Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Uranium miner squanders Australia’s precious water – for FREE!

water-dropsSouth Australia: Olympic Dam mine BHP Billiton 30 Oct 09 Watch Western Mining Corporation first developed the Olympic Dam (Roxby Downs) Uranium Mine in 1983, despite strong and sustained opposition from Kokatha and Arabunna Traditional Owners and environmentalists. BHP Billiton purchased the underground Olympic Dam mine in 2005.

In May 2009 BHP Billiton released an Environmental Impact Statement detailing plans to turn Olympic Dam into a massive open pit mine. With this expansion uranium production is expected to increase from 4,000 tonnes to 19,000 tonnes per year and copper production from 200,000 to 750,000 tonnes a year. Continue reading

October 30, 2009 Posted by | 1, AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, environment, uranium, water | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Australia’s blind eye to China’s abuse of anti-nuclear protesters

Australia is complicit in China’s uranium and human rights abuses Crikey.com Oct 2009 by James Norman

:……………. Australia’s role in supplying China with uranium and the associated impacts of the nuclear industry, within China and in terms of Australia’s non-proliferation commitments.

The expanded Roxby Downs uranium and copper mine being proposed by BHP Continue reading

October 30, 2009 Posted by | 1, AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, politics international, uranium | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Protest against BHP as Alternative BHP Report released

BHPB-Olympic In Melbourne today, protesters gather outside BHP Billiton’s head
office in Melbourne, highlighting the impacts of BHP’s plan to make
Olympic Dam the biggest uranium mine in the world.

Friends of the Earth’s national nuclear campaigner Dr Jim Green said:
“For all of BHP Billiton’s hollow rhetoric about corporate social
responsibility, the company operates the Olympic Dam mine in SA under an outdated Indenture Act which exempts the mine from key environmental and Aboriginal heritage laws.

“BHP Billiton has provided over $2 million to Reconciliation Australia.
Yet the company will not relinquish its exemptions from the SA
Aboriginal Heritage Act. The company’s attitude appears to be ‘do as I
say not as I do’. It’s time for this hypocrisy to end.”

Duban Velez, a union delegate for workers at the Cerrejon coal mine in
Colombia, will be at today’s protest in Melbourne to tell his story
about BHP’s inadequate social and environmental standards in Colombia.
Mr Velez will also be attending BHP’s second AGM, in Brisbane on
November 26. Farming families in villages around the mine have been
deprived of their livelihoods as the mine expands and accuse BHP of
failing to negotiate in good faith or offer sufficient assistance or
compensation.

The Alternative Annual Report can be downloaded at:
http://tinyurl.com/yjjluqg

October 29, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, politics, uranium | , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Uranium miners – the phoniest of corporations

During the next decade the world must reduce emissions as fast as possible, in order to avoid climate change “tipping points”. Australia is the world’s worst per-capita emitter of greenhouse gases. Our coal-fired power stations emit almost 50 percent of our emissions, so it is crucial that we minimise their emissions as fast as possible. Continue reading

October 28, 2009 Posted by | 1, AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, politics, uranium | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Review: a good week for skulduggery and secrecy

a-cat-CAN

Review: Australia; it was a good week for skulduggery and secrecy, even not counting ANSTO’s opinion poll debacle

Defence Dept keeping quiet about planned “termporary” nuke waste dump at Woomera. Martin Ferguson’s secret deal with some NT aborigines over NT nuke waste dumping. BHP Billiton’s Olympic Dam disrupted for months, keeping quiet over probable job losses. Greens asking awkward questions about radioactive spill at Lucas Heights. ERA keeping quiet about radioactive leaking at Ranger uranium mine.

Internationally: Obama being ambiguous about nuclear, as nuke lobbying continues over U.S.A’s Climate Bill. Chilean veterans suing govt over radiation harm. Iran being flighty over nuke deal offered to them. AREVA’s “flagship” nuclear reactors limp on expensively. IAEA trying to solve Chernobyl’s still radioactive cooling pond. Sellafield cleanup costing billions with no end in sight. – review of the week that was

October 27, 2009 Posted by | Christina reviews | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Olympic Dam uranium mine outage: jobs at risk?

Long outage expected for Olympic Dam THE AUSTRALIAN Matt Chambers | October 22, 2009 BHP Billiton has confirmed that damage to its Olympic Dam underground copper and uranium mine, caused by a plummeting fully loaded ore skip, will keep the operation at one-quarter capacity for up to six months. …… Continue reading

October 21, 2009 Posted by | 1, business, South Australia, uranium | , , , , , | Leave a comment

BHP’s uranium mine to miss deliveries

BHP Declares Force Majeure on Olympic Dam Contracts  By Brett Foley Oct. 20 (Bloomberg)– BHP Billiton Ltd. declared force majeure on some supply contracts after the closure of a shaft at Australia’s Olympic Dam, the world’s largest uranium deposit and the fourth-biggest copper lode.

The Australian company has told affected customers of the disruption to shipments, London-based spokeswoman Bronwyn Wilkinson said today in an e-mailed statement.
Force majeure is a legal clause allowing a company to miss deliveries because of circumstances beyond its control.
BHP, the world’s largest mining company, is still investigating damage caused by a mechanical failure to the hoist system at the mine’s Clark shaft two weeks ago.

BHP Declares Force Majeure on Olympic Dam Contracts (Update1) – Bloomberg.com

October 21, 2009 Posted by | 1, business, South Australia, uranium | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Olympic Dam uranium mine jobs at risk

Workers fear lay-offs as they wait for repairs

Sydney Morning Herald BARRY FITZGERALD

October 15, 2009

There have been no lay-offs among the 3000 employees and contractors at BHP Billiton’s Olympic Dam copper, uranium and gold mine in South Australia after the loss of 80 per cent of the underground mine’s hoisting capacity.

But with speculation continuing that the Clark shaft could take up to six months to repair, fears are growing in the outback town that services the mine, Roxby Downs, that BHP could soon be forced to resort to a skeleton workforce.

BHP is still not commenting on the likely impact of the October 6 incident and will not confirm reports that the 850-metre Clark shaft was knocked out of action when a fully loaded ore skip crashed. Automated ore-loading equipment at the bottom of the shaft and winding gear – including a four-kilometre cable – on the surface were damaged………….Leading analysts have tipped that the Clark shaft could be inoperative for between two and six months. The Clark shaft accounts for about 80 per cent of the 10 million tonne-a-year mining operation. http://www.smh.com.au/business/workers-fear-layoffs-as-they-wait-for-repairs-20091014-gxic.html

October 16, 2009 Posted by | business, South Australia, uranium | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

BHPB sets policy for Federal govt, as well as for South Australia’s

BHPBillitonSmWe knew that BHP pretty much dictated the policies of the South Australian government – most clearly shown in the Roxby Downs (Indenture Ratification) Act 1982 (Indenture Act). which  provides BHP Billiton the legal authority Continue reading

October 15, 2009 Posted by | 1, AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, politics, uranium | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Review: opinion polls, BHP, Greens, and nuke-hype

a-cat-CANReview of the week that has been. In Australia, 2 opinion polls –  one showing that women are 4 times more opposed to nuclear power than are men. One showing that 49% of Australians think that the govt should consider nuclear power, and 43% are conmpletely opposed to it. (Hardly a ringing endorsement of nuclear power!).

BHPB rushing ahead with uranium mine in WA, with the help of an outdated, and too narrow assessment process. BHP B keeping quiet about a prolonged shutdown of Olynpic Dam uranium mining (at 20% capacity) following an accident.

Greens come up wilh a forward-looking plan for the government’s Emiisions Trading Scheme. 

Gareth Evans aiming to get “peaceful” nuke power into the Non-Prolifertaion Treaty. Meanwhile, overseas, US senators John Kerry and Lindsay Graham try to get nuclear into US Climate Bill. France’s nuke salesman, Sarkozy,  spruiking everywhere (Bulgaria this week, Australia when?)

October 13, 2009 Posted by | Christina reviews | , , , , , | Leave a comment

BHP Billiton’s uranium mining is above the law

Olympic Dam expansion: above the law? On Line Opinion  By Peter Burdon 9 October 2009 In the heart of the South Australian outback, rests the Olympic Dam mine, owned and operated by BHP Billiton. Continue reading

October 10, 2009 Posted by | 1, legal, politics, South Australia, uranium | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Narrow assessment will allow BHP’s uranium mine to go ahead

Public inquiry not possible on uranium mining

Perth Now

Narelle Towie, science and environment reporter

October 09, 2009

ENVIRONMENT Minister Donna Faragher has today ruled out holding a public inquiry into BHP Billiton’s proposal for a $17 billion uranium mine in WA. Continue reading

October 10, 2009 Posted by | 1, legal, politics, uranium, Western Australia | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Olympic Dam – 80% out of action for 6 months?

BHPB-Olympic-SmOlympic Dam accident threatens output  THE AUSTRALIAN Matt Chambers | October 09, 2009

BHP Billiton’s giant Olympic Dam underground mine could be running at just 20 per cent capacity for up to six months, analysts say, after a loaded iron skip plummeted to the bottom of the 800m-deep main shaft. Continue reading

October 9, 2009 Posted by | business, South Australia, uranium | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

BHP Billiton tight-lipped about virtual shut-down of Olympic Dam

BHPB-Olympic-SmAccident slashes Olympic Dam output  – THE AUSTRALIAN Matt Chambers | October 08, 2009

BHP Billiton’s giant Olympic Dam underground mine in South Australia could be running at less than half capacity for months after a mechanical failure sent a full load of ore plummeting to the bottom of its 800m-deep main shaft. Continue reading

October 8, 2009 Posted by | business, South Australia, uranium | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Review – Gareth Evans – weak sop, and so on

a-cat-CANWell, well, Gareth Evans, ? champion of nuclear disarmament has now come out in favour of Australia taking in everybody else’s dirty washing – i.e. nuclear wastes. I always though he was a weak sop, anyway.

Australia’s Paladin uranium company hopes nobody is noticing that it mucks up Malawi’s drinking water, and that it attacks the Malawi Catholic Commission for Peace and Justice  – (bet it wouldn’t dare have a go at Australia’s)

BHP is lying low – hoping we’ll all forget about the predicted dust storms, as we have apparently forgotten about Maralinga.  Russia plans to join forces with Cameco, in Australia uranium mining.

The nuclear industry is quietly worrying about the falling uranium price, and dimming prospects for commercial nuclear power – hence the increased nuclear hype. Marshall islanders fear sea level rise, to add to their radiation-induced problems.

Some really interesting ideas coming on in how energy efficiency, and smart grids, combining with renewables have great potential for Australia’s energy future. That’s some of the week that has been………….

October 6, 2009 Posted by | Christina reviews, uranium | , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment