Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Would you rather followTony Abbott’s “gut instinct”, or Elon Musk’s brains?

Tony Abbott’s gut v Elon Musk’s brain and billions: which would you follow? Brisbane Times, 23 Sept 17 By Richard Denniss South Australia has one of the highest concentrations of renewable energy in the world. And its government was recently the first to announce a state-based bank tax. But while Australians have been told these “reckless” policies will destroy jobs and discourage investment, some of the world’s most-successful entrepreneurs recently chose to invest big in the state. How could this be?

Tech entrepreneur Elon Musk, who gave the world PayPal, Tesla and SpaceX, recently secured the bid to build the world’s largest battery-storage plant in South Australia. English billionaire Sanjeev Gupta, whose family fortune was made in good old-fashioned steel, recently bought the Whyalla steelworks. Either these businessmen didn’t do their due diligence or what conservative politicians tell us about South Australia is utter nonsense. I know which way I’d lean.
Before Tony Abbott began his 23 years as a public servant, he dabbled with being a priest and a journalist. And while he clearly knows how to tell a simple story based on blind faith, there is nothing in his education or experience to suggest he knows anything about how to run a power station or a steel mill. But in Australia the ability to “cut through” trumps the ability to talk sense. And Abbott excels at simplifying complex issues into three-word slogans.

Abbott isn’t an engineer or an economist, but he claims you can’t have a modern economy without coal-fired steam engines. Musk, who is an engineer, is betting a lot of his own money that the future of energy is renewable sources linked to battery storage and smart grids. Gupta, who has a masters in economics and owns the only steel mill in the world powered by waste fish oil, just spent his own money buying a steel mill in the state with the most renewable sources. Someone is completely wrong………

Chaos may be Abbott’s best chance to return to the top job but it won’t lead to business certainty or lower electricity prices. Abbott has variously supported, and opposed, carbon taxes, emissions-trading schemes and renewable-energy targets. He once described himself as “a bit of a weathervane” on climate change. He’s more like a field of landmines that periodically explodes as Turnbull tries to tiptoe through it. It’s a waste of time to try to placate Abbott and the coal industry – you can’t negotiate with a landmine.

Australia’s Parliament is settling in for another long fight about what not to do about climate change while the rest of the world continues its march away from the age of coal towards energy systems based on renewables and storage.

Leaving aside that Australia is the world’s largest exporter of coal and that we will soon be the world’s largest exporter of gas, the risks to Australia are not just that we will exacerbate dangerous climate change, but that we will be left behind domestically and left surrounded by big piles of coal that the rest of the world doesn’t want.

Last year, China’s economy grew by 6.7 per cent and its coal consumption fell by 4.7 per cent. That’s the third year in a row that China’s coal consumption fell. …….

India is on a similar trajectory. Despite claims made by those who are desperate to bail out the Adani coal mine in North Queensland, Indian coal consumption and imports are declining……..

But as new entrepreneurs, technologies and ideas bust up the complacency of much of our political debate, there is no doubt the old guard will fight till the end. Abbott told us the carbon price would wipe out Whyalla. It didn’t. He told us that scrapping the carbon price would give us cheap energy. It didn’t. And while Abbott tells us that you can’t run an industrial economy on renewable energy, Gupta is betting you can.

Just as facts don’t get in the way of Malcolm Roberts’ beliefs about his citizenship (or anything else), facts won’t slow down Abbott and the coal industry’s political war against renewable energy. The problem is that, even if Abbott wins, the Australian economy loses. Again.

Richard Denniss is The Australia Institute’s chief economist. Twitter: @RDNS_TAI https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/opinion/tony-abbotts-gut-v-elon-musks-brain-and-billions-which-would-you-follow-20170922-gymn0s.html

September 22, 2017 Posted by | General News | 1 Comment

170 years since the massacre…  and finally its a win for Wirangu people.

Paul Wiles speaks with Wirangu Elder Jack Johncock & Elliston District Council Chairman Kym Callaghan

Listen to Audio on CAAMA Radio: http://caama.com.au/news/2017/170-years-since-the-massacre-and-finally-its-a-win-for-wirangu-people

‘A South Australian Wirangu Elder says its a win that the word “massacre” will be included on a memorial plaque recognising the site where  a large number of his people were shot and driven over cliffs by colonial settlers in 1849.

‘While the Waterloo Bay massacre remains strong in the memory of the local Wirangu people,
the local Elliston District council has finally acknowledged that the truth must be told  after decades of refusing to acknowledge the massacre. … ‘

September 22, 2017 Posted by | aboriginal issues, AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL | Leave a comment

Trump not a huge success on the international stage at United Nations

Trump makes little headway in his first turn on U.N. world stage LA Times, 22 Sept 17 Tracy Wilkinson Contact Reporter

The presidents of Japan and South Korea welcomed Trump’s announcement of new sanctions against North Korea but privately questioned whether his threat to “totally destroy” the country would lead to the diplomacy they prefer.

Arab and Iranian leaders sat stone-faced during Trump’s bellicose address on Tuesday — while several other world leaders reacted with bemusement, chagrin and confusion to his often-contradictory comments.

Netanyahu could be observed laughing and grinning as Trump described the hard-fought international nuclear accord with Iran as the “worst deal ever” and an “embarrassment” to the United States.

Far from taming his enemies, Trump seems to have inflamed tensions further as the world faces a nuclear-armed North Korea and worries about a deal designed to prevent Iran from building a bomb.

South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency reported Thursday night that North Korea’s foreign minister, Ri Yong Ho, said in New York that his country may test a hydrogen bomb in the Pacific Ocean to fulfill leader Kim Jong Un’s vow to take the “highest level” action.

The Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, which the United States and the Soviet Union signed in 1963, forbade atmospheric and underwater testing of nuclear weapons. No confirmed ocean tests have occurred since then, but North Korea is not a signatory.

North Korea conducted an underground test of what it called a hydrogen bomb on Sept. 3. An ocean test could severely damage the environment as well as expand the security crisis…….

During the weeklong General Assembly, Trump, invoking his reality-TV flair for drama, said he had made a decision on whether to walk away from the Iranian deal, but he would not yet reveal it.

His administration recently continued lifting sanctions against Iran, which was part of the agreement. But next month, Trump must issue a separate certification to Congress on whether Iran is complying with the deal, an every-90-day requirement under U.S. law.

Several administration officials have suggested Trump will not certify compliance even though the U.N.’s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, has found Iran in compliance eight times since the deal was signed in 2015. http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-fg-trump-un-assess-20170922-story.html

September 22, 2017 Posted by | General News | Leave a comment

Leonardo DiCaprio blasts Trump over climate change

 http://pagesix.com/2017/09/22/leonardo-dicaprio-blasts-trump-over-climate-change/By Jessica Sager

The Oscar winner, 42, met with then-president-elect Trump, 71, in December, only to have the POTUS disregard their conversation once he took office.

“We presented him with a comprehensive plan to tackle climate change, while also simultaneously harnessing the economic potential of green jobs,” DiCaprio recalled at the Yale Climate Conference on Tuesday (via The Hartford Courant). “We talked about how the United States has the potential to lead the world in clean-energy manufacturing and research and development.”

Once in office, Trump pledged to withdraw from the Paris climate accord, which regulates greenhouse emissions, and appointed climate change skeptic Scott Pruitt to head the Environmental Protection Agency.

The moves left staunch environmentalist DiCaprio nonplussed.

“We should not have people in office who do not believe in facts and truths and modern science that are able to manipulate and risk the entire future of this entire generation,” he fumed. “We are at that turning point right now, and we are going to look back at this point in history, and frankly this administration, and certain people are going to be vilified for not taking action. They really are. And it’s up to this generation, it’s up to all of you to get involved and make a difference.”

September 22, 2017 Posted by | General News | Leave a comment

2017 World Nuclear Status Report released

A status report on a troubled nuclear industry http://thebulletin.org/status-report-troubled-nuclear-industry11130, By John Mecklin, 22 Sept 17

This year’s version of the World Nuclear Industry Status Report (WNISR) is out, and its message is not a happy one for nuclear power proponents. As former Tennessee Valley Authority chairman S. David Freeman notes in a foreword, “The report makes clear, in telling detail, that the debate is over. Nuclear power has been eclipsed by the sun and the wind. These renewable, free-fuel sources are no longer a dream or a projection—they are a reality [and] are replacing nuclear as the preferred choice for new power plants worldwide.”

As in previous years, the report—coordinated by Paris-based independent nuclear consultant Mycle Schneider—provides an almost-daunting array of data on almost every aspect of nuclear power plant construction and operation. This year’s report also includes an assessment of what it calls “the financial crisis of the nuclear sector,” a status update on the Fukushima nuclear situation, and a chapter that compares investments in, capacity of, and generation from nuclear, solar, and wind energy installations on a worldwide basis.

Doubtless, nuclear power supporters will argue against some (and perhaps many) of the conclusions that Schneider and co-author Antony Froggatt express in the report. But the data the report presents—data underlying the Global Nuclear Power Database, an interactive visualization that the WNISR developed for the Bulletin—are truly comprehensive. Anyone interested in nuclear power will likely find the report worth at least a first look, and probably a second and third.

September 22, 2017 Posted by | General News | Leave a comment

Nuclear lobby depending on China to develop Generation IV nuclear reactors

the theories behind many of the proposed systems aren’t new and often date back to the 1950s and ’60s. Some experimental plants have been built, such as the fast breeder reactors in the U.K. and U.S. Most suffered from crippling cost or design problems or were abandoned after nuclear accidents.

“Most if not all of these so-called advanced reactor designs have been around for decades,”

Different designs have different problems. I don’t think anyone can be or should be confident that these problems can be resolved merely by throwing money and hiring engineers and scientists.”

Nuclear Experts Head to China to Test Experimental Reactors, Bloomberg By 

Stephen Stapczynski China is becoming the testing ground for a new breed of nuclear power stations designed to be safer and cheaper, as scientists from the U.S. and other Western nations find it difficult to raise enough money to build experimental plants at home.

Continue reading

September 22, 2017 Posted by | General News | Leave a comment

23 September REneweconomy news

RenewEconomy
  • Australia wind energy’s record day of production in August
    Wind energy posts record output in August, with renewables delivering 25 per cent of all demand at the evening peak.
  • Mark Bailey returns as Queensland energy minister
    Mark Bailey is returning to duty as Minister for Main Roads, Road Safety and Ports and Minister for Energy, Biofuels and Water Supply, effective today.
  • Governments should stick to their job of making policy
    Fears of the unstoppable energy transition are reinforced and amplified by vested interests and selfish, small minded losers who try and slow it down. Look at how energy prices jumped since Coalition’s intervention on Liddell.
  • Customers missing out as rule changes miss the point on inertia
    Something is fundamentally wrong in the NEM. Frequency control costs have risen dramatically, but the quality of the service has dived.
  • Tasmania ups quest to become renewable energy “battery of Australia”
    ARENA tips $2.5m into feasibility studies for doubling of Tasmania hydro capacity and developing 2.5GW of pumped hydro storage.
  • Six things we learned: Death spirals and Tony Abbott’s sense of timing
    It seems there is no climate and clean energy myth conservatives and the Murdoch media won’t repeat. Just as well we have renewable energy and smart businesses.
    • Victoria renewable target passes lower house – but Coalition vows to kill it
      Victoria’s renewable energy target of 40% by 2025 has passed the lower house – but the state opposition has vowed to kill it if they get into power.
    • Tesla plans big battery party, still waiting on Victoria tender
      Tesla prepares to announce “big battery” milestone, as Musk drops in for a space conference and storage industry awaits results of Victoria tender.

September 22, 2017 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, energy | Leave a comment

Japan’s bomb in the basement

dunrenard's avatarFukushima 311 Watchdogs

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Under the guise of a civil nuclear program, Japan has become a de-facto nuclear weapons state without so far having to take that next fateful step.

On Thursday, a shipment of 700 kilograms of plutonium arrived in Japan after a journey by sea from the French port of Cherbourg. That’s enough material for more than 100 nuclear weapons.

The plutonium – in the form of atomic fuel known as MOX, a mix of uranium and plutonium oxide – is for use in the Takahama-4 reactor, owned by Kansai Electric Power Co. and located on Wakasa Bay, in western Japan near Osaka.

There have been six shipments of such highly toxic cargoes since 1999, the result of an agreement to send radioactive spent fuel in Japan for reprocessing in France and the UK, and then to be shipped back as plutonium MOX fuel for use in Japan’s reactors.

Putting aside the…

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September 22, 2017 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Reprocessed nuclear fuel returned to Japan for reactor use

dunrenard's avatarFukushima 311 Watchdogs

Japan has learned absolutely nothing from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant disaster. This is not going to end well!

This is a mouthful, read this:

“Nuclear fuel reprocessed in France returned to Japan on Thursday for use in a reactor as the country tries to burn more plutonium amid international concerns about its stockpile.”

“The need to reduce its plutonium stockpile adds to Japan’s push to restart reactors, aside from also needing to generate power. It would require 16 to 18 reactors to burn MOX to keep Japan’s plutonium stockpile from growing when the Rokkasho plant starts up, according to government and utility officials.”

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TOKYO- Nuclear fuel reprocessed in France returned to Japan on Thursday for use in a reactor as the country tries to burn more plutonium amid international concerns about its stockpile.

Kansai Electric Power Co said the shipment arrived for use at the No. 4 reactor at its Takahama…

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September 22, 2017 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

TEPCO to delay emptying fuel storage pools at Fukushima plant

dunrenard's avatarFukushima 311 Watchdogs

reactor 1 left reactor 2 right 21 sept 2017.pngThe No. 1 reactor building, left, and the No. 2 reactor building at the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant

Plans to remove fuel rods from two spent fuel pools at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant will be delayed by up to three years because of difficulties in clearing debris and reducing radiation levels.

The government and plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. originally expected to start emptying the storage pools at the No. 1 and No. 2 reactor buildings in fiscal 2020.

But they plan to move the starting time to fiscal 2023 in their first review in two years of the roadmap for decommissioning the stricken nuclear plant, sources said Sept. 20.

They are expected to announce the revised roadmap later this month.

A survey of the upper levels of the two reactor buildings, where the storage pools are located, found debris piled up in a much…

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September 22, 2017 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment