Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Dr Helen Caldicott – international campaigner for the truth about nuclear power

Caldicott,H1antinuke-internationalProfile – Helen Caldicott
Sydney Morning Herald By Lucinda Schmidt July 29, 2009

This anti-nuclear campaigner has spent a lifetime striving to create a better world.

The day after the Federal Government approved a new uranium mine in South Australia, veteran anti-nuclear campaigner Helen Caldicott was appalled. In her view, exporting uranium, to any country, is morally indefensible.

“I think it’s devastating,” she says, describing Prime Minister Kevin Rudd as “a wolf in sheep’s clothing” and accusing Environment Minister Peter Garrett of moral turpitude.

“I’m so ashamed to be an Australian at the moment,” says Caldicott, 71, a Melbourne-born medical doctor.

“As we export uranium, we’re in fact exporting nuclear weapons, cancer, leukaemia and genetic disease. It’s a public health issue.”

In the 1970s and 1980s, Caldicott was one of the world’s leading anti-nuclear voices, as the Cold War generated fear of a nuclear holocaust.

In Australia, she played a big role in forcing the French atmospheric nuclear tests underground, after writing a letter to a newspaper in 1971 about the increase in radiation levels in Adelaide’s water supply following tests over the Pacific Ocean.

Profile – Helen Caldicott – Money – Business – Home – smh.com.au

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

BHP Billiton’s Olympic Dam will cause greenhouse emissions to soar

Flag_Australiaglobe-warmingMining growth a greenhouse gas threat
– Adelaide Now 29 July 09

July 29, 2009

SOUTH Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions will skyrocket with the expansion of the Olympic Dam copper and uranium mine if the power comes from non-renewable sources.

The Australian Conservation Foundation says the State Government must make the expansion conditional on the use of renewable energy.

“This BHP mining plan is equivalent to putting more than one million inefficient polluting cars on to the roads and keeping them there for decades to come,” said ACF climate change program manager Tony Mohr.

A spokesman for Premier Mike Rann said the greenhouse gas emissions were “a key issue for consideration” and that the Government would ask BHP Billiton to demonstrate how it would comply with relevant legislation.

AdelaideNow… Mining growth a greenhouse gas threat –

July 29, 2009 Posted by | climate change - global warming, South Australia, uranium | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Australia’s nuclear hypocrisy

Aust-two-faced

Unholy Trinity

ON LINE opinion by Bill Williams 28 July 09
“……………………………..the moral and political quagmire created by our ongoing export of the raw ingredient for nuclear weapons fuel, uranium. The not-so-subtle identification of China as our most likely aggressor in the White Paper’s purview ought to raise questions about the role our uranium will play in that nation’s anticipated rearmament…..

………..The capacity to produce nuclear power intrinsically involves the capacity to produce fissile material usable for nuclear weapons. A world free of nuclear weapons will be more readily achieved and sustained in a world in which nuclear power generation is phased out. Bomb-making ingredients will be harder to acquire and more conspicuous to seek. This will substantially deter proliferation, while facilitating timely detection and intervention, focusing scarce intelligence resources on needles, not haystacks.

With the weapons’ retirement age fast-approaching, Australia can contribute to real progress in abolishing these apocalyptic anachronisms, by putting some real spirit into driving the NWC agenda, by politely withdrawing from the US nuclear umbrella and by reducing the flow of raw material into the nuclear fuel chain.

Unholy trinity – On Line Opinion – 28/7/2009

July 28, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, uranium, weapons and war | , , , | Leave a comment

Martin Ferguson undermining climate change policy

Ferguson-ur.Flag_AustraliaMinisters accused of blocking energy greening
Sydney Morning Herald Marian Wilkinson, Environment Editor July 27, 2009

THE state and federal energy ministers, led by Labor’s Martin Ferguson, are being accused of undermining the Rudd Government’s climate change policies in light of a report which finds the national electricity market they oversee is discouraging energy efficiency and new renewable energy.

“Energy ministers are rewarding polluting energy and blocking efficiency and clean alternatives”, said Jane Castle of the NSW Total Environment Centre which commissioned one of the leading energy consultancy firms, McLennan Magasanik Associates, to report on the role of the National Electricity Market in climate change……………………

The report comes after Mr Ferguson launched an attack on environmentalists for failing to support the expansion of Australia’s liquid natural gas projects and uranium mining, saying they did not understand, “where our electricity comes from, who pays for it and what the future of the global energy landscape looks like”.

But Ms Castle accused Mr Ferguson of thwarting the Rudd government’s climate change policies. “He heads the Ministerial Council on Energy which is actively obstructing the development of energy solutions which would bolster the economy, create jobs and protect us from rising carbon costs,” she said. “His overblown statements are intended to simply disguise his defence of Australia’s biggest polluters.”

The consultants’ findings were backed by one of Australia’s leading renewable energy companies, Pacific Hydro. Its spokesman, Andrew Richards, said the energy ministers needed to intervene to get the National Electricity Market to “transition from the old way of doing things”. As a first principle, he said, the electricity market needed to include a commitment to climate change policies.

Martin Ferguson’s climate change policy | Marian Wilkinson | Environment and ALP

July 27, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, climate change - global warming, politics, uranium | , , , , | 1 Comment

Nuclear power proposal ridiculed

Ziggy-spruikerFlag_AustraliaN-power proposal ridiculed
The Bendigo Advertiser 27/07/2009

Last week the chairman of the Federal Government’s Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, Dr Ziggy Switkowski, said Australia was the best-placed country in the world to use nuclear power…………………………..

Environmentalists have called his proposal “ridiculous” and unnecessary given the number of renewable, and cleaner, energy options available.

Bendigo Sustainability Group president Karen Corr said Mr Switkowski’s idea was irrelevant.

“It is a ridiculous plan to even be considering nuclear power,” she said.

“There is existing technology now for green energy and nuclearpower is not clean, there are so many problems with it, especially with the waste.”

Ms Corr said any nuclear power plant would take at least 20 years to build, which seemed pointless given that wind and solar projects were already running and could be installed relatively quickly.

Mount Alexander Sustainability Group chairman Jim Norris agreed.

“We are saying no to nuclear power, we do not see it as clean and safe, there are other solutions readily available,” he said.

“Nuclear power generation is not entirely renewable clean energy, mine site to power point energy costs are quite considerable; you have got to dig the uranium out of the ground then store it for hundreds, if not thousands, of years.”

Mr Norris said the CSIRO’s Maine’s Power project was “absolute proof” that Australia did not need to rely on nuclear energy.

“Four major Castlemaine businesses will save between 30 and 40 per cent of their energy usage by means other than nuclear power by the end of 2010,” he said.

N-power proposal ridiculed – Local News – News – General – The Advertiser

July 27, 2009 Posted by | spinbuster, uranium, Victoria | , , , | Leave a comment

A dark dawn: the nuclear age is with us

Flag_AustraliaA dark dawn: the nuclear age is with us
ON LINE opinion By Jake Lynch –  27 July 2009
“…………………In Australia.. investigative reporting by the Sydney Morning Herald established that Peter Garrett,…. had approved a proposal for a new uranium mine from a “reclusive billionaire” named James Neal Blue. Blue, the paper noted, was “one of the world’s biggest arms dealers” and the supplier, through his company, General Atomics, of the Predator drone aircraft being used in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The new Four Mile mine, in South Australia, would use the same “acid corrosion technique” to extract uranium from aquifers, environment reporter Ben Cubby wrote, as the nearby Beverley mine, which had recorded 59 separate spills of radioactive material in the past decade.

Cubby didn’t raise the point, but real fears have surfaced, over the same period, that South Australia might run out of water, with its state capital, Adelaide, afflicted by salination and drought. It seemed that the exploitation of a resource with a high market value was taking precedence over the preservation of one with unique life-giving properties…………………..

Time then, perhaps, to dredge up some of the nuances otherwise in danger of being forgotten, but emphasised usefully in two new books, Plutonium: A History of the World’s Most Dangerous Element, by Jeremy Bernstein (Cornell University Press) and In Mortal Hands: A Cautionary History of the Nuclear Age, by Stephanie Cooke (Black Inc Books)…………….

…………The element at the heart of humanity’s deadliest weapons is plutonium, and Bernstein describes the science leading to its eventual production in sufficient quantities to manufacture bombs, evoking intrigues, along the way, that crossed the borders of Mitteleuropa, with protagonists fleeing Nazi persecution and heading for points west. Plutonium is a by-product of civil nuclear reactors, and Bernstein ends with a wry commentary on its sheer uselessness for any but military purposes. From the initial laboratory quantities measured in millionths of a gram, the world is now “awash” with the stuff, he says: 155 metric tons in total………………………….

Britain…. still has not settled on one site for the long-term disposal of waste from its existing nuclear plants. The cost, now estimated at well over £70 billion, or about US$120 billion, has been palmed off on the government,…

…Across the Atlantic, the Hanford reactor that produced plutonium for Los Alamos was mothballed long ago, Bernstein notes. The risk from leaks to swimmers and anglers downstream on the Columbia River was hushed up when it was operational, but it now represents a US$10 billion time bomb……………..

In the civil domain, the “nuclear renaissance” now underway creates a lucrative market for uranium suppliers like Australia, but, she observes, also multiplies the risk, of both accidents and proliferation.

A dark dawn: the nuclear age is with us – On Line Opinion – 27/7/2009

July 27, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, spinbuster, uranium | , , , | Leave a comment

Australia’s threatened water resources, and the uranium mining risk

water-drops (for more Australian news, go to

What impact is uranium mining having on our water?

The Advertiser, by Jim Green, 25 july 09

ENVIRONMENT Minister Peter Garrett buttressed his decision last week to approve in situ leach (ISL) uranium mining at Beverley Four Mile with the claim that he is “certain this operation poses no credible risk to the environment”.

Thus Mr Garrett adds another chapter to the history of spin surrounding ISL mining.

Environmental debates typically revolve around differing assessments of the possibility of environmental contamination.

But with ISL mining, environmental pollution – specifically contamination of groundwater with radionuclides, heavy metals and acid – is a certainty.

ISL mining involves pumping an acidic solution into an aquifer, dissolving the uranium ore and other heavy metals and pumping the solution back to the surface.

After the uranium has been separated, liquid radioactive waste is simply dumped in the aquifer. Isolation and containment of the pollutants would not be difficult or expensive, but the mining companies will take the cheaper option of polluting groundwater for as long as the politicians let them……………………

A 2003 Senate References and Legislation Committee report recommended banning the discharge of radioactive liquid mine waste to groundwater. ISL uranium mining is used at the Beverley uranium mine and it is the mining method proposed for Beverley Four Mile, Oban and Honeymoon.

The future of this mining technique is plain to see: short-lived mines leaving SA with a legacy of polluted aquifers.

Spills and leaks are common at ISL mines. The SA Department of Primary Industry and Resources lists 59 spills at Beverley from 1998 to 2007.

Serious questions must be raised as to BHP Billiton’s capacity to safely manage radioactive tailings at Olympic Dam if, as planned, tailings production increases sevenfold to 68 million tonnes annually and water consumption increases to more than 250 million litres daily.

BHP Billiton pays nothing for its massive water take for the Olympic Dam mine, despite recording a $17.7 billion profit in 2007-8. That arrangement is enshrined in the Roxby Downs Indenture Act 1982………

……… The Indenture Act provides a raft of exemptions and overrides from the SA Natural Resources Act 2004, the Environment Protection Act 1993, the Aboriginal Heritage Act 1988 and even the Freedom of Information Act 1991.

BHP Billiton and the Rann Government are currently engaged in secret discussions over the future of the Indenture Act.

July 25, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, environment, uranium | , , , , | 1 Comment

Fairfax News has conflict of interest in reporting on nuclear power

Flag_AustraliaWhy is Fairfax Promoting nuclear power?
Becruz by Robert Vose 25 July 09

The Chairman of the Board for Fairfax Media Limited is Mr Ron Walker. Ron Walker was also one of the three owners of a company that aimed to build Australia’s first nuclear power station:

Herald Sun Michael Harvey February 28, 2007

JOHN Howard has admitted he had known of a private bid by a Liberal powerbroker to build Australia’s first nuclear power station since the middle of last year.

Mr Howard received a phone call from businessman Ron Walker about the time the Federal Government established its expert investigation into the viability of nuclear power.

Mr Walker told the Prime Minister he was registering a private company interested in nuclear power…

The Herald Sun revealed yesterday that Mr Walker joined forces with fellow business chiefs Hugh Morgan and Robert Champion de Crespigny to establish a private company called Australian Nuclear Energy Pty Ltd.

If Fairfax newspapers such as The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald are starting up a campaign to subtly promote nuclear power – through these pretend allegorical stories of the last couple of days – THEY NEED TO DECLARE A POSSIBLE CONFLICT OF INTEREST!!!!

These nuclear power puff pieces do not constitute rational debate. They do not look at the options for energy systems that could replace coal power stations. The writing style even suggests that the authors are embarrassed to have to present these kinds of positions in their writing.

……………………….If editors and the board are pushing the nuclear power wheelburrow they need to declare their interests in nuclear power.

Becrux » Blog Archive » Why is Fairfax Promoting nuclear power?

July 25, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, spinbuster, uranium | , , , , | Leave a comment

Australia: Aboriginal voices raise uranium concerns

A predominantly Aboriginal national anti-nuclear group has raised serious concerns over the impacts of uranium mining and nuclear activities on Aboriginal country ahead of the opening of a uranium industry conference in Fremantle today.
“Aboriginal people have long endured the impacts of uranium mining, nuclear testing and radioactive waste dumping proposals in Australia,” said ANFA co-chair Donna Jackson.
“We continue to lead the resistance to further uranium mining in Australia, Traditional Owners (TOs) should not be bullied or intimidated into signing agreements”.
The Australian Nuclear Free Alliance (ANFA) – formerly known as the Alliance Against Uranium (AAU) – was formed in 1997 and brings together Aboriginal people and health and environment NGOs concerned with the rapid expansion of existing or proposed uranium mining in Australia, particularly on Aboriginal homelands.
“ANFA is requesting an Inquiry or Royal Commission into Uranium mining and it’s impacts on people and country. This is not a black and white issue, this toxic industry threatens our clean air and clean water for tens of thousands of years, yet we are asked to believe the hollow assurances about safeguards from Governments and industry executives that may not be in power next week, let alone years from now”.

“It is vital that the full story be told and the full range of risks and impacts be understood by TOs.  Radioactive pollution can travel vast distances via air and water, and remain radioactive in the environment for thousands of years”.
Donna Jackson is available for comment on 0427 847 186.

ANFA – protecting country, supporting communities – www.anfa.org.au

July 25, 2009 Posted by | aboriginal issues, AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, uranium | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Australia’s poor record as a uranium mining nation

Flag_AustraliaWhat is our record as a nation of Uranium miners?
ARCHIES ARCHIVE 24 July 09

Ranger:• despite being expected to operate under a “no-release” water management system, incidents involving misplaced low grade ores or failures in water control bunds have led on numerous occasions to contaminated runoff waters being leaked into adjacent creeks (especially Corridoor Creek, a tributary of Magela Creek).• in early 2004 incorrect plumbing saw the process water circuit being connected to the potable drinking water circuit – leading to rapid and significant toxic process water being mixed with drinking water, and much of the Ranger workforce being potentially exposed to both acute chemical and radiological exposure.

Olympic Dam:• after operating for nearly a decade, a major ongoing leak from the tailings dam was revealed, amounting to the loss of billions of litres of tailings water to groundwater.• in March 1999, and again October 2001, major explosions and fires caused substantive damage to the mill and smelter complexes, including major releases of noxious fumes – though the extent of radiological releases remains highly contentious, the fact that the uranium solvent extraction circuit in the 2001 incident was on fire raises serious concerns about how these incidents are handled by current regulators.
Beverley:
• numerous spills and leaks from pipelines have occurred………………

Can uranium mines be satisfactorily rehabilitated?

The experience of rehabilitating uranium mines to date in Australia is questionable. The first generation of uranium mines from the Cold War, namely Rum Jungle, Radium Hill, Mary Kathleen and the South Alligator group of mines, all still present environmental and radiological management problems and require constant vigilence and maintenance.

Examples include: – Rum Jungle –….mine drainage continues to pollute the Finniss River…… Radium Hill…………tailings requires ongoing maintenance…..Mary Kathleen………… ongoing seepage of saline, metal and radionuclide rich waters from the tailings dam
From a briefing paper by Gavin M. Mudd for <a

Uranium Mining and a National Park #2 « Ærchies Archive – The Curmudgeon’s Magazine

July 25, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, safety, uranium | , , , , | 1 Comment

Rudd ridicules Opposition’s nuclear push

Flag_Australia ( more Australian news at nuclear news Australia )

Rudd ridicules Opposition’s nuclear push
Jul 23, 2009 Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says Labor’s policy of opposing nuclear power generation in Australia is clear……………………………

“Can I say our policy on this was made absolutely clear at the ALP national conference a couple of years a go when I was leader of the parliamentary Labor Party, I still am, though my other job has changed, and it was clear cut that we were getting rid of the three mines policy,” he said.

Mr Rudd says the remarks show the Opposition do not have a coherent policy on climate change.

“We’ve got this extraordinary situation where the only thing the Liberal Party seem to be united on is putting nuclear plants, power plants, across the country, when they can’t even have a unified position on climate change,” he said.

July 24, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, politics, uranium | , , | Leave a comment

Bligh rules out Queensland uranium mining

Flag_Australia

ABC News By Chrissy Arthur  Jul 23, 2009
Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says uranium mining will not be allowed in the state under her government.Earlier this week, Federal Resources Minister Martin Ferguson said it was inevitable that uranium would be mined in Queensland.

Ms Bligh says she made a promise at the last election not to allow uranium mining and she will not be breaking it.”It’s not like coal, or nickel or zinc,” she said.”This is a material that is used for a range of very serious and violent purposes around the world.”

Bligh rules out Qld uranium mining – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

July 24, 2009 Posted by | politics, Queensland, uranium | , , , | Leave a comment

Mega uranium in Australia

Mega steps up bid to beat BHP with WA’s 1st uranium mine

(Note from Christiona Macpherson – Is Mega Uranium involved in a court case in South Africa?)

PERTH, July 23 AAP

Trading Room By Rebecca Le MayJuly 23 2009,

The race to develop Western Australia’s first uranium mine has gained pace, with Mega Uranium Ltd entering a $US49 million ($A60 million) joint venture with a Japanese firm to progress the Canadian explorer’s Lake Maitland project.

Mega is vying to beat BHP Billiton Ltd’s Yeelirrie project as the state’s first uranium mine.

Both projects are situated in WA’s midwest region near Wiluna………………..Mega, which is expected to soon seek an Australian stock exchange listing, said on Thursday it had teamed up with Japan Australia Uranium Resources Development (JAURD) and Itochu to develop the project………………….

“JAURD’s shareholders – power companies Kansai, Kyushu and Shikoku, will have access to uranium produced at Lake Maitland and Itochu will participate in uranium off-take arrangements,” Mega chief executive Sheldon Inwentash said.

The transaction is subject to approvals required under the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act.

Federal Minister for Resources and Energy, Martin Ferguson, said on Thursday Australian was “committed to mining uranium with safe hands and only supplying uranium to countries which use it with safe hands”.

News: Australian Stock, Share & Commodity Markets News – Tradingroom.com.au

July 24, 2009 Posted by | secrets and lies, uranium, Western Australia | , , , , | Leave a comment

Australia’s top nuclear business closes down – “a waste of time”

Top trio turn off N-switch

(for more Australian news go to nuclear news Australia  )

Herald Sun Cameron England

July 23, 2009 12:00am

THREE of Australia’s best-known businessmen have abandoned plans to build the country’s first nuclear power plant in the face of Federal Government opposition to the controversial energy source.

Fairfax Media chairman and former Liberal Party treasurer Ron Walker has applied to deregister Australian Nuclear Energy — the company he set up with mining identities Robert Champion de Crespigny and Hugh Morgan — three years after its creation.

Mr Walker said yesterday a lack of government support had scuttled their ambitions. “Government was very clear that they would not allow nuclear energy in Australia,” he said.

“We decided that it was just a waste of our time…………

…………Mr Walker applied to shut down ANE, which investigated the possibility of building a nuclear plant in either Victoria or South Australia, on May 2

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,25821675-664,00.html

July 22, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, business, uranium | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Rio Tinto tries to steer Rudd towards nuclear power

uranium-enrichmentBusiness Spectator , 22 Jul 2009
Rio Tinto tries to steer Rudd towards nuclear power

“…………….The company laid out its position in a submission to the government’s Energy White Paper, signed by Rio Tinto Australia managing director Stephen Creese.

The submission raised particular concern about the government’s 20 per cent renewable energy target…………………..

Rio Tinto owns 68 per cent of Australia’s largest uranium exporter Energy Resources of Australia Ltd.

The miner also cast doubt on the viability of gas as a lower-emitting, base load alternative to coal.

July 22, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, politics, uranium | , , | Leave a comment