The non-corporate nuclear news – 8 -20th September

Some bits of good news –Humanity enters the age of rewilding. Humanity will shrink, far sooner than you think China’s green “Marshall Plan” is reshaping global energy.
TOP STORIES
The dangerous new Washington consensus for more nuclear weapons.
The Building of the First Atomic Bombs Impacted Workers and Residents, Too.
Israel has officially moved on from destroying Hamas to erasing
Palestine.Zelensky has insulted Trump: Is he suicidal?
Who are Britain Remade?
More hype about Small Modular Reactors (SMRs), but they may curb nuclear development .
Climate. Human-made global warming ‘caused two in three heat deaths in Europe this summer‘. Kenya’s Ruto says western leaders have broken ‘climate blood pact’– ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/09/11/1-b1-kenyas-ruto-says-western-leaders-have-broken-climate-blood-pact/
Aid cuts cast long shadow over key Africa climate talks. Protect Arctic from ‘dangerous’ climate engineering, scientists warn.
Environment. Key oceans treaty crosses threshold to come into force.
AUSTRALIA.
Nuclear subs base: Will it be Newy or The Gong? Could Australia defend itself?
US Threat to World Peace, AUKUS, and Dollar Sovereignty.
Australia rooftop solar hits 26.8 GW as home battery uptake surges.
NUCLEAR ITEMS
ECONOMICS Why Starmer’s nuclear ‘golden age’ risks becoming a lot of hot air – ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/09/20/1-b1-why-starmers-nuclear-golden-age-risks-becoming-a-lot-of-hot-air/
U.S. Firms Boost UK Nuclear Sector with Major Deals . US and UK companies ink nuclear deals ahead of Trump visit.
Sweden Looks to Lend $23 Billion to New Nuclear Power Projects.
| ENVIRONMENT. ‘Sizewell C oak tree felling would be devastating’. |
| ETHICS and RELIGION. Ending a War That Never Should Have Started.Holy See tells nations at UN to end threat of nuclear weapons, even as deterrence.. |
| EVENTS. 22 September – Spazio Europa, Rome – Global Launch of the World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2025 To attend in person, please register here, The event will be live-streamed on YouTube here. Note: The full 589-page report will be available for free download as of 22 September 2025 at 10:00 CET here |
| HEALTH. Why a national cancer study near US reactors must be conducted before any new expansion of nuclear power. |
| LEGAL. A killing at sea marks America’s descent into lawless power.Campaigners continue to need their day in court, says NFLA Secretary. |
| MEDIA. Trump masters the art of “dobbing” on an Australian journalist.Israeli Lawmakers Demanded Better PR to Conceal Gaza Famine: Google Obliged. New York Times misstates Palestinian death toll, downplays genocide.Read this book! |
| PERSONAL STORIES. I am ANTIFA .Israeli Forces Bomb, Loot, Vandalize Our Homes in Gaza: We Long for Normal Life.Trump not Commander in Chief…he’s Violence Inciter in Chief. |
| POLITICS. Will the US Continue to Aid, Abet, and Arm Genocide in Gaza? Political witch hunts and blacklists: Donald Trump and the new era of McCarthyism. Iran hardliners reject IAEA deal, but IRGC outlet voices support. What You Need to Know About the £38 Billion Sizewell C Nuclear Project in the UK. U.S. Nuclear Reactors will NOT Build a Strong Canada. https://nuclear-news.net/2025/09/20/1-u-s-nuclear-reactors-will-not-build-a-strong-canada/ |
| POLITICS INTERNATIONAL and DIPLOMACY. Europe has discombobulated Trump’s Ukraine war peace plan. UN genocide report puts Starmer in the dock. The future of Gaza as seen from the White House. Iran, allies submit draft IAEA resolution to ban attacks on nuclear sites. IAEA chief notes progress in Iran talks over nuclear site inspections. China, Russia urge Europe to halt UN snapback after Iran-IAEA deal. Saudi pact puts Pakistan’s nuclear umbrella into Middle East security picture. Saudi Arabia, nuclear-armed Pakistan sign mutual defence pact. |
| SAFETY.UK Ministry of Defence dismiss MP’ s call for inquiry into trident bases nuclear leaks – ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/09/20/1-b1-uk-ministry-of-defence-dismiss-mp-s-call-for-inquiry-into-trident-bases-nuclear-leaks/ UK hands over its nuclear safety conditions to Trump’s administration? – ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/09/20/1-b1-uk-hands-over-its-nuclear-safety-conditions-to-trumps-administration/ Can the UK fast-track nuclear power without cutting corners on safety? Case for Military Proportionality: Disabling Nuclear Plants. IAEA reports “serious safety risks” at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. Nuclear Sites Dotted Across Ukraine Pose Threat of Radiation Disaster. Chernobyl shelter repairs: ‘Difficult choices’ lie ahead. Plans to close Suffolk rail crossings for a Sizewell C upgrade will have a “huge impact” on residents and businesses. |
| SECRETS and LIES. Antifa Nation. |
| SPACE. EXPLORATION, WEAPONS. Communities Push Back against SpaceX in Tamaulipas. |
| SPINBUSTER. Rolls Royce “Small” nuclear reactors are not at all small! – ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/09/20/2-b1-rolls-royce-small-nuclear-reactors-are-not-at-all-small/ |
| TECHNOLOGY. Small Modular nuclear reactors sound great, but won’t be ready any time soon. |
| WASTES.Backlash against UK nuclear push with uncertainty over radioactive wastedisposal a key issue. Plutonium, Public Money and a Perilous Nuclear Dump on the Lake District Coast, a Letter to Cumberland Council’s “Nuclear Issues Board”. Academic agrees with NFLA’s position on management of deadly radioactive waste. Two down: Whicham joins Millom in withdrawing from undemocratic and discredited community partnership. First of four containers of tritium waste at LANL has been vented. Construction starts of Belgian disposal facility |
| WAR and CONFLICT. The Department of War Is Back! Israel Bombs Doha, Reportedly Targeting Hamas Negotiators Discussing US Proposal. Israel bombed Qatar to assassinate Hamas’s lead ceasefire negotiators. US Considers Bombing Venezuela as It Deploys F-35 Fighter Jets to Puerto Rico. |
| WEAPONS and WEAPONS SALES. The Military-Industrial Complex.UK Labour must not award Elbit a £2 billion military deal . Spain Announces Arms Embargo on Israel and Other Steps ‘to Stop the Genocide in Gaza’. Pakistan nuclear weapons, 2025. |
Nuclear subs base. Will it be Newy or The Gong?

“what we will end up getting is zero submarines but a bunch of new US bases.”
“all to keep on the right side of Donald Trump’s America.”
by Rex Patrick | Sep 15, 2025, https://michaelwest.com.au/nuclear-subs-base-newcastle-or-wollongong/
A business case to establish a nuclear submarine base at Port Kembla or Newcastle is being prepared for the NSW Cabinet, but the public is being kept totally in the dark. Transparency Warrior Rex Patrick reports.
It’s a radioactive issue in more ways than one, with no one in either the Federal or NSW government prepared to talk about it with the people they govern.
Discussions between the two parties are clearly well advanced, with a final NSW Cabinet submission in preparation – a fact that has been kept secret until the Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure inadvertently revealed it in NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal (NCAT) proceedings.
When confronted with this revelation, Senator David Shoebridge remarked, “Two levels of Labor government are secretly planning to dump a nuclear submarine base on NSW residents and neither of them has the guts to even discuss it. The Albanese government is shovelling hundreds of billions of public dollars into the AUKUS funnel, and
“what we will end up getting is zero submarines but a bunch of new US bases.”
AUKUS is big business
Announcements over the weekend show that AUKUS is big business, with $12 billion to be spent on shipyard and naval facilities in Western Australia.
It’s clear that the question of basing nuclear submarines in NSW is an important one. There will be opinions for and against, but one thing is for sure: without information, public debate won’t occur, or if it does, it will be ill-informed.
“The two shortlisted sites for wildly unpopular nuclear submarine bases, Port Kembla and Newcastle, are both Labor heartlands,” remarked Shoebridge, a former member of the NSW Legislative Council and now NSW senator.
“Port Kembla and the Illawarra would go into open revolt if the Labor government was honest about their plans, and this explains a lot about the secrecy”.
“This secrecy risks deep generational betrayal of Labor voters in both these regions and
No doubt NSW Premier Chris Minns is salivating.
It’s clear that the question of basing nuclear submarines in NSW is an important one. There will be opinions for and against, but one thing is for sure: without information, public debate won’t occur, or if it does, it will be ill-informed.
“The two shortlisted sites for wildly unpopular nuclear submarine bases, Port Kembla and Newcastle, are both Labor heartlands,” remarked Shoebridge, a former member of the NSW Legislative Council and now NSW senator.
“Port Kembla and the Illawarra would go into open revolt if the Labor government was honest about their plans, and this explains a lot about the secrecy”.
“This secrecy risks deep generational betrayal of Labor voters in both these regions and
“all to keep on the right side of Donald Trump’s America.”
Shoebridge seems rather unimpressed. So too does his counterpart in the NSW Legislative Council, Sue Higginson, who told MWM, “Premier Chris Minns is picking up where Peter Dutton left off with a plan to dump nuclear waste at sites in regional NSW. Minns is going further by hosting nuclear subs; he’s making us and our ports vulnerable military targets, and it’s all happening behind closed doors.”
Transparency flip-flop
In May this year, I used the NSW Government Information Public Access (GIPA) Act to ask the NSW Government for access to correspondence they’d had with the Federal Government that related to the use of Port Kembla or Newcastle as a future submarine base, and any briefs prepared for NSW’s Ministers.
The response, received in June, indicated that there were 24 “internal emails” and an “Advice”, but stated that I couldn’t have them because they were “Cabinet information”.
I appealed the decision to NCAT, arguing, as per the NSW Cabinet Practice Manual, that Cabinet privilege is waived when documents are shared with officials from another polity.
That caused a backflip from the NSW Government, with them writing to the Tribunal asking that the decision be remitted back to them to allow them to reconsider their position.
The Tribunal heard their request and ordered them to reconsider the access refusal, and to do so, pronto.
And so it was on 08 September that they sent me a new decision. They’d reconsidered their position … and … the public are still not allowed to see any of the documents, for new and different reasons.
The matter will now proceed to a contested hearing on 18 December in Sydney.
NSW fait acompli participation
Everything the NSW Government does it does for the people of NSW. Everything the NSW Government does is paid for by the people of NSW. The GIPA Act recognises this and allows NSW citizens to part the curtains on the windows of Government buildings to see the information that belongs to them and affects them.
But the NSW Government is having none of that … their arguments for secrecy amount to a desire not to prejudice their relations with the Federal Government, not to prejudice the way ministers in NSW go about their business, and not to have the internal deliberations of public servants subject to public review.
It’s a case of ‘officials’ interest over public interest’.
Whether you think a nuclear submarine base at Port Kembla or Newcastle is a good or bad idea, the NSW public has a right to participate in such a decision. But the way this is lining up is that the NSW Government will look at the business case , make a decision, and then present the people of NSW with a fait accompli.
Democracy comes from the Greek word ‘demos’, meaning ‘the people’, and ‘kratia’, meaning ‘rule’: that is, ‘government by the people’. Maybe someone should remind Chris Minns of this.
Rex Patrick
Rex Patrick is a former Senator for South Australia and, earlier, a submariner in the armed forces. Best known as an anti-corruption and transparency crusader, Rex is also known as the “Transparency Warrior.”
Trump masters the art of “dobbing” on an Australian journalist

By Vince Hooper | 20 September 2025, https://independentaustralia.net/politics/politics-display/trump-masters-the-art-of-dobbing-on-an-australian-journalist,20177
Trump turned a simple conflict-of-interest question into a schoolyard spat — threatening to “tell on” a journo to Australia’s Prime Minister, writes Vince Hooper.
IT TAKES A CERTAIN theatre of the absurd to transform a routine White House press gaggle into a diplomatic sideshow. Yet that is precisely what happened when an Australian Broadcasting Corporation journalist, researching U.S. President Donald Trump’s family business interests, asked a straightforward question about whether it is appropriate for a sitting president to be engaged in so many business activities.
The question was sober and reasonable: a matter of conflicts of interest, wealth accumulation, and transparency in public office. Trump’s response, however, veered quickly into the surreal. He first insisted that his children were running the business empire, then abruptly shifted the ground.
Instead of grappling with the premise, he went after the journalist’s nationality, declaring:
“The Australians, you’re hurting Australia.”
And then came the kicker — Trump promised to personally inform Prime Minister Anthony Albanese about the journalist’s behaviour, as if geopolitics had suddenly collapsed into a schoolyard spat where the ultimate threat was tattling to the headmaster. The art of dobbing.
At one level, the episode is comic, a reminder of Trump’s instinct for spectacle and grievance. But beneath the absurdity lies something darker: a consistent refusal to treat journalistic inquiry as a legitimate part of democracy. Instead, accountability is reframed as disloyalty. The president of the United States, confronted with a basic question about conflicts of interest, responded not with explanation but with a kind of diplomatic intimidation.
This is part of a longer pattern. From his first term to his second, Trump has cast journalists as enemies rather than interlocutors. The “war on the media” is not rhetorical garnish but central to his political style. In this worldview, truth-seekers are painted as traitors, tough questions are reframed as acts of sabotage, and now even foreign allies are enlisted as props in his domestic culture wars. By claiming that the ABC reporter was “hurting Australia,” Trump implied that the act of pressing a leader for clarity was somehow an attack on his allies themselves.
What is most revealing is how quickly Trump personalised diplomacy. The U.S.–Australia relationship is built on strategic alignment, trade, military cooperation, and shared democratic values. It is not dictated by whether a reporter poses a question he finds confrontational. Yet in his rhetoric, the fate of nations collapsed into the thin skin of one man. This habit of reducing statecraft to personal loyalty tests is not merely undignified; it is dangerous. If bilateral alliances can be bent around one leader’s grievances, they risk becoming unstable, transactional, and unpredictable.
Trump turned a simple conflict-of-interest question into a schoolyard spat — threatening to “tell on” a journo to Australia’s Prime Minister, writes Vince Hooper.
IT TAKES A CERTAIN theatre of the absurd to transform a routine White House press gaggle into a diplomatic sideshow. Yet that is precisely what happened when an Australian Broadcasting Corporation journalist, researching U.S. President Donald Trump’s family business interests, asked a straightforward question about whether it is appropriate for a sitting president to be engaged in so many business activities.
The question was sober and reasonable: a matter of conflicts of interest, wealth accumulation, and transparency in public office. Trump’s response, however, veered quickly into the surreal. He first insisted that his children were running the business empire, then abruptly shifted the ground.
Instead of grappling with the premise, he went after the journalist’s nationality, declaring:
“The Australians, you’re hurting Australia.”
And then came the kicker — Trump promised to personally inform Prime Minister Anthony Albanese about the journalist’s behaviour, as if geopolitics had suddenly collapsed into a schoolyard spat where the ultimate threat was tattling to the headmaster. The art of dobbing.
At one level, the episode is comic, a reminder of Trump’s instinct for spectacle and grievance. But beneath the absurdity lies something darker: a consistent refusal to treat journalistic inquiry as a legitimate part of democracy. Instead, accountability is reframed as disloyalty. The president of the United States, confronted with a basic question about conflicts of interest, responded not with explanation but with a kind of diplomatic intimidation.
This is part of a longer pattern. From his first term to his second, Trump has cast journalists as enemies rather than interlocutors. The “war on the media” is not rhetorical garnish but central to his political style. In this worldview, truth-seekers are painted as traitors, tough questions are reframed as acts of sabotage, and now even foreign allies are enlisted as props in his domestic culture wars. By claiming that the ABC reporter was “hurting Australia,” Trump implied that the act of pressing a leader for clarity was somehow an attack on his allies themselves.
What is most revealing is how quickly Trump personalised diplomacy. The U.S.–Australia relationship is built on strategic alignment, trade, military cooperation, and shared democratic values. It is not dictated by whether a reporter poses a question he finds confrontational. Yet in his rhetoric, the fate of nations collapsed into the thin skin of one man. This habit of reducing statecraft to personal loyalty tests is not merely undignified; it is dangerous. If bilateral alliances can be bent around one leader’s grievances, they risk becoming unstable, transactional, and unpredictable.
Compare this to other democratic leaders. Joe Biden, for all his gaffes, generally responds to press scrutiny with irritation at worst, never with the threat of raising the matter in a diplomatic call. Anthony Albanese himself fields barbed questions from Australian journalists on policy, integrity, and leadership without implying that the act of questioning undermines Australia’s alliances. Even populist figures like Britain’s ex-PM Boris Johnson or India’s Narendra Modi, while often prickly, have not suggested that reporters risk harming national security simply by doing their jobs. Trump stands almost alone in converting a press query into a matter of international loyalty.
In the end, Trump’s outburst says less about Australia than about America. It was not Australia’s reputation on trial, nor the alliance, nor the ABC reporter’s patriotism. It was the president’s tolerance for accountability — and that, once again, proved to be vanishingly thin and fake.
Vince Hooper is a proud Australian/British citizen and professor of finance and discipline head at SP Jain School of Global Management with campuses in London, Dubai, Mumbai, Singapore and Sydney.
Rising seas will threaten 1.5 million Australians by 2050 – report

One and a half million Australians living in coastal areas are at risk
from rising sea levels by 2050, a landmark climate report has warned.
Australia’s first National Climate Risk Assessment predicted more frequent
and severe climate hazards like floods, cyclones, heatwaves, droughts and
bushfires. “Australians are already living with the consequences of climate
change today,” Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen said, “but it’s clear
every degree of warming we prevent now will help future generations avoid
the worst impacts in years to come.”
The report looked at three global
warming scenarios – above 1.5C, above 2C and above 3C. Australia – one of
the world’s biggest polluters per capita – has already reached warming of
above 1.5C, the report said, noting that at 3C, heat-related deaths in
Sydney may rise by more than 400% and almost triple in Melbourne. The
72-page report – released days before the government announces its
emissions reduction targets for 2035 – found that no Australian community
will be immune from climate risks that will be “cascading, compounding and
concurrent”.
BBC 15th Sept 2025,
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c930454e77xo
