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Wired has a fairly epic look into a material that could make nuclear power both clean and safe called
thorium
—named after the Norse god of thunder. Of course, scientists recognized its promise back in the 1950s.
Whereas
uranium 
is extremely rare, requires purification and creates waste that will be with us for hundreds of thousands of years, thorium is extremely common, burns more efficiently in reactors and leaves less, less radioactive waste (that can't be turned into a nuke).
In fact, if it weren't for the
Soviet Union
building uranium
reactors 
in the 60s (and us responding in typical Cold War fashion), we'd probably be using thorium today.
But as Wired explains, thorium may be poised for a comeback. [
Wired and
Image]
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