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Page 2 - சேமிப்பு கூட்டாளர் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Newegg Honors 2021 Eggie Award Winners – Consumer Electronics Net

1 month ago Annual Eggie Awards Spotlight Company’s Top Manufacturers, Partners and Influencers LOS ANGELES–(BUSINESS WIRE)–#ecommerce Newegg, one of the leading tech-focused e-retailers in North America, has unveiled its list of 2021 Eggie Award honorees. Newegg’s annual awards recognize key contributions made by the company’s partners during the past calendar year. “Last year proved to be a very challenging one, and we were especially grateful to have the support and collaboration of our extensive network of partners, service providers and influencers,” said Anthony Chow, Global CEO of Newegg. “This year’s Eggie Awards recognize great work under extraordinary circumstances, and we’re pleased to honor their contributions as we look forward to our continued collaboration in 2021 and beyond.”

Nuclear Rubberstamping Commission to weaken rules on radioactive trash

“It’s not cotton candy” Meanwhile, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission may soon consider new regulations that would allow WCS and other commercial sites to accept a higher level of nuclear waste than Texas currently allows. The WCS facility is permitted to accept Class A, B, and C nuclear waste categories that fall below high-level material like spent nuclear fuel. But certain material, much of it generated by the decommissioning of nuclear power plants, falls into what experts call a gray area between the lower-level categories and spent nuclear fuel. It has an equally ambiguous name: “Greater than Class C.” “These are some of the most dangerous materials in the world,”   “It’s not cotton candy.”

Texas on track to get even more nuclear waste as feds tinker with rules

Waste Control Specialists has been disposing of the nation’s low-level nuclear waste including tools, building materials and protective clothing exposed to radioactivity for a decade at a hazardous waste facility in Andrews County, on the New Mexico border. Credit: Eli Hartman for The Texas Tribune To get rid of eight gallons of water, the U.S. Department of Energy spent $100,000. It’s little more than half a tank of gasoline in a midsize car, but the radioactive shipment from South Carolina to a West Texas company last fall marked one change that could lead to more nuclear waste traveling to Texas waste that, until recently, was considered too dangerous to be disposed of.

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