Nuclear Reactors 1496 – Australians Arguing About Adoption of Nuclear Power – Part 2 of 2 Parts

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Part 2 of 2 Parts (Please read Part 1 first)

Wendy Farmer is also the president of Voices of the Valley. She said that NFA was “silencing people” by only allowing questions through an app and filtering them.

NFA has also taken out ads in local newspapers claiming seventy seven percent of coal jobs are transferable to nuclear plants and that nuclear workers are paid fifty percent more than other power generation-related jobs. Those claims come from a U.S. nuclear industry lobby organization and refer to the situation in the U.S.

Farmer said that the advertisements misspell Latrobe Valley as La Trobe Valley, and in one case, an ad aimed at Latrobe was put in a South Australian newspaper. Farmer said that “Regional communities are desperate for jobs now. Nuclear is not the answer.”

Protesters heckled Peter Dutton, who is the opposition leader, for not meeting with the community when he visited Collie in October last year. Parkin said, “Collie doesn’t like it when people like that come to our town and hide. People have questions … at least openly answer them.”

In Perth last week, Dutton was asked about criticism from Collie residents that he had not heard their concerns about nuclear power and whether he would promise to visit Collie during the election campaign. He said, “I’ve been to Collie before. There are seven locations around the country, and I won’t be able to get to all of them.” Those communities understand the Coalition is offering them “the ability to transform”.

Greg Bannon is a member of the Flinders Local Action Group (Flag), which was formed to oppose plans to build a nuclear waste dump in South Australia. He said that the community had not heard much apart from a February information session held by NFA. He said that there were concerns about the safety of any nuclear power plant and the impact on the local environment. He said, “Port Augusta … is probably the most stupid place to put a nuclear power station in the world.” He pointed out the unique nature of Spencer Gulf and its very flat “dodge” tides.

Bannon said, “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 thirty-one miles 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.” Bannon pointed out that the region had already transitioned from baseload power to renewables. Guardian Australia has approached the Coalition and NFA for a response.

Tom Venning was preselected to replace the retiring Minister of Parliament Rowan Ramsey in Grey, the federal electorate that Port Augusta sits within. He said that he supported the policy because it was 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. He added that “I’m committed to keeping my community fully informed and involved.” He continued 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 power and appeared reluctant to mention it.

On Friday, Dutton remarked that people would flock to nuclear power if they subsidized it but that they could “subsidize all sorts of energies. I don’t carry a candle for nuclear power 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.”

Climate Justice Union

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