Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Nuclear news – not the industry handouts

Some bits of good news –  ‘Friendship benches’ are coming to England.

Power to the people: the rise of community energy

How an Ancient Yemeni Tradition Is Reviving Bee Populations.


TOP STORIES
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 Trump’s Iran talks can succeed if the administration embraces reality rather than myth. Trump has threatened Iran over an ultimatum that likely cannot be met.

From the archives – ‘How Many Nuclear Bombs Has The US Air Force Lost?

ClimateArctic sea ice hit a record low as global powers eye shipping routes.

Noel’s notesThe irrational optimism of the nuclear power lobby.

AUSTRALIA. 

ATROCITIES. Israel is About to Empty Gaza . How Israel hunts and executes Palestinian medics.

ECONOMICS.
Moltex Canada pushes on with nuclear project as U.K. parent struggles.
European Commission plans a new subsidy scheme for “innovative nuclear technologies”.
TEPCO’s rehabilitation plan delays expose limits to nuke power reliance.

Up to date costs of Sizewell C nuclear are over  £40 billion, not the  £20 billion  quoted- ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/?s=Up+to+date+costs+of+Sizewell+C+nuclear New EDF boss at mercy of ‘to-do list’ that ousted his predecessor -ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/?s=New+EDF+boss+at+mercy
ENERGY. Forget Sizewell C nuclear – go for a warm home plan.
‘An incredibly powerful tool’: Can AI solve its own energy problem?
Spain’s Nuclear Shutdown Set to Test Renewables Success Story- ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/04/14/1-b1-spains-nuclear-shutdown-set-to-test-renewables-success-story/
ENVIRONMENT. Impacts of Dounreay radioactive discharges to be focus of new research – ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/?s=Impacts+of+Dounreay+radioactive+discharges
EDF urged to tackle ‘nuclear rats’ infestation at Somerset power plant site.
Nuclear Energy Expansion Faces Water Resource Challenges.
ETHICS and RELIGION. The Journey Beyond Nukes Begins with an Apology.
EVENTS. In Chicago: Testimonies of Korean Atomic Bomb Victims and International People’s Tribunal Promotion Events.
HISTORY. We thought it was the end of the world’: How the US dropped four nuclear bombs on Spain in 1966
LEGAL. The top Republicans in the Arizona Legislature want the federal government to cut back regulations on the nuclear energy industry.
MEDIA. Media Find Ways to Minimize Israel’s Murder of Paramedics. When will progressive media acknowledge and condemn US enabled genocide in Gaza.
OPPOSITION to NUCLEAR .Attacked, demonized and forced into hiding.
Nuclear waste returns to Germany amid protests.
The 2025 Nuclear-Free Future Awards. Youth Leading the Charge for a Nuclear-Free Future.

Raising Funds to Stop Lake District Coast Sub-Sea Nuclear Dump.
NFLAs ‘shout up’ for National Parks to be spared from nuclear development.
POLITICS
.Labour leader to improve investment for nuclear plant.   Keir Starmer set to approve nuclear plant in bid to power up economic growth. £2.7bn more taxpayer funding for Sizewell C confirmed- ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/?s=%C2%A32.7bn+more+taxpayer+funding.

Belarus should reinstate its nuclear-weapon-free status, NGOs urge at the Human Rights Council.
Impeachment of Yoon Suk-yeol threatens South Korea’s nuclear energy policy momentum.

Texas Budget Throws a Lot of Tax Dollars at Unproven Nuclear Technology.
POLITICS INTERNATIONAL and DIPLOMACY. 
Iran says ‘indirect talks’ have taken place with US over nuclear programme – with more to follow. Iran and US to enter high-stakes nuclear negotiations – hampered by a lack of trust. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62hN3E5ZCwA Russia pledges to help resolve Iran-US nuclear tensions. Trump claims US held direct nuclear talks with Iran.  Trump says Iran ‘in great danger’ if nuclear talks with US fail. Iran may expel UN nuclear inspectors over US threats.

European rulers are hyping the Russian threat and war for political survival.
SAFETY. 
Ukraine works to repair Chornobyl containment structure damaged in Russian drone strike. Ukraine is seeking solutions to the Chernobyl nuclear reactor’s damaged confinement vessel . Assessment result on the condition of the shelter at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant (ChNPP) is due in May-ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/04/14/2-b1-assessment-result-on-the-condition-of-the-shelter-at-the-chornobyl-nuclear-power-plant-chnpp-is-due-in-may/

Newest French reactor faces further delays due to new issues – ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/04/14/1-b1-newest-french-reactor-faces-further-delays-due-to-new-issues/

Declassified MoD document reveals US Visiting Forces across Britain are exempt from nuclear safety rules.Hartlepool Nuclear site moved into enhanced regulatory attention. Starmer appoints ex-Office of Fair Trading chief to lead nuclear regulatory taskforce.

Disconnection of nuclear plants during severe space weather highlighted as risk to grid stability.
SECRETS and LIES
Nuclear missile ‘cover-up’ fears as secret pact allowing US to bring deadly weapons to UK revealed.
Tory peer helped secure meeting with minister for Canadian nuclear firm he advises.
Manager at Hinkley Point C accepted a quad bike as a bribe, tribunal hears. Ex-Hinkley boss called ‘greedy toad’ over bribes
.Ambassador does not deny Russian attempts to track UK subs.

‘Better that Ukrainians don’t know the truth’ – Kiev’s spy chief.
SPACE. EXPLORATION, WEAPONS. ESA’s new documentary paints worrying picture of Earth’s orbital junk problem.
TECHNOLOGY. 
The Flamanville EPR nuclear reactor will not be able to deliver its full power without major works – ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/04/12/1-a-the-flamanville-epr-nuclear-reactor-will-not-be-able-to-deliver-its-full-power-without-major-works/

Radiation Monitoring – Scottish university in ‘world-first’ for nuclear technology.
UK Government convenes AI Energy Council, but could be ignoring hidden climate impacts in supply chains.
WASTES. Nuclear waste sparks fury in Germany.
WAR and CONFLICTRussia holds all the cards.
WEAPONS and WEAPONS SALESInside the New Mexico lab where the U.S. is moving into the most terrifying chapter of the nuclear arms race.
Walt Zlotow: Trump, Hegseth off by nearly 1 trillion on national security budget.
To Secure U.S. Energy Dominance, the Department of Defense Selects Eligible Companies for the Advanced Nuclear Power for Installations Program.

April 14, 2025 Posted by | Weekly Newsletter | Leave a comment

Rightwing lobby group Advance says it makes ‘no apology’ for support given to anti-Greens groups

Advance has also focused on the anti-renewables movement, appearing at “energy forums” across the country and events held by groups set up to oppose the roll-out of offshore wind and solar energy.

Ariel Bogle, 13 Apr 25 https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/apr/13/rightwing-lobby-group-advance-says-it-makes-no-apology-for-support-given-to-anti-greens-groups?CMP=share_btn_url

Spokesperson acknowledges supply of flyers, T-shirts and corflutes to ‘dozens of community groups’ seeking to defeat party’s candidates.

The rightwing advocacy group Advance has acknowledged it is paying for election materials attacking the Greens to be used by third-party groups during the election campaign.

“Advance is working with hundreds of volunteers from dozens of community groups to defeat Greens candidates and we make no apology,” a spokesperson said.

The spokesperson said Advance did not fund groups directly but “we absolutely pay for anti-Greens campaign material to be at the disposal of volunteers”.

“This includes 2m flyers and thousands of T-shirts and corflutes.

“Again, we make no apologies.”

The group’s plan to focus its election campaign on reducing the Greens vote has been no secret. Advance’s executive director, Matthew Sheahan, claimed in a February email to supporters it had already raised $7.6m to “smash the Greens” and about $2m to target Labor. The group has spent more than $200,000 in the past week to promote posts from Facebook pages with names such as “Greens Truth”.

But it has not previously talked publicly about the extent of its support for other groups hostile to the Greens, including those that take exception to the party’s position on the Israel-Gaza war or on renewable energy.

The type of assistance Advance has on offer was revealed by two Jewish advocacy groups at a forum hosted by the Australian Jewish Association (AJA).

Simonne Whine of J-United, which campaigned against the Greens in the recent Prahran byelection in Victoria, said her group had reached out to Advance to get its campaign started.

“They were fantastic, efficient, strategic, well resourced,” she said. “They supplied the flyers, the T-shirts and the corflutes, and shipped everything to Melbourne, helping us hit the ground running.” Advance even paid for a picnic to thank volunteers, Whine said.

During last year’s Queensland state election, the Queensland Jewish Collective (QJC) also focused on the Greens vote in Brisbane seats such as Maiwar and Moggill. One of the group’s directors, Roz Mendelle, told the AJA forum QJC had spoken with Advance after seeing its work during the campaign against the Indigenous voice to parliament.

When time came … to do something against the Greens here in Brisbane, I knew who to turn to,” Mendelle said, claiming that Advance kept “a healthy distance” while the campaign was under way. According to an event invitation seen by Guardian Australia, QJC held a volunteer event with Advance in February.

Mendelle is a co-director of a new group, Minority Impact Coalition (MIC), which has started a billboard campaign against Labor and the Greens in multiple states. A spokesperson for both groups said neither QJC nor MIC had received materials or funding from Advance.

“We had agreed to share volunteers for the federal election,” she said. “However, our volunteers do not want to work with Advance at the federal election so we have made the decision to do our own groundforce campaign.”

During the AJA briefing, Mendelle showed an image of a billboard paid for by QJC that read: “The Greens: They’ve changed for the worse.”

“This is also inspired by the Advance messaging,” she said. “But from there, we gained our footing, and we decided to just speak our truth.” MIC is using the same mobile billboard provider as Advance in Queensland, NSW and Victoria – STT Advertising.

In return, Advance has also used content from groups such as J-United on social media, sharing pictures of its “local grassroots community members” on its Greens Truth Facebook page.

The likely electoral impact of the anti-Greens strategy remains somewhat elusive. The Greens hold only four seats in the lower house, of which the three they won in Brisbane at the last election appear vulnerable. They have six senators up for re-election. By contrast, six new teal independent MPs were elected in 2022 – if they hold those seats or even increase their numbers, they might be expected to have a greater say in the event of a hung parliament.

“They’ve clearly worked out how to get conservative people fired up enough to throw money at them, and the way to do that is by attacking the Greens,” said Peter Lewis, the executive director of Essential, which is conducting qualitative research for the ALP. “But it’s not going to do anything to help the Liberals win back teal seats.”

The Advance spokesperson said: “Our campaign against the Greens won’t defeat teals because it was never meant to. We have been crystal clear for the past 18 months that our focus is on the Greens this election.”

Sheahan told an Australian Jewish Association forum in 2024: “Our goal is to just expose the Greens policies so that people don’t vote for them … A partial benefit will be that we think that will also reduce the teal vote.” His logic for that claim was unclear.

Anti-renewables

Advance has also focused on the anti-renewables movement, appearing at “energy forums” across the country and events held by groups set up to oppose the roll-out of offshore wind and solar energy.

As Guardian Australia has previously documented, the Facebook account for Advance spokesperson Sandra Bourke is active in dozens of local Facebook groups and pages opposing renewable projects in places such as Lake Borumba and Mount Fox in Queensland, regularly sharing Advance content.

Bourke is a regular speaker at these rallies and events – unusually for the outfit, which generally avoids a public-facing presence.

Grant Piper is the former chair of the National Rational Energy Network (NRen), which brought together community groups opposed to renewable energy projects and hosted events including the Reckless Renewables rally in Canberra last year.

That’s where Piper first met Advance. “We didn’t tie any formal knots, but we could tell we were pushing after the same thing when it comes to renewables,” Piper said.

NRen, which has rebranded as Let’s Rethink Renewables, has had discussions with Advance “all the way through”, he said, although it has remained independent. Bourke, one of NRen’s original members, is now Advance’s spokesperson and the face of its campaign against the Greens.

According to Piper – who appeared in Advance’s anti-renewables Dollars & Destruction video series – the organisation is a natural ally for groups that feel they are mostly excluded from the conversation taking place in parliament and the media.

“Advance is helping get publicity for the grassroots people who have been shut out of everything,” he said.

Others who have teamed up for the Greens Truth campaign include groups that emerged from the anti-lockdown movement, the Freedom party and Reignite Democracy Australia – which makes clear to prospective volunteers that their details will be shared with Advance.

Another NRen member and former One Nation candidate, Katy McCallum, was the MC at a “Goodbye Greens Rally” in Brisbane in late March, where QJC also appeared. Along with other event backers such as the Libertarian candidate Jim Willmott, she thanked Bourke and Advance for their help at the event.

“If our other good mate Sandra Bourke … from Advance hadn’t have jumped on, this would not be happening today,” she said.

April 14, 2025 Posted by | politics | Leave a comment

Dump nuclear, restore momentum – new poll shows opportunity for Coalition

Liberals Against Nuclear. 14 Apr 25

New polling shows the Liberal Party would increase its primary vote by 2.8 percentage points if it abandoned its nuclear energy policy, according to research commissioned by Liberals Against Nuclear.

Andrew Gregson, spokesperson for Liberals Against Nuclear, said the polling demonstrates that the same political flexibility recently shown by Peter Dutton on the work-from-home policy should be applied to the Coalition’s nuclear energy plan.

“Peter Dutton has shown he can make hard-headed decisions when they’re needed to win government. Our polling shows dumping nuclear would deliver an immediate 2.8% boost to the Liberal primary vote in key seats – potentially the difference between winning and losing this election,” Mr Gregson said.

The uComms survey of 5,177 voters across 12 marginal electorates, including Liberal-held seats and those targeted for recovery from Labor and independents, found that 50.6% of undecided voters are less likely to vote for the Coalition because of its nuclear policy.

“Just as Mr Dutton recognised that the work-from-home policy was hurting his standing with women voters, our polling shows that dropping nuclear would increase the Liberal vote among women by four percentage points,” Mr Gregson said.

“The Coalition’s backdown on forcing public servants back to the office full-time shows Mr Dutton can listen to voters and change direction when necessary. We’re simply asking for that same political flexibility to be applied to a fiscally irresponsible nuclear policy that’s proving even more unpopular.”

Mr Gregson noted that 48% of respondents indicated they don’t support nuclear power at all, with concerns about reducing investment in renewable energy (17.3%), nuclear waste management (14.6%), and high build costs (11.6%) topping the list of voter concerns.

“Our message to Liberal candidates is simple – even if you personally support nuclear energy, this polling shows dropping the policy gives you the best chance of winning your race. We’re running out of time, but it’s not too late to make this change and give the Coalition its best shot at forming government.”

April 14, 2025 Posted by | politics international | Leave a comment

Community groups furious Coalition nuclear plan would go ahead even if locals oppose it

Critics of policy say residents should be ‘very angry’ they will not be able to veto generators in their towns despite promise to consult them.

Tory Shepherd, 13 Apr 25, https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/apr/13/community-groups-furious-coalition-nuclear-plan-would-go-ahead-even-if-locals-oppose-it

There is a “growing backlash” to the Coalition’s nuclear plan, with community groups furious at the lack of consultation and angered that the policy would not give local communities the power of veto and that nuclear plants would be built regardless of local opposition.

Opponents say the pro-nuclear lobby group Nuclear for Australia has been hosting information sessions but that it makes it overly difficult for people to attend and ask questions, and is not able to answer those questions that are posed.

Wendy Farmer, who has formed an alliance of the seven regions affected by the Coalition’s pledge to build nuclear reactors on the site of coal-fired power stations, says Australians should be “very angry” that they will not be able to veto any planned nuclear generators in their towns despite the Coalition’s promise to carry out a two-and-a-half-year consultation.

She refuses to call the policy a “plan” because of that lack of consultation. “They haven’t even looked at these sites,” she said.

Dave Sweeney, the Australian Conservation Foundation’s nuclear free campaigner, says it is “more con than consultation”. And he says in his many years in nuclear-free campaigns he has never seen so many sectors – including unions, state leaders, energy producers, businesses and protest groups – aligned against nuclear.

The Coalition has pinpointed Tarong and Callide in Queensland, Liddell and Mount Piper in New South Wales, Loy Yang in Victoria, and small modular reactors (SMRs) in Port Augusta in South Australia and Muja, near Collie in Western Australia.

It says the $331bn nuclear plan will make electricity cheaper, while critics have called its costings a “fantasy”.

The Liberal party did not respond to questions about the lack of consultation and lack of veto power.

The alliance said there “has been no consultation or free prior and informed consent from traditional custodians”.

“You never asked locals if they want nuclear reactors in their back yards, instead you threaten compulsory acquisition and federal overrides with no right to veto,” it said in a petition to the Coalition.

It said the plan was a “distraction” designed to “create false debate” when communities are already transitioning away from fossil fuels to renewable energy.

Jayla Parkin, a Collie resident and community organiser for Climate Justice Union, said pro-nuclear information sessions had not provided any answers and had tried to stop First Nations people from entering.

Nuclear for Australia has held two information sessions with “expert speakers” in the town.

One elder was “devastated” after initially being refused entrance to a meeting last year, Parkin said. “She wanted to get the information,” Parkin said. “Not everyone is simply for nuclear or against. We are for being informed on what’s going to happen.”

At a January meeting, elders were told they couldn’t go in because of something wrong with their registrations, which Parkin then sorted out. Once inside, she said questions had to be submitted via an app.

Not a single question could be answered … like ‘Where is the water coming from?’, ‘How will this benefit Collie?’, and ‘Where are you going to store the radioactive waste?’” she said.

Since then, the community had heard nothing, she said.

Nuclear for Australia, founded by Will Shackel and boasting the entrepreneur Dick Smith as a patron, describes itself as a grassroots organisation with no political affiliation.

Information sessions have featured Grace Stanke, a nuclear fuels engineer and former Miss America who says being called “Barbenheimer” is one of her favourite compliments.

Shackel told SBS that Nuclear for Australia Google people when they try to register for the sessions.

“If we believe that someone is a known protester … someone who could cause a physical threat to people in there, we will not allow them in,” he said.

Farmer, also the president of Voices of the Valley, said Nuclear for Australia was “silencing people” by only allowing questions through an app and filtering them.

Nuclear for Australia has also taken out ads in local newspapers claiming 77% of coal jobs are transferable to nuclear plants and that nuclear workers are paid 50% more than other power generation-related jobs.

The fine print shows those claims come from a US nuclear industry lobby organisation and refer to the situation in the US.

Farmer said that, “adding insult to injury”, the advertisements misspell Latrobe Valley as La Trobe Valley and, in one case, an ad aimed at Latrobe was put in an SA newspaper.

“Regional communities are desperate for jobs now,” Farmer said. “Nuclear is not the answer.”

Protesters heckled the opposition leader, Peter Dutton, for not meeting with the community when he visited Collie in October last year.

“Collie doesn’t like it when people like that come to our town and hide,” Parkin said. “People have questions … at least openly answer them.”

In Perth last week Dutton was asked about criticism from Collie residents that he hadn’t heard their concerns about nuclear power and whether he would commit to visiting the town during the election campaign.

“I’ve been to Collie before,” he said. “There are seven locations around the country, and I won’t be able to get to all of them.”

Those communities knew the Coalition was offering them “the ability to transform”, he said.

Greg Bannon is from the Flinders Local Action Group, which was formed to oppose plans to build a nuclear waste dump in SA.

He said the community had not heard much apart from a February information session held by Nuclear for Australia. He said there were concerns about the safety of any power plant and the impact on the local environment. “Port Augusta … is probably the most stupid place to put a nuclear power station in the world,” he said, pointing to the unique nature of Spencer Gulf and its flat “dodge” tides.

“Any leakage … the water would end up in the top end of the gulf, with only one place to go, through Port Lincoln, the fish nurseries, the mangroves … only 50km further south is Point Lowly near Whyalla, where the annual migration of the southern giant cuttlefish occurs, which is a unique event in the world,” he said.

The other point, Bannon said, was that the region had already transitioned away from baseload power to renewables.

Guardian Australia has approached the Coalition and Nuclear for Australia for a response.

Tom Venning was preselected to replace retiring MP Rowan Ramsey in Grey, the federal electorate that Port Augusta sits within. He said he supported the policy as part of a “credible path to net zero” and that if the Coalition formed government there would be a two-and-a-half-year community consultation and an independent feasibility study.

“I’m committed to keeping my community fully informed and involved,” he said, adding that he would take any concerns seriously and would work with local leaders and the energy minister to address them.

Sweeney said the Coalition already appeared to be backing away from its commitment to nuclear and appeared reluctant to bring it up.

On Friday Dutton said people would flock to nuclear if they subsidised it but that they could “subsidise all sorts of energies”.

“I don’t carry a candle for nuclear or any other technology,” he said.

Farmer said: “There is a growing backlash.

“We are keeping it as a hot topic – because the Coalition doesn’t want to talk about nuclear, we will.”

April 14, 2025 Posted by | opposition to nuclear | Leave a comment