  at the Belgian Research Reactor 2 (BR2). The team also found the need to further address recommendations related to safety analysis and operational limits and conditions. 

    The four-day Integrated Safety Assessment for Research Reactors (INSARR) follow-up mission to BR2 was requested by the national regulatory body, Federal Agency for Nuclear Control (FANC), and was hosted by the operating organization, Belgian Nuclear Research Centre (SCK•CEN). The mission team comprised two experts from Argentina and Czech Republic, as well as one IAEA official. The team visited the research reactor and associated facilities while meeting with SCK•CEN staff and FANC officials to assess the implemented safety actions since the previous INSARR mission.  

    BR2 is one of three operating research reactors at the SCK•CEN in Mol, in northeast Belgium. Operating since 1961, BR2 is one of the world’s most powerful research reactors, supplying the world with radioisotopes for medical purposes, including for cancer therapy and medical imaging. It also produces radioisotopes for industrial purposes and develops doped silicon, which forms a semiconductor material that can be found in hybrid cars, and high-speed trains as well as in solar and wind farms. BR2 performs periodic safety reviews every ten years, and is currently undergoing one that is due to be finalized next year. 

    “SCK•CEN has addressed the majority of the review recommendations made in 2023 and accomplished considerable safety enhancements,” said Kaichao Sun, mission team leader and Nuclear Safety Officer at the IAEA. “Further efforts are needed to finalize the remaining actions and to achieve the highest level of safety for the ongoing periodic safety review.” 

    The mission team assessed that SCK•CEN has strengthened the organizational effectiveness and operational programmes through: 

    • Completion of the SCK•CEN restructuring by establishing a BR2 institute with adequate human and financial resources;
    • Enhancement of safety culture by including mandatory leadership development training for managerial roles across the operating organization;
    • Establishment of a verification process by authorized personnel to enhance the effectiveness of reactor operation and maintenance. 

    The findings from the mission indicate the need for further safety improvements in areas that are related to: 

    • Update of the BR2 safety analysis and the acceptance criteria in the frame of the periodic safety review; 
    • Advancement of operational limits and conditions in accordance with the IAEA safety standards. 

    “We work every day to continuously improve the safety performance of our infrastructure and organization. It is rewarding to see our efforts paying off”, said Steven Van Dyck, Director of BR2. He highly appreciated the open and constructive discussions with the IAEA review team in this follow-up mission. “We’re thankful for their expertise and guidance that help us move forward and enables us to keep delivering for millions of patients worldwide.”  

    The mission team made a new recommendation on specifying the applicability of the BR2 safety limits as part of the ongoing periodic safety review. The IAEA understands that FANC intends to make the results of this mission publicly available on their website. 

    Background 

    INSARR missions are an IAEA peer review service, conducted at the request of a Member State, to assess and evaluate the safety of research reactors based on IAEA Safety Standards. Follow-up missions are standard components of the INSARR programme and are typically conducted within two years of the initial mission. General information about INSARR missions can be found on the IAEA Website

    The IAEA Safety Standards provide a robust framework of fundamental principles, requirements, and guidance to ensure safety. They reflect an international consensus and serve as a global reference for protecting people and the environment from the harmful effects of ionizing radiation. 

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  • I now declare you throuple: how to plan a polyamorous wedding | Well actually

    I now declare you throuple: how to plan a polyamorous wedding | Well actually

    On the day of her wedding, Janie Coppola, 30, overslept. She woke up to a friend banging on her bedroom window, and had to quickly do her hair before rushing to the venue, a dreamy castle in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Fortunately, the rest of the…

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  • Bangladesh to hold general election, referendum on Feb. 12-Xinhua

    by Naim-Ul-Karim

    DHAKA, Dec. 11 (Xinhua) — Bangladesh’s Election Commission has announced that the country’s first-ever twin polls — the 13th National Parliamentary Election and a referendum — will be held on Feb. 12 next year.

    The…

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  • Time+Tide x Frederique Constant Highlife Moonphase Manufacture Onyx Moon

    Time+Tide x Frederique Constant Highlife Moonphase Manufacture Onyx Moon

    Founded in 1988, Frederique Constant has gone from strength to strength with its policy of high-quality watches at affordable prices. Far from an empty catchphrase, the brand’s “accessible luxury” slogan…

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  • AI is Changing How Work Gets Done


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  • Rare image of Tatooine-like planet is closest to its twin stars yet

    Rare image of Tatooine-like planet is closest to its twin stars yet

    In a discovery that’s fit for a movie, Northwestern University astronomers have directly imaged a Tatooine-like exoplanet, orbiting two suns.

    While obtaining an image of a planet beyond our solar system is already rare,…

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  • Insomnia and anxiety come with a weaker immune system — a new study starts to unravel why

    Insomnia and anxiety come with a weaker immune system — a new study starts to unravel why

    Stress, anxiety and sleepless nights do more than erode peace of mind — they can also weaken the body’s defenses, making people more susceptible to infections, cancers and autoimmune disorders. Now, scientists have uncovered a potential…

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  • Rare image of Tatooine-like planet is closest to its twin stars yet: For Journalists

    Rare image of Tatooine-like planet is closest to its twin stars yet: For Journalists

    EMBARGOED UNTIL NOON EST (U.S.) ON THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2025

    • ·     Astronomers discovered a new exoplanet hidden in decade-old data
    • ·     Planet is bound to binary stars, which…

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  • Federal Reserve cuts interest rates by 0.25%, Powell warns there’s ‘no risk-free path’

    Federal Reserve cuts interest rates by 0.25%, Powell warns there’s ‘no risk-free path’

    At the Fed’s press conference, Fed Chair Jerome Powell acknowledged that many consumers are struggling with higher inflation. “We hear loud and clear” the concerns about affordability, Powell said.

    But what Powell and the Fed can do about affordability is a different story.

    “There’s actually not much they can do about that,” Apollo chief economist Torsten Sløk told Yahoo Finance on Wednesday. (Disclosure: Yahoo Finance is owned by Apollo Global Management.)

    Sløk noted that a greater share of consumer spending is going toward basic needs, such as healthcare, housing, and education, all of which have become more expensive in recent years. This has made the Fed’s job more difficult because, in the housing market, for instance, structural factors like low supply are keeping prices high — and somewhat impervious to monetary policy.

    “If you begin to see the Fed lower interest rates, that’s probably going to increase home prices even more,” Sløk said. “So in that sense, the Fed doesn’t really have any tools to solve the affordability crisis.”

    This sentiment was echoed by Powell, who noted that a quarter-point change in the federal funds rate is not “going to make much of a difference” in the housing market.

    More broadly, Powell said, “A lot of [the affordability issue] is not the current rate of inflation. A lot of that is just embedded higher cost due to higher inflation in 2022 and ’23.”

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  • TLC’S NEW SERIES ‘SUDDENLY AMISH’ TAKES SIX INDIVIDUALS ON A DRAMATIC AND LIFE-CHANGING JOURNEY INTO AMISH CULTURE

    TLC’S NEW SERIES ‘SUDDENLY AMISH’ TAKES SIX INDIVIDUALS ON A DRAMATIC AND LIFE-CHANGING JOURNEY INTO AMISH CULTURE

    TLC’S NEW SERIES ‘SUDDENLY AMISH’ TAKES SIX INDIVIDUALS ON A DRAMATIC AND LIFE-CHANGING JOURNEY INTO AMISH CULTURE 

     

    – New Series Premieres Tuesday, January 13 at 10PM ET/PT – 

     

    Watch The Trailer HERE & Check Out Photos

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