Hold onto your bowler hats and stiff upper lips, dear reader, for the Anglosphere is not just tiptoeing into the future—it’s striding forth with the vim and verve of a cavalry charge led by a chap with a monocle and a rocket pack! First up, our Antipodean allies in Australia have whipped up a bit of alchemy, conjuring hydrogen into powder form—yes, powder! Not for the nose, mind, but for exporting clean energy across the globe! A logistical and scientific marvel, this hydrogen powder is set to make the kangaroo-hop from innovation to international infrastructure see source. Not to be…
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Hold the boat! East Yorkshire could soon host a floating power plant, potentially housing a small modular reactor (SMR), at the Yorkshire Energy Park in Saltend. In partnership with major players, this novel marine-based power station would bolster energy supply, security, and local employment. This isn’t whimsy, but solid strategy, adapting SMR technology into floating formats to bridge capacity gaps quickly and securely. Yes, nuclear floating vessels may conjure images of sci-fi subterfuge, but this is merely a clever lever in the clean-energy toolkit. A bump? Possibly, but more like a buoyant opportunity. The Anglosphere should hail this as proof…
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Great Scott! Physicists at Los Alamos have dusted off and replicated a 1938 experiment by Arthur Ruhlig the first observation of deuterium‑tritium fusion. With modern neutron detection, they’ve reaffirmed Ruhlig’s pioneering insight, confirming that the building blocks for fusion were being handled as early as before WWII. This is history vindicated, connecting past insight to present-day fusion ambitions. It reminds us that breakthroughs often come quietly before their time. Is it a detour? Not at all, it’s a strong foundation under contemporary fusion efforts. Anglosphere science, replete with tradition and tenacity, now has another weapon in its clean-energy armoury. Old,…