Parts of Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, which was devastated by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, are still too dangerous for humans to enter. But not, perhaps, for drones.
Is the singularity edging ever closer? Tech giant Google buys robotics firm Boston Dynamics.
A London NHS trust is offering all hospital outpatients an HIV test, regardless of why they are there, to tackle the fact that a fifth of people in the UK with HIV are unaware of their infection.
In the modern world of email and social networking, your connections mean that you could be more closely linked to terror suspects than you thought – which means you might be a target for US spies.
It’s a fishy business. Thousands of farmed salmon have reportedly slipped the net (sorry) from a cage in Norway, leading to fears about the impact on the local wild salmon population.
It was seen as the riskiest operation at Japan’s stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant since the March 2011 tsunami – but the plant’s operator says the first fuel removals have begun safely.
As Tepco opens up to the world about a dangerous operation coming up at the stricken Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, we speak to a former worker who says his legs shook as he did his work.
Two giant barges have popped up in bays on opposite coasts of the United States, prompting fevered global speculation about what they might be.
Just over six months on from the Cyprus bailout, what’s the situation like for people on the ground? Grim, says our newest “Austerity Kid”, 24-year old Maria Christodoulou.
The headlines are alarming: vast leaks of radioactive water, international experts being drafted in and spikes in radiation levels. But how bad is the situation at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plant?
The world is responding to Japan’s call for help at the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant. But with reports of leaks, contamination and a risky new operation, Channel 4 News asks: is it too late?
In conversation with Gary Gibbon – George Osborne tells Channel 4 News what his hair reveals about his economic policy and how the Tories “never really dealt” with Tony Blair as a political opponent.
Raise a glass for Arthur’s day – or maybe not. A day set up by drinks giant Diageo to celebrate the wonders of Guinness is leaving a bitter taste as doctors warn of alcohol abuse dangers.
Preston’s iconic bus station lives to fight another day as Culture Minister Ed Vaizey awards it grade II listed status, putting paid to council plans to demolish the structure to save money.
Police raid Golden Dawn’s offices in Athens after a man arrested in connection with the murder of an anti-fascist hip hop artist claims to be a member of the right-wing party.