Exhibit A. Australia: Public Discussion Minimisation Through Secrecy
A whole range of costly nuclear facilities not yet revealed by the Albanese Government will be needed in Australia to service the AUKUS and visiting foreign nuclear submarine industry.
The Albanese Government was forced, under FOI, to reveal plans for a nuclear waste dump on Australian soil for AUKUS and visiting foreign nuclear submarines. To minimise public debate that news was only revealed to the media by the Albanese Government late on a Sunday, in December 2023, a few days before Christmas...
Andrew Greene’s ABC News article written 17 Dec 2023 – Posted Mon 18 Dec 2023 reports https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-12-18/aukus-americans-western-australia-radioactive-storage-facility/103239924 :
"Planning begins for low-level radioactive waste management
Decisions on where Australia
will eventually dispose of its nuclear submarine reactors are not expected for
many years, but planning has begun for "low-level radioactive
waste management" at HMAS Stirling [aka
Fleet Base West or Perth Naval Base] to support [nuclear Submarine Rotational
Force] SRF-West.
"Expertise
to manage low-level operational waste arising from nuclear-powered submarine
operations and sustainment will be an important part of Australia building the
necessary stewardship capability to operate and maintain its own
submarines."
"All low and intermediate level radioactive waste will
be safely stored at Defence sites in Australia," the [Australian Submarine
Agency https://www.asa.gov.au/about ]
ASA briefing documents confirm.
"An operational waste storage facility for low-level radioactive waste management is being planned as part of the infrastructure works proposed for HMAS Stirling to support SRF-West."
Rex Patrick raises the question whether Australia could become an international dump for high level nuclear waste?
Exhibit B. The UK: Further down the nuclear pathway in Public Discussion Minimized Through Secrecy
On the broader topic of how the UK military's nuclear needs breed high civilian nuclear costs and distortions the following article was originally published at The Conversation on January 19, 2023 at:
The Conversation permits Creative Commons republishing:
"Military interests are pushing new nuclear power – and the UK
government has finally admitted it
Authors
Professor of Science & Technology Policy in the Science Policy Research Unit, University of Sussex
Research Fellow, SPRU, University of Sussex
The UK government has announced the “biggest expansion of the [nuclear] sector in 70 years”. This follows years of extraordinarily expensive support.
Why is this? Official assessments acknowledge nuclear performs poorly compared to alternatives. With renewables and storage significantly cheaper, climate goals are achieved faster, more affordably and reliably by diverse other means. The only new power station under construction is still not finished, running ten years late and many times over budget.
So again: why does this ailing technology enjoy such intense and persistent generosity?
The UK government has for a long time failed even to try to justify support for nuclear power in the kinds of detailed substantive energy terms that were once routine. The last properly rigorous energy white paper was in 2003.
Even before wind and solar costs plummeted, this recognised nuclear as “unattractive”. The delayed 2020 white paper didn’t detail any comparative nuclear and renewable costs, let alone justify why this more expensive option receives such disproportionate funding.
A document published with the latest announcement, Civil Nuclear: Roadmap to 2050, is also more about affirming official support than substantively justifying it. More significant – in this supposedly “civil” strategy – are multiple statements about addressing “civil and military nuclear ambitions” together to “identify opportunities to align the two across government”.
These pressures are acknowledged by other states with nuclear weapons, but were until now treated like a secret in the UK: civil nuclear energy maintains the skills and supply chains needed for military nuclear programmes.
The military has consistently called for civil nuclear
Official UK energy policy documents fail substantively to justify nuclear power, but on the military side the picture is clear.
For instance, in 2006 then prime minister Tony Blair performed a U-turn to ignore his own white paper and pledge nuclear power would be “back with a vengeance”. Widely criticised for resting on a “secret” process, this followed a major three volume study by the military-linked RAND Corporation for the Ministry of Defence (MoD) effectively warning that the UK “industrial base” for design, manufacture and maintenance of nuclear submarines would become unaffordable if the country phased out civil nuclear power.
In repeated parliamentary hearings, academics, engineering organisations, research centres, industry bodies and trade unions urged continuing civil nuclear as a means to support military capabilities.
In 2017, submarine reactor manufacturer Rolls Royce even issued a dedicated report, marshalling the case for expensive “small modular reactors” to “relieve the Ministry of Defence of the burden of developing and retaining skills and capability”.
The government itself has remained coy about acknowledging this pressure to “mask” military costs behind civilian programmes. Yet the logic is clear in repeated emphasis on the supposedly self-evident imperative to “keep the nuclear option open” – as if this were an end in itself, no matter what the cost. Energy ministers are occasionally more candid, with one calling civil-military distinctions “artifical” and quietly saying: “I want to include the MoD more in everything we do”.
In 2017, we submitted evidence to a parliamentary public accounts committee investigation of the deal to build Hinkley Point C power plant. On the basis of our evidence, the committee asked the then MoD head (who – notably – previously oversaw civil nuclear contract negotiations) about the military nuclear links. His response:
We are completing the build of the nuclear submarines which carry conventional weaponry. We have at some point to renew the warheads, so there is very definitely an opportunity here for the nation to grasp in terms of building up its nuclear skills. I do not think that that is going to happen by accident; it is going to require concerted government action to make it happen.
This is even more evident in actions than words. For instance hundreds of millions of pounds have been prioritised for a nuclear innovation programme and a nuclear sector deal which is “committed to increasing the opportunities for transferability between civil and defense industries”.
An open secret
Despite all this, military pressures for nuclear power are not widely recognised in the UK. On the few occasions when it receives media attention, the link has been officially denied.
Other countries tend to be more open about it, with the interdependence acknowledged at presidential level in the US for instance. French president Emmanuel Macron summarises: “without civil nuclear power, no military nuclear power, without military nuclear, no civil nuclear”.
This is largely why nuclear-armed France is pressing the European Union to support nuclear power. This is why non-nuclear-armed Germany has phased out the nuclear technologies it once lead the world in. This is why other nuclear-armed states are so disproportionately fixated by nuclear power.
These military pressures help explain why the UK is in denial about poor nuclear performance, yet so supportive of general nuclear skills. Powerful military interests – with characteristic secrecy and active PR – are driving this persistence.
Neglect of this picture makes it all the more disturbing. Outside defence budgets, off the public books and away from due scrutiny, expensive support is being lavished on a joint civil-military nuclear industrial base largely to help fund military needs. These concealed subsidies make nuclear submarines look affordable, but electricity and climate action more costly.
The conclusions are not self-evident. Some might argue military rationales justify excessive nuclear costs. But history teaches that policies are more likely to go awry if reasons are concealed. In the UK – where nuclear realities have been strongly officially denied – the issues are not just about energy, or climate, but democracy.
The Conversation asked the UK Department for Energy Security and Net Zero to comment but did not receive a reply before the publication deadline."
The typical position of the "green" in Europe..Repeat after me : "Nuclear power is evil and not needed, as solar an wind will do,
ReplyDeleteThe U of Sussex academics position is typical and "selective" on the facts and can be found every day in the serious German press
-Nuclear civilian power is not the result of military pressure (Finland , Sweden, Ungary ,Czechia,Slo .. are not nuclear power and have no intention to become one or to deploy SSN
-Nuclear power is needed , and the renewable '(Solar and Wind)are also needed to reduced CO2 emission but unsufficient (Not permanent and need backup, 20% on shore , 40% off shore , availability on a yearly basis in the UK.)."die Wende" in Germany is a failure sofar and is supported by massive gas and coal (and again in 2023/2024 by Nuclear F export..in 2022/23 due to high maintenance issue in the FR N plant , the prices skyrocketed and shortage were visualized..the German green blamed the "French" for the situation!
-the high costs in W Europe vs China (and the delays) are true and the results to a large extent of multiple legal barriers and higher norms resulting from political decisions.In 2015 the socialist in Fr, needing the green, transferred the nuclear overseeing from the Min of Industry to the Environment. ("the only safe N plant is no plant").and announced a cap on production .Guess what ? training and investment stopped leaqding to the 2022 maintenance crisis..This was reversed in 2023 as a first step. The novel reactors will be built cheaper and faster