or “The Australian nuclear lobby and fixing climate change”
The context is this
This morning, [Opposition Leader] Peter Dutton announced his alleged plans for an Australian nuclear energy industry and in so doing he has set a test for all Australian media: are they willing to do their job as a fourth estate and call this out for the nonsense it is, or they all going to play games until the next election pretending this is some sort of legitimate alternative that deserves to be taken seriously?
https://tdunlop.substack.com/p/duttons-atomic-lie?r=bhqa3&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&triedRedirect=true
[See also Simon Holmes a Court’s excellent thread about the 18 questions that should be asked about Dutton’s announcement.]
I thought about pitching something to The Conversation Australia – but I am out of favour with them and in any case, there’s this typically excellent piece by John Quiggin. Also I should be doing other things (see disclaimer here and at foot of this post).
The short version is this – the Liberals and Nationals have struggled with the climate issue since 1990. There was an effort to compete on the issue in the late 1980s – the Liberals went to the March 1990 Federal election with a more ambitious emissions reduction target than Labor.
But for various reasons (including a myth that the Australian Conservation Foundation had ‘stabbed them in the back’) the Liberals and Nationals quickly decided NOT to compete for ‘green’ votes, and not to take climate seriously. Except when forced (2005 to 2009), they’ve held to that stance ever since.
The nuclear ca(na)rd never goes away, no matter how many times the objections to it are raised. There is always a new buzz phrase – fast-breeder, thorium pebbles, small modular – to roll off the tongues of those whose enthusiasm is ideological or cynical. The buzzsaw of reality hits the buzzword … and a new buzzword replaces it.
The “nuclear” option is too useful to be discarded. It serves as
- as a non-answer to what many LNPers regard (secretly or openly) as a non-issue
- as an invocation of Faith In Technology – it makes them feel modern/scientific/whatever, as distinct from the hysterical emotional greenies (who, dammit – and this must never ever be admitted – have a better track record of seeing what is coming)
- as a wedge issue to split the environmentalists and give lazy/obedient journalists something to write about other than the sheer idiocy of the LNP’s “stance”, whatever it is this week.
Thus it is rolled out again and again. It’s Groundhog Day, only for morons.
A timeline of nuclear power advocacy and use of the climate issue in Australia (always in beta, and more interested in the pre-1988 period than is healthy.)
Over time I will add to this, if I remember. Send me stuff, I guess.
1970 Australian Atomic Energy Commission annual report
This is quoted by academics in presentations at academic conferences, e.g. ANZAAS in Brisbane, the following year
1971 Australia’s first nuclear power station – Jervis Bay– cancelled, by a Liberal Prime Minister (Billy McMahon.
1972 The Stockholm Conference on the Environment.
1975 Institute of Engineers Australia (IEAust) creates an “Energy Task Force”
1977
As part of the debates about whether Australia should be mining and exporting Uranium…
April 21, 1977 – Australian Parliament debate on Uranium – C02 build up mentioned
In July – The IEAust’s Lance Endersbee comments (reported on the front page of the Canberra Times thus_
“Three or four” nuclear power stations were predicted for Australia within 25 years by the chairman of a task force that began its final discussions on a national energy policy in Canberra yesterday.
Professor Lance Endersbee, who is also chairman of the General College of the Institution of Engi neers, said the power stations were possibilities for Western Australia, South Australia and Tasmania. Victoria might have a fourth nuclear power station by the year 2000 – ironically because of the adverse environmental effects of mining its massive coal reserves. Professor Endersbee foresaw problems in the disruption of the State’s landscape and large discharges of carbon dioxide.”
July 27, 1977 – Pro-nuclear professor cites #climate concerns at Adelaide speech
1978 The Australian Mining Industry Council (later rebranded as MCA) publishes a propaganda tome “Nuclear Electricity” with a glancing mention of the possible greenhouse effect
1979 Visit by American scientist and nuclear booster Alvin Weinberg (write up in Canberra Times). See here.
“Dr Weinberg’s case, in brief, was that though we really have not yet experienced an energy crisis, one is on the way. Apart from the fact that oil is running out globally, if we continue burning it and other fossil fuels, meaning mainly coal, we may push up the earth’s temperature (by increasing the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere so creating a “greenhouse effect”) and thus disrupt the climate, at the very least.”
1982 Leslie Kemeny article (which he recycled in 1985 at an IEAust conference) (Kemeny a long-term enthusiastic nuclear bloviator – see Jim Green’s 2009 article in Crikey).
1984 Visit to Australia by Hans Blix
See here
“In Europe, demand for nuclear power was growing as concern mounted about the effects of acid rain on forests, the pollution of the oceans and the increase of atmospheric carbon dioxide.”
In 1988 the “Greenhouse Effect” finally broke through into mass public awareness. There was plenty of denial, and also opportunistic “nuclear is the only answer” stuff.
July 26, 1988, – Australian uranium sellers foresee boom times…
1989 –
“While the concern to make a serious attempt to do something about the problem was widespread, it was not universal. The pro-uranium lobby launched a heavy-handed campaign to portray nuclear power as the answer to the greenhouse effect, with the support of an ‘expert committee’ of the Institution of Engineers.”
(Lowe, 1989: 7)
“…. There can be no credible case on economic grounds for the nuclear option.
An understandably upset member of the Institution of Engineers, Australia, recently sent me a copy of a “position paper”, prepared for the Institution by an expert committee. I read the paper with the interest of someone who might well have been a member of the Institution had it not been for a few chance turnings along the road: I actually earned an honest crust in Sydney as a cadet engineer in bygone days when beaches were clean and books were dirty. The document stated that, ‘It is clear Australia can improve living standards internationally and contribute to an amelioration of the Greenhouse Effect by providing uranium and uranium services’. While some of the rhetoric has been changed, much of the technical detail is eerily reminiscent of a 1977 report by the same body….”
(Lowe, 1989:92)
Various enthusiasms for nuclear, in ALP and LNP. But climate issue dies by 1992 (with the coming of Keating and the UNFCCC) and over the next ten years or so, nuclear advocacy is relatively subdued….
2006 With pressure around the climate issue rising (Kyoto coming into force, the EU Emissions Trading Scheme etc), John Howard gets Ziggy Switowski to produce another report
May 15, 2006 – Australian Prime Minister John Howard spouting “nuclear to fix climate” nonsense
(see BBC report here) (read about this in Guy Pearse’s excellent “High and Dry”)
When the climate wars heat up, from 2006, you get more “nuclear is the Answer” stuff – e.g. the Brave New Climate people.
2010 As the emissions and concentrations climb, so do the “predictions” of imminent roll out of nuclear salvation.
April 7, 2010 – Ziggie tries to sprinkle Stardust – 50 nuclear reactors by 2050
And so it goes on, and on, and on.
References/further reading (will expand if remember)
Green, J. 2009. Leslie Kemeny a nuclear crusader in his own write. Crikey, November 11 https://www.crikey.com.au/2009/11/11/leslie-kemeny-a-nuclear-crusader-in-his-own-write/
Lowe, I. 1989 Living in the Greenhouse. Scribe
Martin, B. 1980. Nuclear Knights: https://www.bmartin.cc/pubs/80nk/80nk.pdf
MacLeod, R. (1994) The atom comes to Australia: Reflections on the
Australian nuclear programme, 1953 and 1993, History and Technology, an International Journal, 11:2, 299-315, DOI: 10.1080/07341519408581868
Urwin, J. 2023. Better active today than radioactive tomorrow’: Environmentalism and the Australian anti-uranium movement, 1975–82. International Review of Environmental History, Volume 9, Issue 2
DISCLAIMER
I struggle (more than usually) to write in academese. Or in that kind of academese to which I once aspired. Maybe I was never good enough, maybe I never tried hard enough or long enough. Whatever.