Climate denier Dutton鈥檚 nuclear 鈥榩lan鈥 a dangerous dead end

June 26, 2024
Issue 
Up the garden path
Up the garden path. Cartoon by Alan Moir, used with permission, www.moir.com.au

Opposition leader and climate denier Peter Dutton鈥檚 June 19 announcement of seven locations across the country for nuclear power reactors has to be .

Labor MPs 鈥 while loudly dismissing, even ridiculing, the idea 鈥 are compromised because they support 鈥渟ome鈥 nuclear power (on submarines), 鈥渟ome鈥 uranium mining and 鈥渟ome鈥 bending of the international nuclear non-proliferation rules.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese nuclear power 鈥渄oes not make sense鈥 economically.

Labor treasurer Jim Chalmers Dutton鈥檚 plan as possibly the 鈥渄umbest policy ever put forward by a major party鈥.

Energy minister Chris Bowen it is a 鈥渞isky scam鈥.

It is easy to Dutton鈥檚 nuclear plan on and 鈥渓ack of detail鈥.

Nuclear power does cost more, as demonstrates.

But there are more important objections including: the toxic waste product (for which there is no safe solution for tens of thousands of years); and the time needed to build new nuclear power stations.

Even in countries with nuclear energy experience, building a new one takes at least 15鈥20 years 鈥 for reducing carbon pollution in time.

Establishing a nuclear industry from scratch in Australia would take too long to guarantee energy supply as ageing coal plants come offline over the next 10 to 20 years.

There are also legal, political and regulatory obstacles to nuclear power.

The Smart Energy Council that spending $600 billion might lead to nuclear energy supplying just 3.7% of Australia鈥檚 energy mix by 2050.

By contrast, the Albanese government鈥檚 plan for 82% renewables by 2030 with almost 100% by 2050 is $116 billion.

But the cost of the transition is not the main concern in a climate emergency.

The transition to renewable energy was always going to cost a lot of money initially (the original Beyond Zero Emissions plan in 2010 projected $370 billion over ten years). However, it should be public money going to public renewable energy suppliers, not subsidies to private corporations as Labor plans.

Pro-nuclear ideologues are pointing to Lowy Institute that shows there has been a significant rise in support for nuclear power.

Six in 10 people (61%) say they 鈥渟omewhat鈥 or 鈥渟trongly鈥 support nuclear power to generate electricity. A significant minority (37%) said they 鈥渟omewhat鈥 or 鈥渟trongly鈥 oppose it.

This is a shift from 2011 when 62% said they were against nuclear.

Polling from the Resolve Political Monitor support for nuclear is still closer to 41% and that a clear majority strongly prefers renewable energy.

Nevertheless, four out of 10 shows a shift in support for an energy technology that is inherently unsafe (on long time frames) and has a well-documented toxic waste disposal problem which Dutton is either glibly ignoring or telling about.

Since Labor, despite being elected on a strong climate vote, has failed to seriously tackle the climate crisis, people who have little understanding of nuclear may just be looking for quick fixes.

Temperature records are broken and the consequences of extreme weather events are clear for all to see. Yet, since May 2022, Labor has approved five new coal mines (not counting extensions) and eight new gas mines.

Labor鈥檚 failure to even come close to proposing a genuine transition to renewables helps make Dutton鈥檚 nuclear plan look more plausible.

Dutton鈥檚 nuclear push is already receiving .

His plan involves helping the fossil fuel corporations make as much profit as possible, delaying the urgent transition.

He also knows that Labor is wedged on nuclear power, because of its embrace of the AUKUS nuclear submarines, all of which will have small nuclear reactors.

This is holding Labor back from making the main arguments against nuclear power: that it is unsafe and has a toxic waste disposal problem that will affect many generations to come.

Therefore, defeating Dutton鈥檚 dangerous nuclear fantasy, which is fundamentally about delaying the inevitable transition away from fossil fuels, also requires challenging Labor.

Alongside exposing Dutton鈥檚 flawed policy, we need to continue to push for a meaningful climate action plan, with safeguards for workers, that completely breaks with the fossil fuel industry.

We also need to break the genocidal alliance with the United States military, including the pro-nuclear AUKUS pact.

[Alex Bainbridge is a member of the National Executive.]

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