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NukeVerse

Deepshikha Vijh

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The threat of a devastating nuclear war is greater than it has been in decades; so, what can we do to mitigate the risk? Join us as we discuss diverse issues around nuclear policy and link them with the common thread of legality. NukeVerse is brought to you by the Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy, a legacy organization engaged in research and advocacy for nuclear abolition. The Executive Producer is Deepshikha Vijh, the Senior Producer is Miranda Shafer.
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Welcome to The Future of Nuclear Energy series with Phil Zeringue! In this series, I invite you to join me on an engaging journey through the complexities of nuclear energy as we explore new ideas and cutting-edge solutions with some of today’s most innovative thinkers. Together, we’ll unpack the latest advancements, confront industry challenges, and dive into the transformative role nuclear energy can play in our world’s future.
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Future of Life Institute Podcast

Future of Life Institute

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The Future of Life Institute (FLI) is a nonprofit working to reduce global catastrophic and existential risk from powerful technologies. In particular, FLI focuses on risks from artificial intelligence (AI), biotechnology, nuclear weapons and climate change. The Institute's work is made up of three main strands: grantmaking for risk reduction, educational outreach, and advocacy within the United Nations, US government and European Union institutions. FLI has become one of the world's leading ...
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Welcome to the "Nuclear Lounge” podcast, a podcast dedicated to students and the Nuclear Medicine community. I am your host, Fernando Anleu. I am a Nuclear Medicine Technologist, and it is my honor to guide you through this captivating journey into the world of nuclear medicine.
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Far too often, governments behave like toddlers. They’re fickle. They don’t like to share. And good luck getting them to pay attention to any problem that isn’t directly in front of them. They like to push each other to the brink, and often do. But when they don’t, it’s usually because other people enter the proverbial room. Private citizens who step up and play peacemaker when their governments won’t or can’t. People who strive for collaboration and understanding, and sometimes end up findi ...
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In this episode, the focus is on Australia's journey in nuclear power, introduced by an American nuclear navy veteran, Mark Schneider. Schneider is working diligently to restart nuclear power in Australia by applying his extensive experience from the commercial nuclear world and the submarine service. His background includes growing up in northwest…
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The Russian Investigative Committee has classified the explosions that allegedly caused bridges to collapse in the Bryansk and Kursk regions this weekend as acts of terrorism. “It’s clear that the terrorists, acting on the orders of the Kyiv regime, planned everything with precision to ensure their attacks would target hundreds of civilians,” said …
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Drones used during by the SBU in its “Spiderweb” operation The Ukrainian Security Service’s (SBU) “Spiderweb” operation, which targeted Russian air bases in five regions on Sunday, was expertly executed and dealt a major blow to the Kremlin’s pride — but it’s not likely to have any real impact on the course of the war. It’s not clear yet how many a…
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On Tuesday, Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) said it had carried out an operation to blow up the underwater supports of the Crimean Bridge. While the SBU claimed the bridge was in “critical condition,” traffic was only suspended briefly before being restored — until Russian Telegram channels reported a second suspension and signs of a renewed attac…
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Update: Ukraine’s State Emergency Service later clarified that three people were killed and 16 others injured in the strike. Russian forces struck central Sumy, a city in northeastern Ukraine, killing at least two people and injuring about 20 others, according to local authorities. The attack involved multiple rocket launch systems, officials said,…
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The Ukrainian drone attack on Russian air bases, carried out as part of operation “Spiderweb,” left the Kremlin “angry and alarmed” over the unexpected vulnerability of its air fleet far from the front lines, Bloomberg reported, citing sources in Moscow. Ukrainian officials claimed that 41 aircraft were damaged in the operation. A Bloomberg source …
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Andriy Yermak, the head of the Ukrainian president’s office, has arrived in the United States as part of a Ukrainian delegation. The delegation is led by Ukraine’s First Deputy Prime Minister and Economy Minister Yulia Svyrydenko, Yermak said. It also includes representatives from the Defense Ministry and the president’s office. “We will actively p…
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Russian forces carried out overnight strikes on several regions of Ukraine, including Odesa and Chernihiv, leaving several people injured, according to regional officials. In the city of Odesa, four people were injured, according to Ukraine’s State Emergency Service. The regional governor, Oleh Kiper, later said five people had been wounded. Reside…
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Drones used in Ukraine’s Operation “Spiderweb” On June 1, Ukraine attacked Russian military airfields with hundreds of drones as part of Operation “Spiderweb.” According to Ukrainian media reports, the drones hit at least four different airfields, striking targets in the Irkutsk, Murmansk, Ryazan, and Ivanovo regions. Kyiv claims to have hit 41 str…
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Russia and Ukraine agreed to hold another prisoner exchange and return the bodies of thousands of fallen soldiers during peace talks on Monday in Istanbul. The negotiations, which lasted about an hour and took place behind closed doors, marked the second round of direct talks between the two sides since March 2022. The delegations also exchanged me…
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A Ukrainian drone strikes a Russian plane during Ukraine’s ‘Spiderweb’ operation Over the weekend, Ukraine’s Security Service conducted a massive, sophisticated drone attack targeting airfields in five regions of Russia. According to the agency, “Operation Spiderweb” destroyed 41 aircraft (though these numbers haven’t been independently confirmed).…
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Delegations from Ukraine and Russia met in Istanbul on Monday for their second round of direct negotiations in three weeks. As in the previous meeting, held on May 16, the Russian side was led by presidential advisor Vladimir Medinsky. Ukraine’s delegation was headed by Defense Minister Rustem Umerov. There were some changes in the Ukrainian team t…
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On Sunday, Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) carried out an unprecedented attack on military airfields in regions across Russia. The operation reportedly involved smuggling drones into the country and then launching them from trucks parked along highways. The SBU claims it destroyed more than 40 Russian warplanes. This figure has not been independen…
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Major General Mykhailo Drapatyi announced on Sunday that he had submitted his resignation as commander of Ukraine’s Ground Forces. “This is a deliberate decision, driven by my personal sense of responsibility for the tragedy at the 239th training ground, which claimed the lives of our soldiers,” he wrote in a post on Facebook. Earlier in the day, t…
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The Russian Defense Ministry said its air defenses shot down more than 160 Ukrainian drones over Russian territory on Sunday night. According to military officials, 57 drones were intercepted over the Kursk region, 31 over the Belgorod region, 27 over the Lipetsk region, 16 over the Voronezh region, and 11 each over the Bryansk and Ryazan regions. …
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A Ukrainian delegation has arrived in Istanbul, where talks with Russia are scheduled to begin today, Suspilne reported, citing Foreign Ministry spokesperson Heorhii Tykhyi. As in the previous round of negotiations held on May 16, the Ukrainian delegation is led by Defense Minister Rustem Umerov. Suspilne noted that the composition of the Ukrainian…
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In a statement confirming a special operation on Sunday that targeted airfields used by Russian strategic bombers, Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) said it had hit a third of Russia’s strategic cruise missile carriers. “Seven billion U.S. dollars — that is the estimated value of the enemy’s strategic aviation assets struck today as a result of the …
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On Sunday, Ukraine’s Security Service carried out a large-scale attack on military airfields across Russia that it claims destroyed more than 40 warplanes. The operation, which reportedly took over a year and a half to plan, is said to have used drones launched from trucks deep inside Russian territory to strike air bases far from the border — incl…
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The latest on the attack Ukraine says it destroyed over 40 military aircraft in major attack on airfields across Russia Residents of Russia’s Irkutsk region, in Siberia, have reported the first drone attack there since the start of the full-scale war, with drones spotted in the region’s Usolsky District, according to the news outlets 7×7 and Mediaz…
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The collapsed bridge in the Bryansk region. June 1, 2025. At least two bridges have collapsed in Russian regions bordering Ukraine over the past 24 hours, killing at least seven people and injuring dozens more, according to local authorities. In the Bryansk region, a road bridge collapsed onto a passenger train, causing it to derail. Shortly afterw…
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At least seven people have been reported dead in a derailment of a Moscow-bound passenger train in Russia’s Bryansk region. Another 30, including two children, have been hospitalized, according to Governor Alexander Bogomaz. The incident occurred near the town of Vygonichi, where a highway bridge reportedly collapsed onto the passing train. In a st…
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Emboldened by support from senior law enforcement officials and a political climate more hospitable to xenophobic violence, far-right activists from “Russkaya Obshchina” (Russian Community) are increasingly involved in attacks, vigilante raids, and coordinated harassment. They typically target migrants from nations to the south or even compatriots …
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The Russian advocacy group Nasiliu.Net (No to Violence) reported on May 30 that its mobile network operator suddenly terminated its service, crashing an emergency helpline available to domestic violence victims. “Previously, the service did not warn us about problems related to our ‘foreign agent’ status, which we have been forced to have since 202…
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On April 18, a Russian court sentenced 19-year-old activist Darya Kozyreva to two years and eight months in prison for repeatedly “discrediting” the Russian army. This week, a St. Petersburg court registered a new case against Kozyreva based on her closing statement at her previous trial. In that statement, she quoted a poem in Ukrainian by Taras S…
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As Ukrainian officials wait for a promised memorandum on Russia’s vision for a peace treaty, Russia's permanent representative to the U.N., Vasily Nebenzya, told the U.N. Security Council on May 30 that Moscow’s “minimum” terms for a ceasefire deal are that “Western countries cease supplying weapons to the Kyiv regime” and that Ukraine end its mili…
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Explosions in the Russian city of Vladivostok on Friday morning were the result of a “successful operation” by Ukraine’s military intelligence agency, according to RBC-Ukraine, UNIAN, and Hromadske, all of which cited informed sources. The sources said two blasts occurred in Desantnaya Bay, near the base of the 47th Separate Air Assault Battalion, …
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Russia’s delegation addresses the media following talks with Ukraine in Istanbul on May 16. On May 19, three days after Russian and Ukrainian delegations met in Istanbul for their first direct talks in over three years, Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump held a phone call. Afterwards, Putin announced that Moscow was “r…
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Demonstrators in the Democratic Republic of the Congo protest a visit by French President Emmanuel Macron in 2023, using Russian flags and portraits of Vladimir Putin as protest symbols Moscow’s foreign policy has zeroed in on Africa in recent years. The shift is partially due to commercial interests, including access to resources like gold, uraniu…
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The United States considers Russia’s concerns about NATO’s potential eastward expansion to be “fair,” U.S. presidential envoy Keith Kellogg said in an interview with ABC News on Thursday. “It’s a fair concern. We’ve said that repeatedly. We’ve said that, to us, Ukraine coming into NATO is not on the table,” Kellogg said. According to him, at least …
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Russian forces carried out a large-scale missile and drone attack on Ukraine’s Kharkiv region on Thursday night, according to local authorities and Ukraine’s State Emergency Service. In Kharkiv’s Slobidskyi district, a Russian strike sparked a fire at a municipal transport agency. One company building and a trolleybus caught fire, and 38 vehicles b…
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Sanctions have significantly hindered the flow of fresh foreign currency into Russian banks, leaving both the institutions and their customers with a surplus of “old-series” dollars issued before 2009. Many foreign exchange offices reject these bills or agree to exchange them only at unfavorable rates. Even domestically, Russians are increasingly e…
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In this episode, young supervisor Ryan Smothers from Palisades shares his insights on restarting a nuclear plant and building a cohesive, skilled team. Ryan discusses his approach to hiring, focusing on bringing in highly qualified candidates, even if they are overqualified, and ensuring team cohesion by involving current employees in the hiring pr…
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On this episode, Ben Goertzel joins me to discuss what distinguishes the current AI boom from previous ones, important but overlooked AI research, simplicity versus complexity in the first AGI, the feasibility of alignment, benchmarks and economic impact, potential bottlenecks to superintelligence, and what humanity should do moving forward. Timest…
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On this episode, Jeff Sebo joins me to discuss artificial consciousness, substrate-independence, possible tensions between AI risk and AI consciousness, the relationship between consciousness and cognitive complexity, and how intuitive versus intellectual approaches guide our understanding of these topics. We also discuss AI companions, AI rights, …
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In this Third Edition of the Special Series featuring Women Speakers in the nuclear field, we are joined by Dr Sayaka Shingu in her personal capacity. Dr. Shingu grew up in Hiroshima, and is the granddaughter of hibakushas or atomic bomb survivors. Dr Sayaka Shingu has a prolific career where she currently serves as the Head of Research Section of …
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In this episode, Bill interviews Adam Eastridge, Senior Manager, Operations, and Nick Culp Senior Manager - Government Affairs and Communications for the Palisades Nuclear Plant in Michigan. They discuss the ambitious project of restarting the decommissioned plant and how it symbolizes a broader push for sustainable nuclear energy. Key topics inclu…
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On this episode, Zvi Mowshowitz joins me to discuss sycophantic AIs, bottlenecks limiting autonomous AI agents, and the true utility of benchmarks in measuring progress. We then turn to time horizons of AI agents, the impact of automating scientific research, and constraints on scaling inference compute. Zvi also addresses humanity’s uncertain AI-d…
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In this episode of the Nuclear Leader Podcast, host Bill Nowicki interviews Brandon Oliviera, a new leadership talent at Idaho National Labs. Despite his lack of background in nuclear energy, Brandon harnesses his extensive experience in leadership, including his time as a Green Beret, to excel in his role. He shares insights on strategic leadershi…
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In this episode, Matt shares his journey of becoming interested in nuclear energy, sparked by reading about climate change solutions that included nuclear options. He talks about his extensive research into the field and the pivotal role that understanding nuclear's clean energy potential played in shifting his preconceived notions. Matt's personal…
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In a sector known for complexity, regulation, and long timelines, Liz Muller is doing the unthinkable: making nuclear energy faster, cheaper, and more scalable—starting a mile underground. As the co-founder of Deep Isolation and now CEO of Deep Fission, Liz has built a reputation as an “actionivist”—someone who doesn’t just talk about solving globa…
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Key Topics Discussed: Ingemar Engkvist’s Background and Philosophy Ingemar’s unconventional leadership style: prioritizing people over technology. His journey from teaching to nuclear chemistry, and eventually, leadership roles in the nuclear industry. The importance of listening and connecting people in the future of nuclear energy. Challenges in …
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On this episode, Jeffrey Ding joins me to discuss diffusion of AI versus AI innovation, how US-China dynamics shape AI’s global trajectory, and whether there is an AI arms race between the two powers. We explore Chinese attitudes toward AI safety, the level of concentration of AI development, and lessons from historical technology diffusion. Jeffre…
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In this second edition of our "Special Round Table Series 2025" highlighting women speakers, we are joined by a very special guest from New Delhi, India -- Dr. Manpreet Sethi. Dr. Sethi is a Senior Research Adviser at the Asia Pacific Leadership Network, and a Distinguished Fellow at the Centre for Air Power Studies, New Delhi,India where she leads…
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In this episode of The Nuclear Leader, host Bill Nowicki sits down with Joe Ford, a seasoned nuclear professional and founder of 1021 Development LLC. They dive into Joe’s inspiring career journey, his passion for teaching, and the critical challenges facing the nuclear workforce today. Key Topics Opening Conversation**: Bill and Joe discuss the te…
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When you talk to Lisa Marshall, it quickly becomes clear that her impact on the nuclear industry isn’t just about her title as President of the American Nuclear Society. It’s about the intentional, tireless, and deeply human way she shapes the future of nuclear education and workforce development. Key Takeaways from Lisa’s Interview Performance ope…
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On this episode, Allison Duettmann joins me to discuss centralized versus decentralized AI, how international governance could shape AI’s trajectory, how we might cooperate with future AIs, and the role of AI in improving human decision-making. We also explore which lessons from history apply to AI, the future of space law and property rights, whet…
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In this episode of the Nuclear Leader Podcast, Bill Nowicki speaks with Andrea Garfield, CEO of Awesome Institute, about the crucial role of people skills and emotional intelligence in successful leadership within the nuclear power industry. Andrea shares her unique coaching methodology, personal experiences with burnout, and practical tips for cre…
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On this episode, Steven Byrnes joins me to discuss brain-like AGI safety. We discuss learning versus steering systems in the brain, the distinction between controlled AGI and social-instinct AGI, why brain-inspired approaches might be our most plausible route to AGI, and honesty in AI models. We also talk about how people can contribute to brain-li…
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Join us for a personal and introspective journey with Bill Nowicki on "The Nuclear Leader," where we explore the heart and humanity behind the nuclear power industry. Emotional Insights: [00:00:14] Bill grapples with the challenge of speaking about himself, highlighting his humility and sincerity. [04:13] A moment of pride when Bill becomes a plank…
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On this episode, Ege Erdil from Epoch AI joins me to discuss their new GATE model of AI development, what evolution and brain efficiency tell us about AGI requirements, how AI might impact wages and labor markets, and what it takes to train models with long-term planning. Toward the end, we dig into Moravec’s Paradox, which jobs are most at risk of…
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