Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Nuclear power too costly for Australia’s net zero future

Nuclear power plant costs need sharp fall to help Australia reach net zero target, a study finds. By NICK EVANS, RESOURCE WRITER 19 Apr 23 more https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/renewable-energy-economy/nuclear-power-plant-costs-need-sharp-fall-to-help-australia-reach-net-zero-target-a-study-finds/news-story/d62e6d66e4fa17fba73fd794bf4c37ea 19 Apr 23

The price of building nuclear power plants would need to fall dramatically for it to find a place in Australia’s decarbonisation strategy, and carbon capture will need to play a major role in the nation’s net-zero economy alongside a staggering increase in the rate of renewable energy generation.

Those are among the findings of final modelling in a major expert study of Australia’s path to net zero carbon emissions, conducted by interdisciplinary teams from the University of Melbourne, The University of Queensland, Princeton University’s Andlinger Centre for Energy and Environment, and Nous Group.

The expert group, Net Zero Australia, will release its final modelling on Wednesday, saying the country needs to triple the capacity of the National Electricity Market by the end of the decade to be on track to reach the commitment of being net zero by 2050.

Net Zero Australia released its interim modelling in August last year, after a multi-year effort to model Australia’s possible paths to a near-zero carbon economy, which suggested the country will require wind and solar capacity worth 40 times the capacity of the current NEM to achieve the goal.

Robin Batterham, emeritus professor of engineering at the University of Melbourne – and Australia’s former chief scientist – chaired the steering committee and told The Australian the new figures incorporated the potential use of nuclear power, as well as forecast changes in the cost of installing wind and power generation, to reach its new conclusions.

Among those are the conclusion that nuclear power will have little or no role to play unless costs of building and operating plants fall by at least 30 per cent from current “international best practice”, and the build out of renewable energy generation is significantly constrained – by any one of a range of factors, including policy settings, supply chain issues, or simply the time taken to win environmental and other permits.

“Even if you took the lowest costs that are currently being built in the world now, which is the ­Korean (reactors) in the Middle East, and then knock 30 per cent off them, nuclear only just gets a look in if you really constrain the renewables build,” he said.

The South Korean-led construction of the Barakah nuclear power plant in Abu Dhabi built four reactors, collectively with a nameplate generation capacity of about 5400MW. Initially tipped to cost $US20bn ($30bn) and be fully operational by 2020, its full cost is now estimated at about $US24bn – and the plant did not have its first unit supplying power until 2021.

Professor Batterham said the updated modelling – intended to be updated on an ongoing basis – also factored in substantial cost inflation in the Pilbara and other parts of northern Australia, downgrading the likely size of solar energy installations, and increasing the proportion of energy expected to be generated by offshore wind farms, particularly in the nation’s southern waters.

“This is quite a message to the states because it says you don’t have to change the numbers much to shift the opportunities around quite a bit,” he said.

But the size of the task in front of the country is still staggering, according to Net Zero Australia’s modelling.

Australian projects will need to attract up $7 trillion-$9 trillion worth of investment to decarbonise the nation’s own electricity market and replace existing export products, and grow renewable ­energy generation by about 40 times the current NEM generation capacity.

Under the most aggressive renewable energy scenario modelled by Net Zero Australia, the country’s total domestic energy costs would fall from just under 9 per cent of GDP to about 7 per cent by 2050.

And the skilled workforce needed to install and run new generation assets, transmission lines, and associated decarbonisation ­efforts will need to double to at least 200,000 people by 2030 and reach 700,000-850,000 – most with technical skills – by 2060.

Continue reading

April 21, 2023 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, business | Leave a comment

NATO allies, partners to join largest-ever U.S.-Australia war games — Anti-bellum

Australia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore, South Korea and Tonga supplied troops for NATO’s International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan. The Japanese navy also assisted. ==== Defense PostApril 19, 2023 Australia, US to Host ‘Largest-Ever’ Bilateral Exercise Australia and the US will hold their largest bilateral exercise this year, with approximately 30,000 military personnel expected to […]

NATO allies, partners to join largest-ever U.S.-Australia war games — Anti-bellum

April 21, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

At last political folk music is back ! “Killing the Messenger #Free Julian Assange”, by David Rovics

I am grateful to Australia’s 3CR Radio, the Green Left programme, for introducing me to David Rovic and this wonderful song. Let this song be heard far and wide . It might have some effect, unlike the cowardly Australian government’s “quiet diplomacy do-nothing” treatment of the persecution of an Australian citizen. For my part, I’ll publicise it through my websites (www.nuclear-news.net and http://www.antinuclear.net) and networks.

April 21, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Penny Wong – a huge disappointment to me.

Penny Wong – a huge disappointment to me – her mindless enthusiasm for U.S,. militarism, and her mealy-mouthed weasel words pretending to support Julian Assange, while really backing the USA persecution of Julian.

I would be glad to be proven wrong – but I think that “quiet diplomacy” is intended to just shut us all up.

April 21, 2023 Posted by | Christina reviews | Leave a comment