Julie Bishop is right. We need to talk about nuclear power.
Bishop raised the issue yesterday. It shouldn’t be confused with the emissions trading farce in shadow Cabinet — it wasn’t mentioned there — but she’s right that we need to drop the ideological and emotive approach to nuclear power and consider it seriously in the context of carbon abatement.
That’s not to say it might be a viable option in Australia. On the plus side, apart from its low carbon emissions, its polluting by-products are far easier to geosequestrate, and it’s well-established technology. On the negative side, it’s enormously expensive, and even a high carbon price under emissions trading may not be enough to make it competitive with coal. If it needs taxpayer handouts to be viable, then there may be other, better uses of our dollars than smashing atoms.
But it’s impossible to have a serious debate on the issue at the moment. The Government’s eyes light up whenever nuclear is mentioned. It conjures visions of power plants mushrooming — sorry — in suburban Australia. That the citizens of the socialist nirvanas of France and Sweden somehow cope with nuclear power gets overlooked. Peter Garrett correctly says we need to invest in solar (presumably by limiting access to the solar panel rebate?) and geothermal — he could’ve added better energy efficiency as well — but neither provide off-the-shelf solutions for the problem of replacing coal-fired base power generation.
The Coalition won’t go any further on the domestic nuclear issue than proposing it be debated. You can’t blame them — they can’t afford to if the Government is going to use it as a political weapon.
Where they’ve been stronger is on uranium exports. Andrew Robb has consistently argued that we should be selling uranium to India rather than being hung up, like the Government is, on India’s non-membership of the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Robb argues that nuclear power currently reduces global emissions by more than two billion tonnes a year and that up to 35% of India’s energy needs could be met by nuclear power by 2050 if they have access to the right technology and uranium.
Garrett suggested today that the Indians should focus on clean coal. Presumably he doesn’t mean that India should simply stall its economic development until we come up improved carbon capture technologies, because even Martin Ferguson admits that that’s going to take years. Clean coal’s a nice idea. When it’s anything more, maybe we can pay attention to its advocates.
The complicating factor with uranium sales is what to do with the by-products of the stuff we export. There’s a strong moral argument that if we sell the stuff, we should be prepared to take back the waste. No-one likes the idea of a nuclear dump, but Australia is about the best place for one you could find.
These are all issues that warrant debate, rather than reflexive opposition. As a species we use vast amounts of energy. Barring the discovery of a miracle source of limitless, non-polluting power, we’re stuck with picking the least-worst option amongst technologies of varying levels of utility, pollution, cost and development.
If we’d started doing something about carbon emissions a decade ago, we could have focussed on seriously developing renewable energy options, but it’s too late in the day to rely on that exclusively. We should consider whether existing technologies like nuclear need to be pressed into service here and overseas.
Connor Moran: Um, I think I can get my head around some of the complexities of this issue.
Michael James, you are kind to describe Andrew Bolt as a polemicist. I would describe him as a paid political thug. I realize that Rupert Murdoch pays him a fortune for his ill-written rants. However, much as Murdoch may be evil, much as his desire for destruction is greater than his ability to create. Why does he really want a totally stuffed-up planet.?
So the only real questions I have of Andrew Bolt would be; how much does Exxon pay him? Through which branch of Exxon’s various satrapies to fu*k the environment, in order to save their ar*es whilst they gouge out the last oil-well does he receive the money? And, how much does the satrapy concerned pay him? If this sort of information was available it certainly wouldn’t do their cause much good.
Michael James: thank you for your excellent input. Thank you also for trying to get my mind off its perhaps negative opinion about the tardiness of currant ‘slap happy’ alternatives. Of course economics will have the concluding answers to the nuclear options. Although, perhaps Australia could, still using nuclear, come up with a different solution to the economics of nuclear power. Would some of the alternatives, hot rocks. geo-sequestration, clean coal, desalination plants, multiplied by 50 times the size of the laughably polluting one that John Brumby has foisted on us, be any cheaper?
Certainly, the cost of cleaning up the planet will be huge. But as an escapee from Chong Qing-I wasn’t there that long-I can only say that trying to breathe in that city was an effort, and I do resistance training three times a week and am reasonably fit-What are the costs of keeping the old and the very young children (whose lungs can’t cope) alive in places like that? Wouldn’t these costs weigh in favour of a radical solution to our pollution problems?
Roy Milne: As you so rightly say, “We must have another look”. Also, I would add that with the world’s exploding population; time is a luxury we don’t have a lot of.
Cheers
V.
Michael Hutchinson: “Clean” and “Nuclear” being relative terms like when I turn my jocks inside-out and then back-the-front to get four days out of them.
Funny that Bernard picked out Sweden.
Sweden phasing out nuclear energy, aiming to end nuclear power generation by 2010.