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  1. #276
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Labor senator Tim Ayres has branded the Coalition’s nuclear energy policy “too silly for words”.

    SENATOR AYRES:

    They'll see exactly what it is. They'll see it for what it should be seen as, and only five years ago, Mr Dutton and these characters were joking about sea level rises in the Pacific, thought it was hilarious, when they thought that the cameras and microphones weren't on. It is well understood, not just in the Pacific, but around the globe, what an outlier Australia was under the previous government, under the Morison Government in particular, going backwards on climate change and sending a big message to boardrooms and investment around the world. Don't bother knocking was the message that they sent, and disinvestment hand over foot, leaving the economy, factories that weren't built, energy projects that were abandoned under their watch, and of course, in the Pacific, they understand exactly what this is about. It's about crass base politics, the Liberal Party and the National Party, who can't see beyond their own internal politics. That's why we've ended up with this too silly for words nuclear proposition, or let's say, it's an economic cul-de-sac for Australia. Bad idea. Experimental nuclear reactors that no economy around the world is using. These propositions, not projectss, not measured in millions of dollars of cost, but tens of billions of dollarsÂ’ worth of cost projects that spin out not for a few years, but for decades. Sure, I mean this is nonsense. They know it, and they'll be judged for what is a not serious energy policy.

    Speaking with the ABC’s Afternoon Briefing, he said the Liberal party and the National party were being led by “crass base politics” and “can’t see beyond their own internal politics.”

    ThatÂ’s why weÂ’ve ended up with this too-silly-for-words nuclear proposition. ItÂ’s an economic cul-de-sac for Australia. Bad idea Â… Projects not measured in millions of dollars of cost, but tens of billions of dollars worth of cost. Projects that spin out not for a few years, but for decades.

    This is nonsense. They know it. And theyÂ’ll be judged for what is a not-serious energy policy.

    ___________

    Barnaby Joyce and Keith Pitt call on Coalition to abandon Paris agreement as Albanese says Dutton ‘all negativity and no plan’

    Former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce and Morrison cabinet colleague Keith Pitt have called for the Coalition to abandon the Paris global climate change agreement and related emissions reduction targets, as the prime minister accused opposition leader Peter Dutton of walking away from climate action.

    Dutton has said he would oppose the government’s target of a 43% cut to 2005-level emissions by 2030, telling the Australian newspaper there was “no sense in signing up to targets you don’t have any prospect of achieving”.

    In 2022, he said he would adopt a 2030 target that was more ambitious than the 26-28% reduction promised when Scott Morrison was prime minister.

    Pitt told Guardian Australia that the Coalition should consider quitting the Paris agreement which commits signatories to set periodic targets to limit global heating, arguing the transition to renewable energy was costing Australians too much.

    “If that’s necessary in order for people to have a roof over their heads and pay their bills, then that ought to be considered,” Pitt said on Monday.

    Joyce said that “in the end, aspirations have to take a secondary position to the economic reality”.

    “You cannot destroy the economy for the purposes of a policy,” he said. “The political reality that sits behind that is if the lights go out and the economy is shelled out, you’ll get voted out.”

    Anthony Albanese seized on the policy shift, accusing Dutton of ditching the CoalitionÂ’s commitment to address climate change.

    “His decision to abandon the 2030 target means him walking away from the Paris accord,” Albanese said on Monday. “You can’t shape the future if you’re afraid of it and Peter Dutton is afraid of the future and he’s incapable of leading Australia towards the future that we need.

    “Peter Dutton is worse than Scott Morrison on climate change. He is all negativity and no plan.”

    The Paris agreement is a legally binding commitment to hold global heating at below 2 degrees celsius – and ideally 1.5 degrees – compared to pre-industrial levels. With only Libya, Yemen and Iran declining to join, its signatory countries have subsequently agreed to a target of achieving net zero emissions globally by 2050, with interim emissions reduction targets for 2030 and 3035.

    The government insists Australia is on track to achieve a 42% reduction – still short of its 43% target – and measures recently announced in the budget will provide further help. But some analysts have said it will likely fall short and the Coalition argues that makes the target pointless.

    The shadow energy minister, Ted O’Brien, insisted that the Coalition remained committed to the Paris agreement – even though it requires countries to progressively increase their commitments and not backslide once a target has been set. Dutton’s remarks appear at odds with that.

    “The Coalition is absolutely committed to the Paris agreement and we’re also committed to net zero,” O’Brien told ABC Radio National. “There’s no doubt targets are important but they have to be well informed and they have to be achievable… Of course we will be signing up, in government, to targets, not just net zero.”

    On Sky News, OÂ’Brien said the Coalition would commission modelling before setting its target.

    “We will be as ambitious as we can,” O’Brien told Sky News. “But we will be contained by what’s achievable – and we’ll be honest and transparent.”

    Nationals leader David Littleproud appeared to differ, suggesting on Monday that the Coalition “won’t have a linear pathway” to net zero and that nuclear power would deliver a sharp reduction in emissions when it was up and running, meaning the Coalition would not need to transition to renewables, or away from fossil fuels, so soon.

    “There will be a ramp up at the end in us achieving that goal of net zero by 2050,” Littleproud told Sky News. Later, he told constituents: “We don’t need to do it all by 2030.”

    Speaking to Guardian Australia, Pitt went further, insisting the priority commitment should be “to the Australian nation, not the United Nations”.

    “People are hurting and anything we have to do to help them, we should do,” he said. “So if that means a disagreement with the United Nations on previous agreements in order to help the Australians in their time of need, then that’s what we should do.”

    Joyce said his deal with Morrison to endorse a net-zero 2050 target never included any agreement on a target for 2030.

    “In my discussions with Scott Morrison, I was quite explicit that we didn’t agree to a 2030 target,” Joyce said, arguing it was irrelevant whether the Liberals had accepted that position or not.

    “If you say ‘I’m not going to marry you’, it doesn’t matter whether they accept it or not.”

    Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull said withdrawing from the Paris agreement would “definitely be a negative” for investment in Australian renewable energy.

    “The curious thing from an electoral point of view is why Dutton is doing it because nuclear power is not going to deliver cheaper electricity - that’s perfectly clear - and it’s not going to deliver electricity any time soon,” Turnbull told ABC TV.

    “It will take decades to establish nuclear power plants and we don’t have an abundance of time. And so it seems to me and to many other people in the Liberal party that it’s an approach that’s going to further alienate the very people whose votes were lost in 2022.

    “And they don’t see - I don’t see - how it’s going to assist Peter Dutton in winning government. It will probably just ensure he doesn’t win any teal seats back and perhaps loses more.”

    Independent senator David Pocock condemned the Coalition for considering watering down the targets.

    “That would be an extraordinary act of vandalism against the people and places we love and we should be pushing both sides of politics and particularly the government to ramp up their ambition,” Pocock told ABC television.
    Last edited by S Landreth; 17-06-2024 at 02:22 PM.
    Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

  2. #277
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Coalition to impose ‘cap’ on renewable energy investment, Nationals leader says

    David Littleproud has claimed Australia doesn’t need “large-scale industrial windfarms” like the planned offshore zone south of Sydney, adding the Coalition will “cap” federal government investment into renewable energy if elected.

    The Nationals leader visited Wollongong on Monday, where he promised the opposition would instead offer a “calm” and “methodical” energy pathway to net zero by 2050.

    Littleproud offered no details of the Coalition energy plan, only conceding “it will take a little longer to get there”.

    The Albanese government on Saturday gave the green light to a 1,022 sq km area, 20-km off the Illawarra coast, in the next stage to become the country’s fourth dedicated windfarm zone.

    While the development over the weekend was welcomed by a number of groups, some in the community have continued to oppose offshore windfarms due to potential environmental, economic and social impacts.

    The Coalition is yet to detail its full energy plan, which will include a mix of nuclear, coal, gas and renewables. Littleproud said a Coalition government would result in “no windfarm” for the Illawarra.

    “We want to send the investment signals that there is a cap on where [the Coalition] will go with renewables and where we will put them,” he said.

    “The Coalition isn’t against renewables, but renewables should be in an environment they can’t destroy. Why don’t we give priority to where they can make a difference and give energy independence to businesses and households, which is on rooftops where the concentration of power and population is?”

    Asked why the Nationals supported an offshore windfarm in Victoria’s Gippsland, but not in the Illawarra, Littleproud said: “They are fixed in Gippsland, this is floating.”

    He said, unlike the Illawarra zone, few people lived near the Gippsland site, “and the transmission lines that are required aren’t as necessary”.

    Earlier on Monday , Littleproud told ABC radio the Coalition’s energy policy will show investors Australia doesn’t need “large-scale industrial windfarms, whether they be offshore or onshore”.

    “From what you’ll see in our energy mix, we won’t need large-scale industrial renewable projects. So that’s in essence where we’ll get to and be very clear and upfront and we are committed to that pathway. But it won’t be a linear pathway that you’re experiencing at the moment,” he said.

    “It’d be one that’ll invest in the technology that’s zero emissions and it will take a little longer to get there.”

    Guardian Australia has contacted the shadow energy minister, Ted O’Brien, and the member for Gippsland, Darren Chester, for comment.

    The federal energy minister, Chris Bowen, defended the Illawarra’s windfarm announcement on Monday, saying three other areas around the country had also been marked as wind energy hubs.

    “It’s very energy-rich, it’s very windy off our coast, and it’s windy constantly,” he said.

    “Unlike onshore wind, which is windy some of the time and not some of the time, offshore wind is pretty much always windy. During the night, during the day, all the time.”

    The Clean Energy Council’s chief executive, Kane Thornton, said his group were certain Illawarra residents would prefer “wind turbines that are 20 kilometres offshore, as opposed to a nuclear reactor on their doorstep”.

    “It is disappointing that the Coalition has chosen to oppose sensible policy developments such as offshore wind and instead focus on stoking division in regional communities,” he said.

    “This will undermine investor confidence in infrastructure projects right across Australia.”

    In a statement to Guardian Australia, Littleproud clarified the Nationals are not against renewables but preferred “common sense and sensible options”, such as solar on rooftops.

    “While the Gippsland project is smaller in size, the offshore wind farm in the Illawarra will still be 1,022 square kilometres and just 20 kilometres from the coast.”

    Peter Dutton, the opposition leader, has said the Coalition is looking at six or seven nuclear power sites around the country but their locations will only be revealed “at a time of our choosing”.

    Dutton has also backed away from Labor’s legislated 43% emissions reduction target by 2030 as part of Australia’s commitments to the 2050 net zero agreement, warning it would “harm Australian families and businesses in the interim”.

    ___________

    Peter Dutton’s plans will breach the Paris agreement on climate – that much is clear

    The Coalition’s rejection of a 43% cut in emissions by 2030 will have major ramifications for us and the world

    Peter Dutton plans to breach the text and spirit of the landmark Paris climate agreement, backed in 2015 by a Coalition government along with the leaders of more than 190 other countries.

    This should be clear to anyone who clicks on this link and reads the deal reached in the French capital.

    Dutton did not say in an interview with News Corp published on Saturday that he would formally pull out of the agreement if the Coalition won the next election. But he did confirm a position that would put Australia at odds with what it sets out to do.

    Since this was pointed out by people with decades of experience at highly technical climate negotiations, the Coalition has responded with a mix of half-truths and falsehoods.

    Both Dutton and Ted O’Brien, the opposition climate change and energy spokesperson, say a Coalition government would be committed to the agreement but reject the national 2030 emissions target – that is, a minimum 43% cut below what emissions were in 2005.

    A bit on the target: Labor took it to the 2022 election after asking the consultants RepuTex to calculate what its policies would deliver. It was legislated with the support of the Greens and independent MPs after they made an evidence-based argument that Australia should be doing more. It was also submitted to the UN as a pledge.

    Here’s what the Paris agreement says about these pledges, known in UN lingo as “nationally determined contributions”: that countries will build on them over time. Article 4.3 of the agreement says each commitment a country makes will be a progression – an improvement – and “reflect its highest possible ambition”. Article 4.11 says a country can adjust its commitment “with a view to enhancing its level of ambition”.

    It means countries can increase commitments at any time they like, but there should not be backsliding.

    The climate crisis is already fuelling heatwaves, extreme weather and potentially extraordinary and catastrophic changes in natural systems. In Paris governments accepted the scientific and economic evidence that the threat and cost of climate change to lives, livelihoods and the natural world was escalating. They agreed they needed to ramp up action, not put it off.

    Dutton and O’Brien seem to ignore this part of the Paris agreement, and instead argue the Coalition is committed to the deal because it would stick to a target of net zero emissions by 2050.

    This is misleading. In addition to including net zero – expressed as aiming for a global balance in the second half of the century between the greenhouse gases pumped into the atmosphere and the CO2 we draw out of it – the agreement emphasises the need to act rapidly, with new national pledges every five years. It says countries will aim to hold the increase in average temperatures since preindustrial levels to well below 2C and try to limit it to 1.5C – a level that we have already nearly reached.

    Promising to do less now, having few if any policies to reduce emissions before 2040 and planning for Australia to in the meantime pump hundreds of millions of additional tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere would be the opposite of being committed to this goal.

    The Coalition should be clear with the public about what it is proposing, and news media should be clear with audiences about the potential ramifications.

    Australia will face no direct penalties under the UN process if it goes down Dutton’s path – or, for that matter, if Labor stays in power but misses its target. National pledges under the Paris agreement are not binding in this way.

    But John Connor, who helped Fiji run the UN climate negotiations between 2017 and 2019 and now leads the Australian Carbon Market Institute, says the Coalition’s plan to weaken a commitment under the Paris deal would be historic. No other country has done it.

    Experts say the ramifications could include Australia being diplomatically isolated – a return to the days of the Morrison government, when it was grouped with laggards such as Russia and Saudi Arabia on climate. It would, by design, hurt the country’s ability to attract the hundreds of billions of dollars in private investment needed to replace fossil fuels and build new, clean industries.

  3. #278
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    New wind farm in North Queensland to power 240,000 homes

    The Albanese Government has approved another new wind farm in Queensland which will generate enough energy to power 240,000 Queensland homes.

    The 400 megawatt Gawara Baya Wind Farm is located 65km southwest of Ingham, Queensland and includes the installation of 69 wind turbines.

    This is another big step in the Government’s plan to make Australia a renewable energy superpower.

    The project is expected to increase wind generation in the National Electricity Market by 5.2 per cent, and overall renewable generation by 1.8 per cent.

    Australians saw how a decade of political fights stopped action on climate change.

    Under the Liberals and Nationals, 24 coal fired power plants with a total capacity of 26.7 GW announced their closure dates, but the previous government failed to deliver any policy to ensure replacement energy capacity.

    At the last election, Australians voted for progress on renewables. That’s exactly what Labor is delivering.

    The project will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by up to 1.2 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent per year, which is equivalent to taking around 375,000 cars off the road each year.

    We know projects like this are vital to boosting renewables capacity and putting downward pressure on prices, but they are also great for local jobs and economies. This project will support up to 300 direct jobs in construction and up to 20 operational ongoing jobs.

    The approval of the wind farm is subject to strict conditions to protect the Sharman’s Rock-Wallaby and northern Greater Glider, and follows a rigorous assessment process.

    The conditions include clearance limits, hours of operation during construction, and submission of environmental management plans which will set out how any impacts will be managed, mitigated, avoided or offset.

    Quotes attributable to Minister for the Environment and Water, the Hon Tanya Plibersek MP:

    “The Coalition has spent a decade trying to kill off renewables and our transition to net zero. Australians voted for an end to that and we are delivering. Labor is transforming Australia into a renewable energy superpower while Peter Dutton wants to send us back decades.

    “I’ve ticked off a record 54 renewable energy projects - more than the Abbott and Turnbull Governments combined and enough to power more than three million Australian homes.

    “While Peter Dutton and the Coalition are watering down our climate targets, Labor is getting on with the job of the renewable energy transition.

    “Not only are we delivering cheaper cleaner power sooner, but we are on track to reaching our 2030 emissions target. It’s achievable, and we’re doing it.”

    https://minister.dcceew.gov.au/plibe...r-240000-homes

    _____________

    Dutton’s surprise climate policy proves he ‘can’t be taken seriously’, Albanese says

    Anthony Albanese says Peter Dutton has forfeited his claim to the prime ministership because refusing to name a short-term emissions reduction target shows he is not serious about addressing climate change.

    Some Liberal MPs were taken by surprise when Dutton confirmed the opposition would not name a 2030 climate target until after the next election. Moderate Liberals have sought to downplay the significance of the announcement, stressing the party remains committed to net zero by 2050 amid concerns it may hurt the Coalition in seats held by, or under threat from, climate-focused “teal” independents.

    In a podcast interview with Guardian Australia, Albanese said Dutton’s refusal to commit the Coalition to any 2030 emissions reduction target before the next election proved he was not serious about governing.

    “It is just not a serious policy and if you don’t have a serious policy on energy and climate then you can’t be taken seriously as the alternative prime minister of Australia,” Albanese said.

    “The point of having a target was to have ambition and try to meet it.”

    He claimed Dutton “leads a divided party and he’s a divisive leader”.

    The latest Coalition discussion on energy and climate goals has again exposed a schism between rural or regional Nationals and Liberals, and more moderate city-dwelling Liberal colleagues. Bridget Archer, often outspoken against her party’s own decisions, called the scrapping of targets a “regressive” step that should be put to voters before the election.

    The shadow assistant minister for housing, Andrew Bragg, told Sky News it was not “a particularly new policy”, saying the Coalition had foreshadowed the plan for some time, and stressed a commitment to the Paris agreement. Menzies MP Keith Wolahan told the ABC the opposition was seeking to be “transparent” with the public about the difficulty of the energy transition.

    The Paris agreement, aimed at limiting the global temperature rise to 1.5C, requires its almost 200 signatory nations to set targets and strive to meet them. While falling short of the targets does not automatically force a country out, backsliding by lowering the target is not permitted.

    It’s understood the weekend newspaper headlines confirming Dutton would scrap Labor’s 2030 target took some by surprise, and that the issue hadn’t been discussed in the wider Liberal party room – although Dutton said on Wednesday the stance had gone through shadow cabinet.

    Shadow ministers Ted O’Brien and David Coleman appeared on weekend TV to say Australia remained committed to Paris, but Dutton did not appear publicly until Tuesday, when he said his party would not confirm a 2030 target unless it won government.

    Other Coalition members noted the Coalition opposition in Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland had backed or not opposed the 2030 targets set by the Labor governments in those states.

    Several Liberal members said they could understand Dutton’s reticence to name a 2030 target, noting the potential for the Coalition to be exposed to the same kind of scepticism they are currently mounting against Labor, but said it created a “difficult” situation – especially in urban seats.

    The situation is a “gift” to teal MPs and potential challengers, several Liberals admitted, while others maintained the next election would hinge on cost of living and energy prices rather than global climate targets.

    Climate 200, the fundraising vehicle that supported numerous independent challenges in 2022, is running a donation drive on the back of the Liberal policy, emailing supporters to seek funds to “stop Dutton derailing global climate progress.”

    “Every seat we can add to the pro-climate crossbench is another line of defence for the Paris agreement,” Climate 200 executive director Byron Fay wrote.

    Independent MPs including Allegra Spender, Zoe Daniel, Monique Ryan and Sophie Scamps have all publicly slammed Dutton’s announcement; Spender will hold a public event next week in her electorate to discuss “Dutton’s climate disaster”.

    Speaking to Guardian Australia, Albanese dismissed Dutton’s plan to introduce nuclear power as scaremongering.

    “It’s not really an attempt at an alternative policy,” he said. “It’s just an attempt to create fear.”

    But the prime minister acknowledged sections of the community were also anxious about the transition to renewable energy. The government’s target of a 43% cut on 2005-level emissions by 2030 involves drawing 82% of energy from renewables by the same deadline.

    “We certainly need to make sure that the community comes with us on the journey on climate change.”

    Albanese suggested that in shunning interim targets while claiming to still be committed to the Paris climate agreement — which requires interim targets — Dutton was only trying to unify the Coalition, not solve the climate crisis.

    “This requires a whole of government approach but a whole of society approach as well, which is why the business community had been so strong in saying they want that investment certainty,” he said. “And Peter Dutton’s plan is to rip all of that up, start again, go back to the climate wars that were really a civil war within the Liberal and National parties.”

  4. #279
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Chris Bowen labels Coalition’s nuclear plan a ‘risky scam’ as premiers affirm state bans

    Chris Bowen has labelled the Coalition’s nuclear plan a “risky scam”, citing the fact owners of six of the seven proposed sites for power plants won’t sell and five are located in states with their own bans on nuclear power.

    In a move that frustrated some on his backbench on Wednesday, Peter Dutton revealed the sites but without providing costings for the proposed government-owned nuclear power plants, nor an estimate of the amount of electricity to be added to the system and or justification for the ambitious 2035-37 timeframe for the first two plants.

    Although the Coalition has said it proposes to build the plants – at Tarong and Callide in Queensland, Mount Piper and Liddell in New South Wales, Collie in Western Australia, Loy Yang in Victoria, and one near Port Augusta in South Australia – it has not committed to doing so.

    The deputy Nationals leader, Perin Davey, revealed that if local communities were “absolutely adamant” they didn’t want them then the Coalition “will not proceed” and will not search for alternative sites.

    The Nationals leader, David Littleproud, later refuted Davey’s comments, saying he and Dutton would be “prepared to make the tough decisions in the national interest”.

    The independent MP Andrew Gee, whose electorate of Calare includes Mount Piper, said that “even supporters of nuclear power have questions about this announcement”, including cost and whether the current owners had been consulted.

    So far Coalition MPs whose electorates will host the power plants, including Littleproud, and MPs Colin Boyce and Darren Chester, have backed the plan.

    But other MPs felt the snap Coalition party room on Wednesday morning wasn’t a genuine consultation, with key details missing from the proposal. Those MPs have muted their criticism only because it is pointless to criticise a policy that will likely never come to fruition.

    ___________

    HereÂ’s what we know about the CoalitionÂ’s seven planned nuclear power sites

    The Coalition has announced their nuclear power policy, revealing the seven sites where power plants could be rolled out.

    But details around how the sites would work remain murky, especially when it comes to dealing with the existing owners, accessible water, cost, waste and legality.

    Guardian Australia understands that the Coalition has not consulted the communities or the site owners about their proposal.

    The Coalition has also offered no further information to the MPs who represent the sites and who will have to face these questions in the coming election.

    Here’s what we know so far about the sites – and the potential issues facing them.

    Just one example from the link above.

    New South Wales

    Liddell

    Where is it? North-west of Newcastle in the federal electorate of Hunter. Labor MP Dan Repacholi holds the seat with a slim margin.

    Who owns it? AGL, which shuttered the power station in 2023.

    Issues with the site: AGL does not wish to sell the site. Work has already started to turn the site into a $750m battery.

    Mount Piper power station

    Where is it: About 25km from the Central West town of Lithgow. It sits in the electorate of Calare, which is held by former Nationals turned independent MP Andrew Gee.

    Who owns it: Energy Australia.

    Issues with the site: Energy Australia intends on keeping the power plant operating until at least 2040, but has already put in place plans to start transitioning, with potential for the site to play a “reserve” role in the power grid. The company plans to use the site as a “firming” power source for renewables, as part of its own shift to renewables, mostly in wind.

    Is the state government in favour? No. The Labor state premier, Chris Minns, has said his government would not overturn the state’s nuclear ban.

    _________

    ‘No credible reason’ to expect cheaper power bills under Peter Dutton’s nuclear energy plan, experts say

    Peter Dutton’s claim that nuclear energy would lead to cheaper power bills has been rejected by energy experts, with one saying there was “no credible reason” to think adding “the most expensive form of bulk electricity” would cut prices.

  5. #280
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Senate opposition firms against Coalition’s nuclear power plan as David Pocock blasts ‘reckless’ proposal

    Senate opposition to the Coalition’s nuclear plan is firming, presenting a major hurdle to Peter Dutton’s proposal for seven nuclear power plants on top of state objections.

    In addition to Labor and the Greens, independent senators Lidia Thorpe and David Pocock have voiced major criticisms of the policy, while Jacqui Lambie, who has previously expressed support for nuclear to be part of the mix, is investigating the Coalition’s proposal and is concerned nuclear plants are “incredibly expensive”.

    Anthony Albanese has accused the Coalition of hampering power price reductions in the short term by pursuing a nuclear power “fantasy” and “disrupting certainty” of investment in renewable energy.

    On Thursday the prime minister muscled up against Peter Dutton’s proposal to build seven nuclear power plants, arguing it had not survived one day of scrutiny and accusing the Coalition of pursuing the “destination of denial” instead of more practical steps to reduce emissions and prices.

    “Now they’ve moved away from coal but they’ve found another destination of denial,” he said.

    “There will be issues of more energy insecurity, because we know it is disrupting the certainty that the business community have been crying out for.

    “That’s how you reduce prices – by increasing supply.”

    Even if elected, Dutton would need the support of the Senate to overturn the federal ban.

    Thorpe, whose term expires in 2028, said: “My people have known for thousands of years that uranium is poison and needs to stay in the ground. Nuclear doesn’t make sense economically, technologically or environmentally.”

    “We should stick to what works: renewables.”

    __________

    Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan pushes back on Opposition Leader Peter Dutton's nuclear power plan

    Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan has told federal Opposition Leader Peter Dutton she will not be negotiating on a nuclear power plant in the state.

    Her refusal came as welcome news for residents in Traralgon in the Gippsland region who staged a snap rally outside federal MP Darren Chester's office vowing to fight the plan.

    "We just don't need it, there's enough renewable energy," one resident said.

    Their representative in state parliament is undecided and says he wants to educate himself.

    "It's a hard one to actually say," Morwell MP Martin Cameron said when asked about his stance.

    "It's nothing to be scared about, I don't think."

    Labor is challenging the state coalition to stop the plan.

    "Nuclear energy, it's toxic, it's risky," Allan said.

    Opposition Leader John Pesutto said he will wait to see where the conversation goes.

    "We have no plans for it, but we acknowledge the a future government may initiate that discussion, I don't think we should be foreclosing that discussion," Pesutto said.

    Labour Minister Danny Pearson said Pesutto "has 24 hours to show some spine".

    The biggest hurdle to Dutton's plan in the state is a ban on nuclear written into legislation.

    It would either have to be repealed by a like-minded state government or it would need to be challenged through the courts.

    __________

    Nuclear engineer dismisses Peter Dutton’s claim that small modular reactors could be commercially viable soon

    Australia would need “many decades” to develop the regulations and skills to operate a nuclear power plant, and the experience gained at the existing Lucas Heights facility won’t help much, according to New South Wales’ chief scientist and engineer.

    Hugh Durrant-Whyte said he stood by comments made to a 2019 NSW upper house inquiry into uranium mining and nuclear facilities that running a plant and its fuel supply chain would require skills “built up over many decades”.

    Stressing he spoke in the capacity of a trained nuclear engineer rather than as the state’s chief scientist, Durrant-Whyte said the industry demanded regulations and monitoring for all stages of fuel handling, power generation and waste management.

    He told Guardian Australia that 2040 or even 2045 was the “realistic” timeframe.

    “We would need people who were trained [on] how to measure radioactivity, how to measure containment vessel strengths, how to [manage] everything we do.”

    Snip

    “It’s not like we haven’t had this [nuclear] conversation many times over the last 20 years in Australia,” Durrant-Whyte said. “[I]t would be expensive, and likely more expensive than anything else you could possibly think of.”

  6. #281
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Over my dead body.

    Mr Dutton said Australians would be “pleasantly surprised” when the costings are eventually revealed.

    “It’s a lot of money, there’s no question about that, but this is an investment,” he told Nine’s Today program.

    But a survey from the Australia Institute showed 65 per cent of Australians were not prepared to pay any more to have nuclear power in the nation’s energy mix, regardless of their voting intentions.

    “The numbers are clear: residents across the country, regardless of who they vote for, don’t support a nuclear future that requires them to pay more for electricity than they already do,” the institute’s executive director Richard Denniss said.

    First Nations elders also harbour concerns about the reactors and have vowed to fight the opposition’s plans.

    One of the sites earmarked for a nuclear plant, Tarong in Queensland, is located on Indigenous elder Aunty Jannine Smith’s country.

    “Over my dead body. I will be in a tent outside Tarong gates,” she told AAP.

    “It’s a death sentence to that land.”

    Ms Smith said building a nuclear plant on that land would be “severing the connection to that sacred site of ours”.

    “We are the custodians of the land, the land is our mother and we don’t own our mother, we care for her,” she said.

    Queensland Conservation Council’s Paul Spearim said “white Australia has a short-sighted approach to country”.

    He pointed to Maralinga and Emu Field in South Australia where the British held nuclear tests that exposed more than 1000 Indigenous people to radiation.

    “We have learnt that white Australia cannot be trusted with nuclear power, and you continue to act without care for our sacred country,” Mr Spearim said.

    ___________

    The First Nations Fight Against Nuclear

    The Decades-Long First Nations Fight Against Nuclear

    In arguably the least-anticipated drop of 2024, the Coalition has revealed its plan to turn Australia nuclear. For Peter “I need details about the Voice” Dutton, the proposal to build seven nuclear power plants by 2050 is overwhelmingly devoid of detail.

    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has already derided the plan as a “fantasy”, citing a lack of a cost plan, community consultation, details on types of reactors or the proportion of nuclear energy in the system.

    But beyond the details there’s a missing piece in the ongoing critique of Dutton’s nuclear plan: that First Nations people have been fighting nuclear for decades.

    From nuclear weapons testing to uranium mining and nuclear waste dumps; any discussion involving nuclear in Australia requires reflection on the disproportionate impact any nuclear initiative would have on First Nations people and Country.

    Much more in the link above

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    Peter Dutton’s nuclear plan could cost as much as $600bn and supply just 3.7% of Australia’s energy by 2050, experts say

    The Coalition’s pledge to build seven nuclear reactors as part of its controversial energy plan could cost taxpayers as much as $600bn while supplying just 3.7% of Australia’s energy mix by 2050, according to the Smart Energy Council.

    The analysis found the plan would cost a minimum of $116bn – the same cost as delivering the Albanese government’s plan for 82% renewables by 2030, and an almost 100% renewable energy mix by 2050.

    The Coalition has drawn widespread criticism for not releasing the costings of the nuclear power proposal it unveiled on Wednesday as part of its plan for Australia’s energy future if elected. On Friday, the opposition leader, Peter Dutton, said the costings would come “very soon”, but did not confirm whether it would be days, weeks or months.

    The Smart Energy Council came to the $116bn figure using data from the CSIRO and the Australian Energy Market Operator’s latest GenCost report. It factored in the Coalition’s proposed timeframe and the capital costs of replacing the 11 gigawatts of coal capacity produced on the seven sites with nuclear reactors.

    But factoring in the experience of cost and timeframe blowouts in the UK, the refurbishment of coal-fired power stations, and Dutton’s plan to compensate the states, the Smart Energy Council found the cost could reach as much as $600bn.

    The council found the large nuclear reactors – of which there will be five alongside two smaller reactors – would likely cost $60bn each and were unlikely to be built by 2040. Dutton has said that they plan for the reactors to be built and operational by the second half of the 2030s.

    “At best, Peter Dutton’s nuclear proposal would deliver 3.7% of the energy required at the same cost as the government’s comprehensive strategy,” John Grimes, the chief executive of the Smart Energy Council, said.

    “In reality, current cost overruns happening right now in the UK could mean a $600bn bill to Australian taxpayers, whilst delivering a small proportion of the energy that is actually required.

    “The most optimistic assessment of Peter Dutton’s nuclear proposal indicates it is a pale shadow of the reliable renewables plan outlined and costed by the Australian Energy Market Operator (Aemo).”


    The Smart Energy Council called on the opposition to immediately release its costings and the generation capacity of the proposed seven nuclear reactors.

    _________

    Peter Dutton vows to override state nuclear bans as he steps up attack on PM

    Peter Dutton has vowed a Coalition government would override the states’ legislated ban on nuclear power, telling party officials on Saturday that state premiers “won’t stop us”.

    The opposition leader made the comments in an address to the federal Liberal party council in Sydney, where he escalated his attacks on Anthony Albanese. He called the prime minister a “fraud” and a “child in a man’s body” that is “still captured in his university years”.

    On Wednesday, the Coalition unveiled its controversial nuclear energy plan in the event it wins government, including seven proposed sites for nuclear reactors across five states. The nuclear pledge drew unanimous blowback from state premiers.

    In question time this week, the New South Wales premier, Chris Minns, said he wanted to “make it clear” that his government would not be repealing the ban on nuclear energy in the state. The premiers of Victoria and Queensland said the same.

    In responding to the criticism, Dutton said he would work “respectfully and collaboratively” with state premiers, “but I don’t answer to them”.

    “The decisions I make will be in our national interest to the benefit of the Australian people,” he said on Saturday.

    “Commonwealth laws override state laws even to the level of the inconsistency. So support or opposition at a state level won’t stop us rolling out our new energy system,” he said to a round of applause erupting from the room.

    Some state opposition leaders have also opposed the Coalition’s nuclear pledge, with Victoria’s opposition leader, John Pesutto, saying his party had “no plans for nuclear” and Queensland’s opposition leader, David Crisafulli, also saying it was not part of the party’s plan and would remain that way.

    In his address, Dutton said Crisafulli had taken “a perfectly understandable position on nuclear power” and was “getting a hard time from the worst premier in Australia, Steven Miles”.

    Dutton said Australians would decide their energy future, saying the “the next election will not only define the next political term, it will define the future and fate of this nation”.

    During his speech, Dutton slammed Albanese as being out of “his depth”, later adding “visionary Labor leaders – like the late, great Bob Hawke – knew that zero emissions nuclear energy was a good thing”.

    “But Labor’s current crop of leaders have been reduced to posting juvenile social media memes of three-eyed fish and koalas.

    “Frankly, their behaviour is an affront to the intelligence of the voters whom they seek to represent,” he said.

    He then diverged from his scripted remarks to say “our prime minister is a man with his mind still captured in his university years, he’s as a child in a man’s body”.

    “[Albanese’s] more interested in appeasing the international climate lobby than sticking up for the interests of everyday Australians,” he said.

    Dutton said people between the ages of 18 and 34 were “looking at a Liberal party for the first time [that] is offering environmental policy which is superior to that which the Labor and the Greens party will offer at the next election”.

    “They’re comfortable with [nuclear energy] because they’re well read, because they understand modern technology and they have a passion for reducing emissions,” Dutton said.

    Prof Anne Twomey, a constitutional law expert at the University of Sydney, said the commonwealth can override state laws, but there were a number of hurdles the government would face.

    The first would be enacting legislation that overrides any inconsistent state laws and passing that through the Senate, while ensuring government decision-making processes around the laws were done fairly.

    “If you get through both of those, then … so long as the commonwealth enacts laws that are valid, that are supported by the Constitution, then those laws will override state laws that are inconsistent.”

    Victoria’s premier, Jacinta Allan, said in a statement after Dutton’s remarks: “There is no plan that sits behind Peter Dutton and his Liberal National colleagues’ announcement to bring a nuclear power plant to Victoria – and no
    detail about how much it would cost, how long it would take, where the waste would go, the impact on water supply and the water security for the Gippsland community.

    _______

    Coalition won’t reveal 2030 emissions target unless it wins election, Peter Dutton says | Australian politics

    Confused Coalition stance on 2030 emissions target risks ‘chasing away’ investment, Albanese says

    Prime minister says there will be ‘regrettable’ consequences for global relationships after Liberal leader won’t commit to 2030 target

    The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, has accused Peter Dutton of being “afraid of the future” and risking “chasing away” investment in clean energy in Australia, after the opposition leader confirmed the Coalition will not set a 2030 emissions reduction target unless it wins the next election.

    Albanese called Dutton’s stance “absurd”, highlighting confused messages from the Coalition about its climate policy, and saying any backtrack on Australia’s emissions reductions commitments would be “walking away from the Paris agreement”.

    After foreshadowing on Saturday that the Coalition could walk away from the Paris agreement and scrap Labor’s legislated target to cut emissions by 43% by 2030, Dutton said the Coalition remained committed to net zero by 2050, but would not reveal its interim targets in opposition.

    “We need to make sure that we don’t harm Australian families and businesses in the interim and that is what Labor is doing,” Dutton said on Tuesday.

    “And in terms of the targets otherwise, we’ll make those decisions when we are in government.”

    The Liberal leader told 2GB later on Tuesday: “It’s very hard in opposition – without all the modelling and the advice from government – to put an exact figure on the table.”

    The Coalition has delayed releasing its own energy policy, despite raising nuclear as a solution. Albanese on Tuesday afternoon called the repeatedly delayed nuclear announcement a “fantasy”, claiming it would lead to higher energy prices and emissions.

    “We know that the consequences of that for our relationships in our region and around the world with our closest allies will be ones that are regrettable, to say the least,” Albanese told a press conference in Canberra.

    “Instead of chasing investment in new industries with new opportunities in new jobs, he is chasing them away. No action until 2040 means energy shortfalls. It is something that Australia should not pursue.”

    Albanese claimed “there hasn’t been any proper process to determine the Coalition’s policy”, noting that Liberal senator Andrew Bragg had said moments after Dutton’s press conference that he believed the Coalition would set its own 2030 target before the election.

    Dutton told the Weekend Australian he would oppose the legislated 2030 target – a 43% cut compared with 2005 levels – at the next election, declaring there was “no sense in [at]signing up to targets you don’t have any prospect of achieving”.

    Government department projections last year suggested Australia was on track for a 42% reduction in emissions by 2030. The government said it showed the 43% target was within reach. Albanese said on Tuesday they were “very much on track” to meet the target.

    On Tuesday, Dutton doubled down, claiming Labor’s targets would “trash” the economy.

    “I think it’s very clear that we have absolute commitment to Paris and our commitment for net zero by 2050,” he said.

    “It’s important it doesn’t need to be linear, as we’ve pointed out, and we’re not going to send the economy into freefall and families bankrupt through an ideologically based approach, which is what Anthony Albanese is doing at the moment.”

  8. #283
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Farmers who graze sheep under solar panels say it improves productivity. So why don’t we do it more?

    As a flock of about 2,000 sheep graze between rows of solar panels, grazier Tony Inder wonders what all the fuss is about. “I’m not going to suggest it’s everyone’s cup of tea,” he says. “But as far as sheep grazing goes, solar is really good.”

    Inder is talking about concerns over the encroachment of prime agricultural land by ever-expanding solar and windfarms, a well-trodden talking point for the loudest opponents to Australia’s energy transition.

    But on Inder’s New South Wales property, a solar farm has increased wool production. It is a symbiotic relationship that the director of the National Renewables in Agriculture Conference, Karin Stark, wants to see replicated across as many solar farms as possible as Australia’s energy grid transitions away from fossil fuels.

    “It’s all about farm diversification,” Stark says. “At the moment a lot of us farmers are reliant on when it’s going to rain, having solar and wind provides this secondary income.”

    By keeping the grass trimmed, which can otherwise pose a fire risk during dry summer months, sheep save the developer the cost of slashing it themselves.

    In exchange, the panels provide shelter for the sheep, encourage healthier pasture growth under the shade of the panels and create “drip lines” from condensation rolling off the face of the panels.

    “We had strips of green grass right through the drought,” Dubbo sheep grazier Tom Warren says. Warren has seen a 15% rise in wool production due to a solar farm installed on his property more than seven years ago.

    Despite these success stories, a 2023 Agrivoltaic Resource Centre report authored by Stark found that solar grazing is under utilised in Australia because developers, despite saying they intend to host livestock, make few planning adjustments to ensure that happens.

    “The result is that many solar farms are poorly suited for sheep,” Stark says. “Developers need to be talking to landholders earlier than they currently are.”

    Prof Bernadette McCabe, the director of the Centre for Agricultural Engineering at the University of Southern Queensland, says farming and solar are “two very different activities” and there’s “minimal research and demonstrated success” of running them in combination.

    The expectation to retain farming land for primary production is driving greater interest in the coexistence of agriculture and renewable energy but McCabe says “misaligned incentives” between the developers and farmers must be better managed.

    It’s these conflicting goals that are giving anti-renewable voices “fodder to attack the renewable energy industry”, according to former New South Wales solar developer Ben Wynn.

    He says energy developers often “talk up the possibility” of coexisting with livestock production but don’t have “genuine desire to do so”.

    Wynn is now part of a community group opposing a large solar farm proposed south of Tamworth because it lies on productive cropping country.

    “We need this transition to speed up, but if we take up highly arable black soils we are giving oxygen to the naysayers,” he says.

    Wynn also led the construction of a prototype solar farm outside Tamworth, raised high off the ground with steel posts to stay out of reach of a cattle herd below.

    “Cattle are massive, they will rub and scratch themselves up against anything,” Wynn says.

    The project was a success but Wynn says it is too expensive to be feasible on a large scale because the installation costs are three-to-four fold the cost of regular low-lying solar panels.

    The integration of sheep and solar is “highly feasible”, McCabe says, because they can graze under ordinary height panels. But she says it is “still early days” to know if it will become economically viable for cattle.

    Dr Nicholas Aberle, the energy generation and storage policy director at the Clean Energy Council, says solar developers should explore dual land use options but warns it be may not be suitable for every project. He adds that “the abundance of land in Australia means it isn’t always necessary”.

    According to an analysis by the Clean Energy Council, less than 0.027% of land used for agriculture production would be needed to power the east coast states with solar projects – far less than the one-third of all prime agricultural land that the rightwing thinktank the Institute of Public Affairs has claimed will be “taken over” by renewables”. That argument, which has been heavily refuted by experts, has been taken up by the National party, whose leader, David Littleproud, said regional Australia had reached saturation point with renewable energy developments.

    Queensland grazier and the chair of the Future Farmers Network, Caitlin McConnel, has sold electricity to the grid from a dozen custom-built solar arrays on her farm’s cattle pastures for more than a decade.

    “Trial and error” and years of modifications have made them structurally sound around cattle and financially viable in the long-term, she says.

    “As far as I know, we are the only farm to do solar with cattle,” McConnel says. “It’s good land, so why would we just lock it up just for solar panels?”

    _________

    Germany’s top climate envoy says ‘this is the critical decade’ after Dutton ditches 2030 target

    Germany’s climate envoy has dismissed claims the Paris agreement is only about reaching net zero emissions by 2050, warning that deep cuts by 2030 are “essential” and scientific evidence shows “this is the critical decade” to act on global heating.

    Australia’s opposition leader, Peter Dutton, has refused to commit to a 2030 emissions reduction target prior to the next national election, prompting claims from Labor, the Greens and independents that the Coalition isn’t serious about acting on the climate crisis.

    Dutton raised the prospect of watering down the target – a 43% cut compared with 2005 levels – that Australia has already enshrined in law and committed to under the Paris agreement.

    “Well, the Paris agreement is predominantly about net zero by 2050, and that’s what we’ve signed up to,” Dutton told 2GB radio on Tuesday, adding there was no need to cut emissions in a “linear way”.

    But the German government’s special envoy for climate action, Jennifer Morgan, stressed the need for all countries to have strong 2030 targets as part of international attempts to hold global heating to 1.5C above preindustrial levels.

    Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, is an important player in international climate negotiations and is working with Australia on a clean energy transition and the development of green hydrogen. Germany hosted talks in Bonn this week as part of international preparations for the Cop29 summit in November in Baku in Azerbaijan.

    While being careful to avoid wading directly into the Australian political debate, Morgan told Guardian Australia that “science-based 2030 targets are essential” to keep the 1.5C limit “intact”.

    “Therefore all countries agreed already in 2021 to strengthen their targets within their national climate plans for 2030,” Morgan said.

    “This is the critical decade.”

    The comments add to Morgan’s previous remarks, made during a visit to the Pacific late last year, that “all countries have to scale up their ambition for 2030” because the 1.5C goal is “a matter of life and death for many people here in this region”.

    Morgan, a former Greenpeace co-executive director, has been involved in international climate negotiations for many years. Since 2022, she has served as a state secretary at Germany’s Foreign Office with responsibility for climate action.

    The Paris agreement was adopted by more than 190 countries, including Australia’s then Coalition government, in 2015.

    The agreement aims to hold “the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2C above preindustrial levels” and pursue efforts “to limit the temperature increase to 1.5C above preindustrial levels”.

    Countries including Australia agreed that such action “would significantly reduce the risks and impacts of climate change”.

  9. #284
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    The Coalition says its nuclear plants will run for 100 years. What does the international experience tell us?

    The federal Coalition’s pledge to build nuclear reactors on seven sites in five states if elected has continued to raise questions this week.

    Ted O’Brien, the shadow energy minister, says the plants can operate for between 80 and 100 years, providing “cheaper, cleaner and consistent 24/7 electricity” compared with renewables.

    That claim comes despite the CSIRO’s Gencost report estimating each 1-gigawatt nuclear plant could take 15-20 years to build and cost $8.4bn. The first may be double that given the high start-up costs.

    But what does the state of the nuclear energy internationally tell us about the Coalition’s proposal?

    What is the state of the global nuclear industry?

    The world opened five nuclear reactors last year and shut the same number, trimming 1GW of capacity in the process, says Mycle Schneider, an independent analyst who coordinates the annual world nuclear industry status report.

    During the past two decades, it’s a similar story of 102 reactors opened and 104 shutting. As with most energy sources, China has been the biggest mover, adding 49 during that time and closing none. Despite that burst, nuclear provides only about 5% of China’s electricity.

    Last year, China added 1GW of nuclear energy but more than 200GW of solar alone. Solar passed nuclear for total power production in 2022 while wind overtook it a decade ago.

    “In industrial terms, nuclear power is irrelevant in the overall global market for electricity generating technology,” he says.

    As for small modular reactors, or SMRs,nobody has built one commercially. Not even billionaire Bill Gates, whose company has been trying for 18 years.

    The CSIRO report examined the “contentious issue” of SMRs, and noted that one of the main US projects, Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems, was cancelled last November. Even then, its estimated costs in 2o2o of $18,200/kiloWatt, or more than double that of large-scale plants at $8,655/kW (in 2023 dollars).

    Can these plants really run 80-100 years?

    Of the active 416 nuclear reactors, the mean age is about 32 years. Among the 29 reactors that have shut over the past five years, the average age was less than 43 years, Schneider says.

    There are 16 reactors that have been operating for 51 years or more. “There is zero experience of a 60-year-old operating reactor, zero. It never happened. Leave alone 80 years or beyond,” he says. (The world’s oldest, Switzerland’s Beznau, has clocked up 55 years with periods of outages.)

    CSIRO’s report looked at a 30- or 40-year life for a large nuclear plant as there was “little evidence presented that private financing would be comfortable” with risk for any longer.

    As plants age, maintenance costs should increase, as they have in France. That’s not the case in the US, though, with declining investment in the past decade even as the average reactor age has jumped from 32 to 42 years.

    “You have two options as to the outcome: either you hit an investment wall, so you have to have massive investments all over the place at the same time, or you get a very serious safety or security problem somewhere,” Schneider says.

    US plants have been running an “incredible” 90% of the time over the past decade. Compare that with France’s load factor in 2022 of just 52%, he says.

    “The best offshore wind farms in Scotland have a five-year average load factor of 54%.”

    __________

    'Duttonheimer': Qld protesters lash LNP's nuclear plan

    Protesters have rallied outside a major Liberal National Party office to slam the federal opposition's nuclear energy plan.

    More than 50 people gathered at Queensland's LNP headquarters in Brisbane on Monday as the fallout over Peter Dutton's controversial policy continues.

    Environmental groups and union members joined concerned citizens at the Albion office to lash the nuclear plan, dubbing the federal opposition leader "Duttonheimer".

    It marked one of the biggest protests since Mr Dutton pledged on June 19 to build seven nuclear plants across five states on the sites of coal-fired power stations if elected.

    Two of the proposed sites are located in the Sunshine State - at Callide in central Queensland and Tarong, northwest of Brisbane.

    Queensland Conservation Council's Paul Spearim said First Nations communities had not been consulted on the nuclear energy plan, sparking fears about its impact on the environment and people.

    "We had Maralinga," Mr Spearim said of the 1956 nuclear testing by Britain in South Australia.

    "I was proud and fortunate enough to meet a lot of old people that were affected by those blasts in Australia, and a lot of the following generations after these old people are still suffering from nuclear damage."

    Electrical Trades Union workers said voters are being blindly led with a policy not backed by experts or current state and federal legislation.

    "We have a longstanding vote in the national office that takes an anti-nuclear stance ... it's not good for workers, it's not good for communities or environment," union member Hayden van der Kruk told AAP.

    "It's just a smokescreen (to continue fossil fuels) and doesn't stack up economically."

    Stuart Traill, also from the union, called the opposition leader "Duttonheimer" and queried why nuclear was now suddenly a priority.

    "If they wanted nuclear power they could've done it when they were in power for 10 years," he told the group of protesters.

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    Miles Launches Townsville Renewable Energy Zone Pilot

    More Townsville households than ever before will soon be able to get back the energy they generate throughout the day, for use at night, bringing down energy bills and emissions.

    A Local Renewable Energy Zone (LREZ) will be established in Townsville, to help the community generate more renewable energy, store it and share it locally across the electricity infrastructure that already exists.

    Working hand-in-hand with Energy Queensland's local network-connected batteries, LREZs will allow the benefits of renewable energy to be shared amongst all customers, especially those who haven't been able to invest in solar power, for one reason or another.

    That includes renters, vulnerable customers and those who live in unit complexes.

    The LREZ will work by allowing households with rooftop solar to transfer the energy they generate during the day into local batteries, to be transferred back to additional households during the night time, when the sun isn't shining, but energy usage is at its peak.

    That means households that have not previously had access to cheaper electricity generated through rooftop solar will now be able to access the benefits.

    The Miles Government will fund $40 million for the Townsville LREZ pilot project which will see the deployment of up to 8.4MW/18.8MWh of battery storage and support up to an additional 2.8MW of solar PV, and 0.9MW of demand management.

    The benefits will be shared across residential and commercial customer sites in Townsville, starting from January 2025.

    This is one of two LREZ projects funded in the Miles Government State Budget, following the announcement of the Caloundra LREZ last week.

    The Government funding includes $3 million to optimise the size of behind the meter customer assets such as solar PV, batteries, home energy management systems and dynamic connections for the Townsville LREZ pilot project.

    Energy Queensland has also received the go-ahead for another 18 local network-connected batteries which will play a major role in the transition to help deliver clean, reliable and affordable energy for future generations.

    The Miles Government committed $240 million in the Budget to build the 18 new local network-connected batteries across the state.

    __________

    Climate 200 names nine new Coalition seats where it hopes to replicate teal wave at next election

    Climate 200, the fundraising giant that bankrolled the teal independent wave at the last election, has thrown its support behind independent campaigns in nine more Coalition-held seats.

    After months of speculation, the group said it would support independent campaigns in the Queensland electorates of McPherson, Moncrief, Fisher and Fairfax as well as the New South Wales electorates Cowper and Bradfield, and Casey, Monash and Wannon in Victoria.

    Each of the selected campaigns met Climate 200’s initial criteria for support, which includes support for climate action and restoring integrity in politics. The candidates will receive grants of up to $50,000 to help them further their campaigns.

    Despite speculation a community independent campaign would target Peter Dutton’s electorate of Dickson, it was not among the initial rounds of funding announced by Climate 200. But the group is still considering applications and is expected to make more announcements soon.

    At the last election the independent candidate Nicolette Boele helped turn Paul Fletcher’s seat of Bradfield into a marginal electorate.

    It’s seen as a strong chance for the independent movement at the coming election, especially after a draft redistribution moved North Sydney voters, who went independent in 2022, into Bradfield’s boundaries. While Boele has been campaigning in the seat, it is understood that the North Sydney independent MP, Kylea Tink, is considering her options. The Australian Electoral Commission has recommended that her electorate be abolished.

    The Gold Coast seat of McPherson, where the sitting Liberal MP Karen Andrews has announced her retirement, is also considered ripe for an independent campaign. Community groups in the Sunshine Coast seats of Fisher and Fairfax, where local Liberal members are vocal supporters of the Coalition’s nuclear gambit, are also considered winnable. The long-term Monash MP, Russell Broadbent, quit the Liberal party after losing pre-selection for the coming election.

    Climate 200’s executive director, Byron Fay, said the group had raised more than $1m in the last two months, from more than 1,300 donors in 146 electorates who contributed to its community accelerator fund, which aims to support new grassroots independent campaigns.

    The group aims to support 30 campaigns at the coming election, including the 11 independents it backed at the last election.

    “There is no doubt Peter Dutton’s re-ignition of the climate wars has re-energised support for community independents.” Fay said. “Last weekend, we saw a 20-fold bump in donations and the pace hasn’t let up.”

    Fay and Climate 200’s founder, Simon Holmes à Court, have been travelling across the country meeting and speaking with community groups looking to establish their own independent member campaigns.

    “There are new groups active in every single state and territory,” Fay said.

    “The dissatisfaction with the major party duopoly is palpable. We see it in the declining primary vote of Labor and the Coalition, both nationally and in the seats where community independent groups are active.

    “Voters are yearning for a different way of doing politics, and the community independent model it is.”

    In 2022 independent candidates backed by Climate 200 donations won six electorates previously held by Liberal MPs. Climate 200 does not start the campaigns – instead, community-driven campaigns which align with the fundraising groups’ values and who which prove a pathway to victory can apply to receive support, either financially, or with strategic advice.

    At the last election the so-called “teal independent” campaigns, named for their green views on climate in traditional blue Liberal seats, were successful in North Sydney, Wentworth, Goldstein, Kooyong, Curtin and Mackellar. Four existing independents were re-elected and David Pocock was elected as an independent senator for the Australian Capital Territory. All up, Climate 200 supported 23 independent campaigns and were successful in 11.

    Labor helped those campaigns along by running ‘dead’ in the seats, a strategy where a candidate is chosen but runs a quiet campaign. Labor has not yet finalised its own campaign plans for the next election.

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    AEMO: Fast-Track Renewables Vital for Australia's Grid

    Clean energy backed by storage is the lowest-cost source of electricity for Aussie households and businesses, and Australia is well on the way to a reliable renewables-led grid, the Australian Energy Market Operator's (AEMO) latest roadmap confirms.

    Australia's move to clean energy is well underway, with 40% of the electricity in our main national grid now coming from renewable sources. This is delivering cheaper, cleaner and more reliable energy as our ageing and unreliable coal-fired power stations start to close.

    AEMO's position is clear: Australia's shift to clean energy is on track, and urgently stepping up the roll out of renewable energy generation, transmission and storage is the key to powering our homes and businesses while keeping power prices down as coal exits the energy system.

    Climate Councillor and energy expert, Greg Bourne, said: "We have no time to waste. Getting more clean energy to more households and businesses is the only way to slash climate pollution while preventing price volatility in the years ahead.

    "AEMO's roadmap shows our clean energy grid is being built in front of our eyes. Renewables backed by storage will power our homes and industry 24/7 and we are already nearly halfway there. We should be emboldened by the progress we've already made, and build on this momentum so millions more Australians benefit.

    "Australia's coal generators will close in less than 15 years, so let's get serious about proven technologies and get on with the job of building out a cleaner, more reliable energy grid."

    Dr Jennifer Rayner, Climate Council Head of Policy and Advocacy said: "AEMO's roadmap recognises that millions of households and businesses are already benefiting from rooftop solar and community batteries. There is a big opportunity for governments to step up and work with communities to further accelerate the roll out of local solar and storage, bringing more clean energy online, more quickly.

    "The roadmap also highlights that a Future Made in Australia needs a bigger, cleaner grid. For Australia to seize our potential in green metals, clean manufacturing, critical minerals processing and more, governments need to be planning for and delivering the clean energy infrastructure that underpins these new industries.

    "As Australia heads towards the next federal election, the Climate Council is calling for the right investment and policies to boost rooftop solar and community storage, and scale up the build of our clean grid so that we can fully achieve our potential as a renewable energy and clean export superpower. We have already made significant strides towards cleaner, cheaper and more reliable energy - let's redouble our efforts to capitalise on this momentum."

    /Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.

    _________

    Peter Dutton’s energy policy is a political death wish – and utterly irresponsible in the face of the climate emergency

    Peter Dutton’s proposed energy policy, in the face of our climate emergency, is utterly irresponsible. Not just irresponsible environmentally, but also economically. Given community attitudes, it looks like the silliest political death wish in recent history.

    Joëlle Gergis’s recent Quarterly Essay, Highway to Hell, was a frightening reminder of the price we are already paying for climate change. In property damage from floods and fires as well as lost agricultural production, the bills keep rolling in. As well as spending billions subsidising fossil fuels, we are spending billions more repairing the damage global heating is doing. It would be in our direct interest to be urging a rapid increase in ambition from the inadequate Paris targets. Becoming the first country in the world to weaken our response would undermine the growing impetus for a concerted program of action. We should be increasing the rate of decarbonisation, not slowing it.

    The 2006 UMPNER report, chaired by the head of the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO), found that it would take at least 10 years, more probably 15, to build one nuclear power station – one of the dozen or so that would be needed for the Dutton proposal to replace our coal-fired units. It also said that the power would be 20% to 50% more expensive than the system was then providing.

    CSIRO’s regular GenCost study confirms the cold financial truth. Recent world average prices of electricity from solar farms and wind turbines are about 4c a kilowatt hour. Nuclear power costs about 16c. Even adding in the price of the storage we need and the cost of increased grid connections, renewables cost far less than nuclear power. Deciding to replace our coal-fired power by nuclear would commit us to continuing to burn coal until well into the 2040s, as well as promising to increase the scale of our electricity bills. The economically responsible solution to climate change is renewables backed up by storage, plus an urgent investment in energy efficiency.

    Twenty years ago, a report to the Howard government showed we could reduce our greenhouse gas emissions by 30% simply by using more efficient technology with payback times of less than four years. That should be a top priority. The introduction of vehicle efficiency standards is a long-overdue step in that direction. We should also be lifting appliance efficiency towards international best practice. That would save consumers money as well as slowing climate change.

    As well as being economically and environmentally irresponsible, the proposed policy is politically impossible. The Howard government legislated a ban on nuclear power 25 years ago. Coalition governments in power for most of the time since then made no attempt to repeal that law. Several states also have legislation prohibiting nuclear power. Even the most naively optimistic Coalition MPs don’t believe there is any chance of a majority in both Houses that would be needed to change the national law. There is equally little chance of state legislation being changed. Even Dutton’s Queensland LNP colleagues, facing an election later this year, have been rushing to disassociate themselves from the whole idea.

    So what about the politics? In the 2019 and 2022 elections, the Coalition lost seats such as Warringah and Kooyong, which have been under their control since time began. In every case, the independents elected campaigned on the need for more rapid action to slow climate change. The proposed policy is likely to strengthen the chances of all those independents being re-elected and increase the likelihood of their being joined by new winners in other seats. Since the last election, the scale of damage from climate change has continued to increase. The voters have shown they are willing to forego traditional party loyalties to elect independents who will push for more urgent action. Coalition candidates must be shaking in their boots.

    https://www.theguardian.com/australi...mate-emergency

  12. #287
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    Nuclear push would drag out energy transition, PM warns

    A proposal to build nuclear reactors risks further delay to Australia's energy transition, says the prime minister who warns it would undermine certainty for business and industry.

    There would be little time to waste in boosting manufacturing, Anthony Albanese will say in a speech to the Committee for Economic Development of Australia's state of the nation conference on Thursday,

    As the federal opposition outlined plans to build seven nuclear reactors across five states should it win the next election, the prime minister will argue such a move would put many sectors of the economy at risk.

    "That's the trust cost of nuclear power in Australia, not the just the hundreds of billions of dollars in the cost of constructing the reactors more than a decade away ... but the danger that another decade of denial prevents the action on climate and investment in energy we need now," he will say.

    "Australia has every resource imaginable to succeed in this decisive decade: critical minerals, rare earths, skills and space and sunlight, the trade ties to our region.The only thing our nation does not have, is time to waste."

    The coalition had come under fire for not revealing the cost of the nuclear reactors, while indicating the first power plants would not be built before 2035 to 2037 at the earliest.

    It comes as the federal government prepares to introduce laws to parliament setting up its future made in Australia agenda, aimed at increasing the nation's manufacturing sector.

    Mr Albanese said the proposal would help drive Australia to meet net-zero targets, while strengthening sovereign capability.

    "For Australia to realise its full potential, we must draw on the talents of our whole population and extend opportunity to every part of our country," he will say.

    "This is about lifting Australia up the international value chain, by lifting our national ambition. Australia is the best in the world at extracting and exporting our natural resources.

    "Our vision for a future made in Australia says that all these national strengths and advantages can be brought together to build something greater than the sum of the parts."

    ___________

    ‘Real and growing’ threat to grid if Australia goes for nuclear power, Aemo says

    There is no chance nuclear energy will get online in time to replace retiring coal-fired power plants and any delays in rolling out renewables will likely lead to higher costs and interrupted grid supply, the market operator has warned.

    “The possibility that replacement generation is not available when coal power stations retire is real and growing, and a risk that must be avoided,” the Australian Energy Market Operator (Aemo) said in its Integrated System Plan (ISP). “The sooner firmed renewables are connected, the more secure the energy transition will be.”

    Aemo’s grid blueprint, published Wednesday, echoed the draft version released in December. That report said all coal power stations would shut by 2o38 under Aemo’s most likely scenario, but new wind and solar farms need to double their current pace of construction to 6 gigawatts a year to 2050 to meet decarbonisation goals.

    Solar and wind farms will need to rise six-fold by 2050 to reach 58GW and 69GW, respectively. Rooftop solar should roughly quadruple to 72GW by then, the report said.

    The 25-year plan did not model nuclear energy because the technology isn’t policy for any federal or state government and is banned. Aemo said nuclear was “one of the most expensive ways to generate electricity”, citing a CSIRO report.

    “[The] time it would take to design and build nuclear generation would be too slow to replace retiring coal-fired generation,” Aemo noted in an accompanying factsheet.

    The ISP, released every two years, will likely stoke the intense political debate over Australia’s energy future. The federal opposition last week announced plans to build nuclear generation on the sites of seven existing or closed coal plants without detailing their size, cost or impact on existing or future renewable investments.

    The energy minister, Chris Bowen, said Aemo’s findings were in “stark contrast” to the Coalition’s nuclear plan.

    Bowen claimed the Coalition policy would “see Australians pay hundreds of billions for the reactors alone”, which he said could provide “at best” 4% of Australia’s energy needs by 2050. It might add $1,000 a year to people’s energy bills, he said.

    Aemo’s report also included an estimated benefit for each tonne of carbon dioxide avoided. As reported by Guardian Australia in April, market rules set the price at $70 a tonne, rising to $420 tonne by 2050 when Australia aims to reach net zero emissions.

    That change boosted the net benefits of the 10,000km of new transmission lines by $3.3bn to $22bn compared with the draft ISP.

    Renewable energy supplied almost 40% of electricity across the national electricity market (Nem) in 2023, and briefly topped 72% last October. The government is aiming for 82% of the Nem to be supplied by clean energy by 2030.

    “Already this decade, 12.5GW of new utility-scale generation and 1.3GW/1.8GWh of storage has entered the Nem and 490km of transmission has been built,” it said. “A further 20GW of generation and storage, and 2,090km of transmission, are progressing from planning to delivery.”

    The market will also need 15GW of gas-fired generation by 2050, up from 11.5GW now, even if rarely used. Those plants may be fuelled by fossil gas, biomethane or even hydrogen.

    “This gas generation is a strategic reserve for power system reliability and security, so is not forecast to run frequently,” Aemo said. “A typical gas generator may generate just 5% of its annual potential, but will be critical when it runs” particularly in winter.

    Nem regions will need more than 60,000 people to build and maintain energy infrastructure over the next 20 years.

    “The transition will have undeniable benefits,” Aemo said. “Lower cost, lower emission renewables will offer homes and businesses the electricity they need, with greater insulation from international price shocks that can put unwelcome pressure on the cost of living.”

    Anna Malos, Australia lead at Climateworks Centre, said the centre’s modelling – which helped inform Aemo’s report – found nuclear energy to “be much more expensive than renewables”. It was also presumed to be unavailable before 2040, meaning carbon budgets would be blown as more coal and gas would be burned for power generation.

    “The grid is very largely decarbonised by the time nuclear becomes available,” Malos said.

  13. #288
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    Nuclear more costly and could ‘sound the death knell’ for Australia’s decarbonisation efforts, report says

    A nuclear-powered Australian economy would result in higher-cost electricity and would “sound the death knell” for decarbonisation efforts if it distracts from renewables investment, a report by Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF) argues.

    The report comes as ANZ forecast September quarter power prices will dive as much as 30% once government rebates kick in. A separate review by the market watchdog has found household energy bills were 14% lower because of last year’s rebates.

    BNEF said the federal opposition’s plan to build nuclear power stations on seven sites required “a slow and challenging” effort to overturn existing bans in at least three states, for starters.

    Even if they succeeded, the levelised cost of electricity – a standard industry measure – would be far higher for nuclear power than renewables. Taking existing nuclear industries in western nations into account, their cost would still be “at least four times greater than the average” for Australian wind and solar plants firmed up with storage today, Bloomberg said.

    “Nuclear could play a valuable, if expensive, role in Australia’s future power mix,” the report said. “However, if the debate serves as a distraction from scaling-up policy support for renewable energy investment, it will sound the death knell for its decarbonisation ambitions – the only reason for Australia to consider going nuclear in the first place.”

    Bloomberg’s analysis complements CSIRO’s GenCost report that also found nuclear energy to be far more costly than zero-carbon alternatives. Australia’s lack of experience with the industry would result in a learning “premium” that would double the price of the first nuclear plant, according to the CSIRO.

    Bloomberg also found that assuming the opposition’s seven plants had a generation capacity of 14 gigawatts, they would supply only a fraction of the total market.

    ________

    Set more ambitious climate targets to save Great Barrier Reef, Unesco urges Australia

    Unesco has urged Australia to set more ambitious climate targets for the Great Barrier Reef in a list of recommendations to preserve its status as a world heritage site.

    The report, published in Paris late on Monday, did not recommend the reef be placed on a list of sites “in danger” – a threat that has hung over the reef for years – when the 21-country world heritage committee meets next month.

    But the report says Australia should be asked to submit a progress report by February 2025, after which the committee “could consider the inclusion of the property on the list of world heritage in danger” at its 2026 meeting.

    Unesco also said it had “high concern” that rates of land clearing in catchments that flow into the reef was “incompatible” with targets to cut sediments and nutrients running into the reef.

    Unesco expressed “utmost concern” at the mass coral bleaching event that swept across the reef this summer, urging Australia to make public the extent of coral death “as soon as possible”.

    Unesco experts wrote: “The current bleaching occurs as part of the fourth global mass bleaching, which is likely impacting at least 30% of the world heritage-listed coral reef properties, and the implications across the world heritage system will also need to be considered further.”

    The reef “remains under serious threat, and urgent and sustained action is of utmost priority in order to improve the resilience of the property in a rapidly changing climate”, the report said.

    The Unesco report, co-written with scientific experts at the International Union for Conservation of Nature, includes a set of “draft decisions” which act like recommendations for the world heritage committee’s 10-day meeting in India starting on 21 July.

    Unesco said Australia needed to continue efforts to reduce pollution running into the reef and to control coral-eating starfish outbreaks

    The recommendation comes after one of the worst summers on record for the reef with widespread and extreme bleaching hitting in the same summer as two cyclones and outbreaks of native coral-eating starfish.

    Almost three quarters of reefs surveyed by government scientists saw at least 10% of corals bleached. Parts of the southern section of the reef saw the highest levels of heat stress ever recorded on the reef.

    The committee put Australia on notice last year, saying it would not put the reef on the “in danger” list but said more action was needed on climate targets and pollution.

  14. #289
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    Australia’s power and gas companies want Coalition to retain Labor’s 2030 climate target

    The owners of Australian coal and gas-fired power plants have joined the country’s leading business groups in saying the Coalition should keep Labor’s 2030 climate target if it wins the next election.

    The Australian Energy Council, which represents electricity companies and gas wholesalers and retailers, the Business Council of Australia and the Australian Industry Group said maintaining an interim target – legislated as a 43% cut compared with 2005 levels – was an important step in getting to net zero emissions by mid-century.

    Some of the business groups said the 43% target would be difficult, but the government should aim to meet it. None said they agreed with the opposition leader, Peter Dutton, that it was “unachievable”.

    Dutton on Tuesday repeated that he would not back the legislated goal, and revealed the Coalition did not intend to propose an alternative 2030 emissions reduction target before the next election, which is due by May 2025.

    He said Labor’s target would “harm Australian families”, and that a decision on interim targets would be made “when we are in government”. But he said the Coalition was still committed to net zero emissions and the 2015 Paris climate agreement.

    Several climate experts said his refusal to back the country’s 2030 target meant a Dutton government would be in breach of the Paris deal, which commits countries to progressively increase commitments every five years and to make pledges that reflect their “highest possible ambition”.

    The agreement’s headline goal is to limit global heating to well below 2C and to pursue efforts to keep it to 1.5C above preindustrial levels. Scientists say this requires rapid emissions cuts before 2030 on the way to net zero.

    The energy council told the Guardian it continued to support the country’s economy-wide interim emissions reduction target for 2030, describing it as an “important stepping stone towards achieving net zero”. Its interim chief executive, Ben Barnes, said interim targets gave certainty to industry and the broader economy on the “investment pathway” to net zero.

    He said the 43% target would be challenging to meet but said “that is not a reason to stop trying”.

    “The energy sector will do most of the heavy lifting to reduce emissions between now and 2030, which will enable other sectors to achieve their decarbonisation objectives,” Barnes said. “It’s critical that we continue to work towards reducing our emissions as quickly as is possible and affordable.”

    The chief executive of the Business Council of Australia, Bran Black, said his organisation was committed to achieving net zero emissions by 2050, and interim targets were a critical part of that. “Already announced and legislated targets should remain in place,” he said.

    The head of the employer association the Australian Industry Group, Innes Willox, said his organisation supported Australia’s interim emissions target as “a guide path and glide path” to meeting the Paris goals. But he said targets needed to be credible to support investment, and Australia’s 43% goal was “in the balance”.

    “We are tracking in broadly the right direction, and we have the tools to get it done, but it’s looking more unlikely that Australia will build the new assets we need fast enough to meet the full 43% by 2030,” Willox said. “More than ever, industry needs affordable, reliable and clean power and an investable policy environment.”

    On the Coalition’s proposed support for an Australian nuclear industry after 2040, Willox said it would be “shortsighted to rule out any technology”, but he said the country’s response now should be building “a lot of renewables, energy storage and smart demand-side resources, transmission to connect it all up, and flexible gas peakers to provide essential backup”.

    Government department projections made last year suggested Australia was on track for a 42% reduction in emissions by 2030. The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, said on Tuesday this showed the government was “very much on track” to meet the 43% target but some analysts have warned the slow rollout of large-scale renewable energy and transmission lines put the goal at risk.

    Data released last month showed national emissions were 29% below 2005 levels at the end of last year, although most of this was due to CO2 being absorbed by trees and the landscape for reasons unrelated to climate policy. Emissions from fossil fuels and the broader economy fell less than 3%.

    Bill Hare, the chief executive of the science and policy institute Climate Analytics, said the Coalition’s rejection of the 43% target was a “clear abandonment of any serious and believable commitment to net zero by 2050 and to the Paris agreement’s 1.5C limit”.

    He said the national target for 2030 should be more than 60% to align with the global 1.5C goal.

    “There are no credible technically and economically feasible pathways to net zero without substantial reductions by 2030 and 2035,” Hare said. “A net zero commitment without policies and targets to match for 2030 lacks any credibility and is essentially an attempt to con the public.”

    Dutton’s stance was sharply criticised by Labor and crossbench MPs. Albanese called the opposition leader’s stance absurd and accused him of risking billions of dollars of investment in clean energy. “Peter Dutton is divisive, the Coalition are divided and there is no detail about what they would pursue,” he said.

    Adam Bandt, the Greens leader, attacked both major parties. He said the Liberals were “completely ignoring the Paris agreement” and Albanese was “crying Paris crocodile tears” while supporting new fossil fuel developments.

    __________

    Who is Matt Kean and what is the Climate Change Authority?

    The federal Labor government has appointed prominent New South Wales Liberal Matt Kean as the new chair of the Climate Change Authority.

    Here’s a short explainer on Kean and the agency he will chair.

    Kean, 42, had been a Liberal MP in the NSW parliament until announcing his resignation last week. He gave his valedictory speech to parliament on Friday.

    Kean entered politics in the 2011 landslide as the member for Hornsby, a seat in northern Sydney. His first major appointment was as minister for innovation and better regulation in 2017, a role that suited his education, including gaining a graduate diploma from the Institute of Chartered Accountants and his time at consultants PriceWaterhouseCoopers.

    He found his calling and gained a higher profile after the 2019 state election when he became energy and environment minister. As head of the Liberal’s moderate faction, and being close to then-premier Gladys Berejiklian, Kean was able to implement far-reaching changes – particularly in the energy sector – that had eluded similarly inclined moderate Liberal ministers.

    He secured cross-party support for an ambitious road map to drive renewables into the grid in NSW – a state that had been slow to decarbonise – and a large expansion of national parks.

    Increasingly alarmed at the scale of the 2019-20 black summer bushfires, Kean spoke out against the lack of climate action including by his federal counterparts in the Morrison government. Morrison bristled in response that “most of the federal cabinet wouldn’t even know who Matt Kean was” – helping to boost Kean’s national profile.

    When Berejiklian resigned following revelations the state’s corruption commission was investigating whether she had been involved in “a breach of public trust”, Kean was elevated to treasurer and deputy Liberal leader under Dominic Perrottet. After the March 2023 election ended the Coalition’s 12 years in office, Kean took a much less publicised role as shadow health minister.

    What is the Climate Change Authority?

    The authority was set up by the Gillard Labor government in 2012 to provide independent advice on what Australia’s carbon emissions reduction targets should be.

    The Abbott government sought to scrap the authority – and other emissions-reducing bodies such as the Clean Energy Finance Corporation – but was stymied by the Senate.

    However, the Coalition made it clear the authority’s advice wasn’t welcomed, with one after another of the authority’s board members resigning, including former Reserve Bank governor Bernie Fraser.

    Since April 2021, the authority has been chaired by Grant King, a former managing director of Origin Energy for 16 years. During that time, Origin expanded rapidly, particularly in coal seam gas for export.

    King, though, has held other roles, including chairing CWP Renewables, and Kean too may take up roles in clean energy. King’s term was scheduled to run until April next year but Bowen said the current chair had sought to leave the role early.

    The authority reviews Australia’s national greenhouse gas reporting and the safeguard mechanism aimed at forcing industry to cut carbon emissions over time. It can also order its own research or act on requests for analysis from the government.

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    Peter Duttons a clueless asshole.That should save some folk hours from reading that cut n paste horseshit.

  16. #291
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    CoreLogic and CSIRO launch RapidRate energy efficiency tool to meet banking industry needs

    Property data analytics company CoreLogic Asia Pacific (CoreLogic) and Australia’s national science agency, CSIRO, have launched RapidRate, an innovative tool that can estimate the energy efficiency performance of Australia’s 11 million residential properties.

    The program combines CoreLogic’s 40 years of comprehensive property data with CSIRO’s RapidRate artificial intelligence model to produce an estimate of energy performance rating for existing homes, which is a good indicator of how costly a home would be to heat or cool, and the associated carbon footprint of its energy use.

    Since the pilot program announcement in 2023, insights gained from pilot program participants and collaboration with banking industry stakeholders have been instrumental in the development of the energy efficiency platform.

    CoreLogic International Chief Executive Officer Lisa Claes said the industry’s strong interest in RapidRate highlighted genuine demand for better insights into energy performance of the country’s existing properties.

    “By enhancing the data on property-level energy performance, banks and lenders can analyse and report on their climate commitments related to the properties in their portfolios,” she said.

    “There is limited data available around the energy efficiency of existing properties. RapidRate bridges the knowledge gap and will contribute to more efficient, sustainable, and cost-effective housing.”

    Revolutionising home energy assessment

    CSIRO’s RapidRate AI tool is designed to assess the energy efficiency of dwellings with minimal input. Utilising a set of key factors such as floor area, orientation, and building materials, RapidRate uses machine learning techniques to generate an estimated star rating aligned with the Nationwide House Energy Rating Scheme (NatHERS).

    CSIRO Senior Experimental Scientist Melissa James said that when combined with CoreLogic property data, RapidRate’s many potential applications include the ability to help the finance industry better understand the energy efficiency of homes in their mortgage portfolios.

    “RapidRate can ingest CoreLogic’s property data and quickly turn it into meaningful information about the energy efficiency of a home,” she said.

    “Understanding the energy efficiency of Australian homes is the first step towards making them perform better. Energy efficient houses are healthier and more comfortable, cost less to run, and result in less carbon emissions.”

    Banking benefits from enhanced insights

    Enhanced energy efficiency insights will equip the banking sector with valuable tools to help mitigate risk, enhance sustainability, and align with global climate commitments across their housing portfolios.

    CoreLogic’s Head of Banking & Finance Solutions Tom Coad said RapidRate offers the country’s lenders an efficient mechanism for improving their financial records with previously unavailable information.

    “Banks and lenders have identified that an understanding of energy efficiency is required to address portfolio segmentation and risk mitigation, while providing a baseline for performance tracking over time to meet compliance obligations,” he said.

    “With the continuous collection of data, RapidRate will add value in supporting climate transition planning, financial emissions reporting, and formulating customer solutions. Continuous data collection ensures that financial institutions remain at the forefront of the residential energy transition, optimising and streamlining their strategies for clients.”

    Mr Coad emphasised the launch of NatHERS-aligned energy efficiency star ratings via RapidRate is the foundational step to a comprehensive ecosystem of data-driven solutions.

    “The banking and finance industry is proactive and highly engaged in wanting to understand the energy efficiency of their property portfolios, which will mean they can better support their customers in the reduction of carbon footprints,” he said.

    “This is an exciting new era in the fight against climate change and our partnership with CSIRO means we have the resources for future capabilities such as Whole-of-Home based appliance modules. Every enhancement will be designed to support ongoing energy performance improvement of the housing stock into the future.”

    ___________

    Electric vehicles alone won’t be enough to hit climate goals, says research

    An electric vehicle revolution is unlikely to be enough to cut Australia’s emissions in line with its climate change goals, according to new research that suggests more public transport travel and rail freight are needed to rein in pollution.

    Transport produces one-fifth of Australia’s carbon emissions, and the government projects it will grow over the next decade to become the country’s highest emitting sector.

    Cars, vans and utes account for 61 per cent of those greenhouse gasses, which are expected to start falling towards the end of this decade as electric vehicles gradually replace conventional petrol vehicles.

    But new modelling by Monash University’s Climateworks Centre has found that even with a faster-than-expected uptake of EVs, a failure to also change how people and goods travel will mean transport emissions overshoot the reductions necessary for Australia to meet the Paris Agreement goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees.

    “To date, we’ve put all our eggs in that EV basket,” said Climateworks’ transport program lead, Helen Rowe. “Australia will struggle to reach [its climate goals] if we don’t diversify the solutions.”

    EV sales are taking off in Australia after lagging those in comparable countries for many years. Almost 10 per cent of new cars sold in the first quarter of 2024 were battery electric or plug-in hybrid vehicles, an increase from 3 per cent just two year earlier, according to the Australian Automobile Association.

    State and federal targets, on average, are aiming for EVs to make up 46 per cent of new vehicle sales by 2030.

    The Climateworks report, to be published on Tuesday, shows that zero emissions vehicles (or ZEVs, which include hydrogen-powered trucks) would need to hit 72 per cent of sales by 2030 to keep transport sector emissions between 2025 and 2050 at a level compatible with 1.5 degrees of global warming.

    A more likely but still aggressive “moderated” ZEV uptake (56 per cent of sales by 2030) and no other action would mean emissions overshoot the 1.5 degree benchmark by 21 per cent.

    However, moderated ZEV uptake combined with efforts to shift trips away from private vehicles and avoid unnecessary travel would mean an overrun of only 4 per cent. A rapid ZEV uptake plus “avoid and shift” solutions would bring emissions 12 per cent below the benchmark.

    “Avoid and shift” solutions would involve moving 35 per cent of car trips onto public transport and active transport (walking, cycling and scooting), and train travel replacing about 7 per cent of domestic aviation.

    Governments would also need to reduce passenger travel by 10 per cent and freight travel by 5 per cent by 2040, while 15 per cent of freight on articulated trucks and 5 per cent on rigid trucks would shift to rail too.

    Rowe, from the Climateworks Centre, said the modelling showed governments needed to ratchet up policies to encourage the electric vehicle transition but also develop policies to guide investment in public and active transport and rail freight, which had additional benefits for liveability in growing cities.

    “Even if we transition every car and every truck to a zero emission option, particularly as we have population growth, those vehicles are still traffic,” Rowe said.

    Melbourne University transport planning lecturer John Stone, who was not involved in the research, said governments needed to set targets to increase the share of climate friendly transport modes.

    “Once we have them, a lot of the investment decisions that we currently make – will we widen this road for cars or will we improve public transport? – become much simpler,” Stone said.

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    Nuclear 'fantasy' comes under scrutiny in parliament

    The federal opposition's plans to build multiple nuclear reactors across Australia have come under fire in parliament as the fallout from last week's announcement spread to Question Time.

    Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has pledged to build seven nuclear power plants across five states should he win the next election.

    He has been criticised for not revealing the cost of the plan, which has been rejected by the leaders of the state's affected, while doubts have been raised over the opposition's timeline for the first reactor to be built.

    As politicians returned to Canberra for the first time since the nuclear announcement, Labor leaders were quick to attack the opposition's plan when they got a chance in parliament.

    Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek said the economics of the proposal would not stack up.

    "What we have before us is a choice between a renewable energy transition that's already underway or a nuclear fantasy that may never happen," she told parliament on Monday.

    "The Leader of the Opposition's plan, if you could call it that, is a recipe for delay and it's a recipe for higher bills."

    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese took aim at the cost of nuclear and ruled out lifting a federal moratorium on nuclear energy.

    "At a time when the rest of us are working to get power bills down, (Peter Dutton has) picked the one option guaranteed to force prices up," he said.

    Every affected state leader has condemned the proposal, with NSW and Victorian premiers Chris Minns and Jacinta Allan vowing to block nuclear power plants.

    That stance has also been echoed on the coalition side by Queensland's opposition leader David Crisafulli.

    Mr Dutton noted commonwealth laws override state laws, meaning their opposition would not stop a federal coalition government.

    Asked how much the coalition's proposal would cost, Nationals leader David Littleproud said they would announce that "very soon" but would not reveal a figure.

    Independent senator Jacqui Lambie said she would love to see nuclear energy, but the coalition "couldn't get their s*** together" on energy policy when in power for almost a decade.

    In a 2019 inquiry report into nuclear energy tabled under the previous Liberal government, committee chair and Queensland MP Ted O'Brien wrote "the will of the people should be honoured" and "nuclear power plants or waste facilities should not be imposed upon local communities that are opposed".

    Mr O'Brien, now the face of the coalition's nuclear push as opposition energy spokesman, tried to dodge the question of what had changed from then to now, before saying "what I wrote in the report then is consistent with this term of government".

    Though he said he did not think locals would reject the proposal, a survey from the Australia Institute shows 65 per cent of Australians are not prepared to pay any more to have nuclear power in the nation's energy mix, regardless of their voting intentions.

    A News Corp Australia survey of more than 920 people found about 60 per cent of participants agreed nuclear power "has a place" in Australia's energy mix.

    In a separate question in the Resolve Political Monitor, conducted for The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald, 43 per cent preferred a Labor plan for renewables supported by gas for the next 10 to 20 years while 33 per cent opted for a coalition plan for nuclear power and some gas to support renewables.

    The Smart Energy Council - a body set up to promote renewable energy - said a breakdown of figures from the CSIRO and the Australian Energy Market Operator indicated that it could cost up to $600 billion to build seven nuclear plants, which it said would deliver just 3.7 per cent of Australia's energy mix in 2050.

    __________

    Albanese’s approval rating dips to new low amid signs Dutton on losing hand with nuclear

    Anthony Albanese’s approval rating has dipped to a new low but there are signs the opposition leader, Peter Dutton, has gone all-in on a losing hand, with voters concerned about the cost and safety of nuclear energy.

    Those are the results of the latest Guardian Essential poll of 1,141 Australians which found that nuclear energy has leapfrogged renewable energy as the perceived “most expensive” form of electricity.

    Albanese’s approval rating is now net -9, the lowest since he took the top job by winning the May 2022 election. Some 49% of respondents disapproved of the job he is doing as prime minister, up three points from June, compared with 40% who approved, down three.

    Dutton’s approval rating is steady, with 42% of respondents disapproving of the job he is doing as opposition leader and 41% approving.

    The proportion of respondents who said Australia was on the “wrong track” increased to 54%, up five points since June, while those who said it was going in the “right direction” dropped four points to 30%.

    Asked about a series of individual characteristics, the majority of respondents said Albanese plays politics (75%), changes his opinion depending on who he thinks is listening (64%), is out of touch with ordinary people (61%), and is narrow-minded (53%).

    Dutton rated similarly on these measures, but people were less likely to say he plays politics (71%) and changes his opinion depending on who he thinks is listening (54%).

    Given a choice of three energy sources, most (59%) ranked renewable energies, such as wind and solar, as the “most desirable” overall, compared with 23% who said the same for nuclear and 19% fossil fuels, such as coal and gas. Nuclear was judged “least desirable” by 45% of respondents.

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