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<div style="float:left;margin:0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0;">[[File:Wolsong_(04790183).jpg|150px]]</div> '''Nuclear power in [[Menghe]]''' is one of the most prolific in [[Septentrion]]. At the end of 2019, it had 43 operational nuclear reactors, with a total capacity of 39.43 GW in power. Over the course of 2019, Menghe's nuclear power plants generated 266.56 TWh of energy, for an overall {{wp|capacity factor}} of 83.1%. While large in isolation, these figures amount to only 8.6% of Menghe's total electricity production in 2019, which surpassed 3,000 TWh. An additional 33 reactors, under construction, will nearly double that figure by the end of 2025, and current plans call for 28 more commercial-grade reactors to begin construction in 2020 through 2023. Including the planned shutdown of the two Ro-5 reactors in 2026 and 2027, this would bring Menghe's total nuclear power generating capacity to 102.130 GW by the beginning of 2030. An even larger reactor-building program is slated to begin in 2029, when a commercial-grade {{wp|generation IV reactor}} design is chosen for mass production. Although Menghe was a late-comer to nuclear energy, opening its first commercial reactor in 1992, it has since developed into a powerhouse of nuclear research and development. As of May 2020, Menghe has two {{wp|Generation IV reactor}}s in operation, two more under construction, and ongoing design work on two additional reactor models, all slated to begin operation before 2027. ('''[[Nuclear power in Menghe|See more...]]''')
<div style="float:left;margin:0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0;">[[File:Machairodus_from_Cerro_de_Batallones.png|150px]]</div> The '''Kōpeo Cat''' (''Machiarodus kōpeo''), also known as the the ''Kōpeo Lion'', ''Kōpeo Tiger'' or just ''Kōpeo'' is a species of large ''{{wpl|Machairodontinae}}'' sabertooth cat endemic to [[Onekawa-Nukanoa]]. A surviving member of the subfamily Machairodontinae, despite it's name the Kōpeo cat is not closely related to lions, nor any other current member of the ''{{wpl|Panthera}}'' genus. The largest living felid, with large males regularly exceeding 390 kilogams and measuring 1.4m at the shoulder. Despite a member of the  Machairodontinae family, Kōpeo cats canines are not as long as some members, but still regularly reaching and exceeding 10cm. The Kōpeo cat is considered critically endangered by the [[Association of Ozeros Nations]] Intercontinental Conservation Agency, with current estimates placing the total wild population at 1,200. Whilst fossil records has shown that the Kōpeo cat was once found as far westward as Kopikara in [[Zanzali]], no fossils younger then 180,000 have been found west of the Hanaki Wetlands. The Kōpeo cat is argued by some in the scientific community to undergoing a process of natural extinction; and that whilst accelerated by human activity has led to controversy in whether or not this animal and it's habitats should be maintained. ('''[[Kōpeo Cat|See more...]]''')


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Latest revision as of 18:54, 5 May 2024

Machairodus from Cerro de Batallones.png

The Kōpeo Cat (Machiarodus kōpeo), also known as the the Kōpeo Lion, Kōpeo Tiger or just Kōpeo is a species of large Machairodontinae sabertooth cat endemic to Onekawa-Nukanoa. A surviving member of the subfamily Machairodontinae, despite it's name the Kōpeo cat is not closely related to lions, nor any other current member of the Panthera genus. The largest living felid, with large males regularly exceeding 390 kilogams and measuring 1.4m at the shoulder. Despite a member of the Machairodontinae family, Kōpeo cats canines are not as long as some members, but still regularly reaching and exceeding 10cm. The Kōpeo cat is considered critically endangered by the Association of Ozeros Nations Intercontinental Conservation Agency, with current estimates placing the total wild population at 1,200. Whilst fossil records has shown that the Kōpeo cat was once found as far westward as Kopikara in Zanzali, no fossils younger then 180,000 have been found west of the Hanaki Wetlands. The Kōpeo cat is argued by some in the scientific community to undergoing a process of natural extinction; and that whilst accelerated by human activity has led to controversy in whether or not this animal and it's habitats should be maintained. (See more...)

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