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Can China's Venus 2 treat nuclear sewage?

Venus 2 can treat nuclear sewage.

Venus 2 is one of China’s major achievements in the field of environmental protection.

This technology is based on the principle of bioremediation and can efficiently and safely handle toxic substances such as heavy metals and radioactive elements.

In terms of treating nuclear wastewater, Venus 2 can convert pollutants into harmless substances, and the treated water quality meets national standards, which can completely eliminate people's concerns about the discharge of nuclear wastewater.

Many people don’t know that we have a technology that can solve this problem, which is the Venus 2 project. Venus 2 can convert most of the nuclear nuclides and other long-lived secondary radionuclides in the spent fuel, allowing

While they turn into short-lived radioactive materials, they can also provide energy for the Venus 2 spent fuel removal equipment. Simply put, the Venus 2 is a device for harmlessly processing nuclear waste, and it can also provide energy while processing it.

Providing energy by itself can be said to be self-sufficient.

Introduction to Venus 2 device: Venus 2 is a device developed in China and used in nuclear power plants. It is called a lead-based nuclear reactor zero power device. It is mainly used in nuclear power plants. It can not only increase the efficiency of nuclear fuel use to 95%,

It can also recycle the waste generated after the nuclear fuel is consumed. The lead-cooling material in Venus 2 can not only make the nuclear waste lose radioactivity, but also convert the energy released into electricity.

Let’s not talk about Japan’s nuclear-contaminated water, but let’s talk about the United States. It still has at least 100,000 tons of spent fuel in its hands. After Obama killed the United States’ permanent spent fuel storage project in 2010, the United States can only use these irregular resources.

Bombs are scattered and stored in temporary storage warehouses across the country, so both Japan and the United States once wanted to introduce this system at a high price.