Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Peter Dutton reveals seven sites for proposed nuclear power plants

By political reporter Tom Crowley and national regional affairs reporter Jane Norman, 19 June 24  https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-06-19/dutton-reveals-seven-sites-for-proposed-nuclear-power-plants/103995310

Peter Dutton has told his Coalition colleagues he will go to the next election promising to build seven nuclear power stations.

Mr Dutton will promise the first two sites can be operational between 2035 and 2037, several years earlier than the timeframe the CSIRO and other experts believe is feasible.

As had been previously flagged, the stations are all on retiring or retired coal sites.

The seven sites are:

  • Tarong in Queensland, north-west of Brisbane
  • Callide in Queensland, near Gladstone
  • Liddel in NSW, in the Hunter Valley
  • Mount Piper in NSW, near Lithgow
  • Port Augusta in SA
  • Loy Yang in Victoria, in the Latrobe Valley
  • Muja in WA, near Collie

Five of the seven are in Coalition seats: Muja in Rick Wilson’s seat of O’Connor, Loy Yang in Darren Chester’s seat of Gippsland, Port Augusta in Rowan Ramsey’s seat of Grey, Callide in Colin Boyce’s seat of Flynn and Tarong in Nationals leader David Littleproud’s seat of Maranoa.

Mount Piper is in the seat of Calare, held by independent Andrew Gee who was elected as a Nationals MP in 2022 but quit the party.

Liddel is in only site in a Labor seat, the seat of Hunter, held by Labor’s Dan Repacholi.

Further details are expected later this morning, including about how much government funding would be required and whether the proposal is for large-scale nuclear reactors, small modular nuclear reactors, or a combination.

The Coalition had been promising a nuclear policy, including specific sites, for several months amid expert concerns over the cost and timeframe. 

Last week, Mr Dutton also revealed the Coalition would campaign against the Labor government’s legislated target to reduce emissions by 43 per cent by 2030, and would not outline a 2030 emissions reduction target of its own before the election.

Coalition energy spokesperson Ted O’Brien and Nationals leader Mr Littleproud will address an energy conference held by The Australian today. 

This morning, Treasurer Jim Chalmers will tell that conference the Coalition’s nuclear plan is “the dumbest policy ever put forward by a major party” and will seek to contrast the Coalition’s plan, likely to require significant public funding, with Labor’s plan to encourage private investment in renewables and gas.

June 19, 2024 - Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, politics | , , , ,

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