Nuclear power is currently enjoying a flurry of interest in Australia. But those promoting nuclear power are almost exclusively from the far right of the political spectrum.
They include far-right politicians from the Coalition and One Nation; the Minerals Council of Australia (who for clean nuclear and clean coal) and the ; radio shock jocks and the Murdoch media (especially The Australian); and the .
Beyond the far right, support for nuclear power in Australia has ebbed due to the Fukushima disaster, catastrophic cost overruns on reactor projects and the falling costs of renewables.
Dr Ziggy Switkowski used to be nuclear power鈥檚 head cheerleader in Australia. He led the John Howard Coalition government鈥檚 of nuclear power in 2006. But Switkowski 聽last year that 鈥渢he window for gigawatt-scale nuclear has closed鈥 and that nuclear power is no longer cheaper than renewables, with .
Australian Institution of Engineers fellow Peter Farley in RenewEconomy earlier this year: 鈥淎s for nuclear the 2,200 MW [megawatts] Plant Vogtle [in the US] is costing US$25 billion plus financing costs, insurance and long term waste storage ... For the full cost of US$30 billion, we could build 7,000 MW of wind, 7,000 MW of tracking solar, 10,000 MW of聽rooftop solar, 5,000MW of pumped hydro and 5,000 MW of batteries...
鈥淭hat is why nuclear is irrelevant in Australia. It has nothing to do with greenies, it's just about cost and reliability.鈥
In January, the Climate Council 鈥 comprising Australia's leading climate scientists and other policy experts 鈥 issued a concluding that nuclear power plants 鈥渁re not appropriate for Australia 鈥 and probably never will be鈥.
The statement continued: 鈥淣uclear power stations are highly controversial, can't be built under existing law in any Australian state or territory, are a more聽expensive source of power聽than renewable energy, and present significant challenges in terms of the storage and transport of nuclear waste, and use of water鈥.
Exponentially rising costs
estimated the cost of electricity from new reactors at $40鈥65 per megawatt-hour (MWh). That is roughly one-quarter of current estimates.
Financial advice and asset management firm Lazard's November 2018 on levelised costs of electricity gives these figures:
鈥 New nuclear: $161鈥271/MWh
鈥 Wind: $42鈥80/MWh
鈥 Utility-scale solar: $52鈥66/MWh
鈥 Natural-gas combined-cycle: $59鈥106/MWh
the construction cost of a 1000 MW power reactor in Australia would be $4鈥6 billion. That is about one-quarter of all the real-world experience over the past decade in western Europe (and Scandinavia) and North America, with cost estimates of reactors under construction ranging from $14鈥24 billion.
The VC Summer project in South Carolina (two AP1000 reactors) was after the expenditure of at least $12.9 billion. The project was initially estimated to cost $14.1 billion; when it was abandoned, the was about $36 billion.
Largely as a result of the VC Summer disaster, Westinghouse filed for bankruptcy and its parent company Toshiba almost went bankrupt as well.
The cost estimate for the Vogtle project in Georgia, US, (two AP1000 reactors) has doubled to $38.8鈥43.2 billion and will rise further. The project has only survived because of multi-billion-dollar government .
In 2006, Westinghouse it could build an AP1000 reactor for as little as $2 billion 鈥 that's 10 times lower than the current estimate for Vogtle.
In , three of six proposed reactor projects have been abandoned (Moorside, Wylfa, Oldbury), two remain in limbo (Sizewell and Bradwell) and Hinkley Point C is at the early stages of construction.
The estimated combined cost of the two EPR reactors at Hinkley Point, including finance costs, is $48.7 billion (拢26.7 billion 鈥 the EU鈥檚 2014 of 拢24.5 billion plus a 拢2.2 billion announced in July 2017).
A decade ago, the estimated construction cost for one EPR reactor in Britain was almost at聽$3.7 billion.
The聽British National Audit Office聽(NAO) estimates that taxpayer subsidies for Hinkley Point 鈥 primarily in the form of a guaranteed payment of $169/MWh, indexed for inflation, for 35 years 鈥 will amount to , while other credible estimates put the figure as high as .
NAO said Hinkley Point is 鈥渁 risky and expensive project with uncertain strategic and economic benefits" and the British Parliament鈥檚 Public Accounts Committee said it amounts to a 鈥渂ad hand鈥 and 鈥渢he poorest consumers will be hit hardest鈥.
Hitachi abandoned the Wylfa project in Wales after the of the twin-reactor project rose from $26.4 billion to $39.7 billion. Hitachi abandoned the project despite from the British government to take a one-third equity stake in the project; to consider providing all of the required debt financing; and to consider providing a guaranteed minimum payment per unit of electricity (expected to be about $137/MWh).
In France, one EPR reactor is under construction at Flamanville. It is seven years behind schedule and the of $17.7 billion is more than three times the original estimate of $5.4 billion.
In Finland, one EPR reactor is under construction. It is 10 years behind schedule and the of $13.8 billion is nearly three times the original $4.9 billion estimate. The $13.8 billion figure was ; true costs have undoubtedly risen.
Enter culture wars
The far right, however, will not let facts get in the way of its promotion of nuclear power.
NSW Coalition Deputy Premier John Barilaro , against all the evidence, that nuclear power would probably be the cheapest power source for the average household and is 鈥溾 to lower power bills.
Former Coalition prime minister Tony Abbott鈥檚 rationale for supporting nuclear power 鈥 and repealing Howard-era legislation banning nuclear power plants 鈥 is to 鈥溾 with the unions, GetUp!, the Greens and Labor. Last year he promoting nuclear power 鈥渨ould generate another fight with Labor and the green left鈥.
Abbott 鈥 and some others on the far right 鈥 would undoubtedly oppose nuclear power if Labor and the 鈥済reen left鈥 supported it and point to the $14鈥24 billion price tags for new reactors in western Europe and North America.
Abbott seems to have forgotten the experience in Howard's last term as PM. Howard became a nuclear power enthusiast in 2005 and the issue was alive in the 2007 election contest.
Howard鈥檚 nuclear promotion did nothing to divide Labor. On the contrary, it divided the Coalition, with at least 22 Coalition candidates publicly distancing themselves from the government's policy during the election campaign. The policy of promoting nuclear power was seen to be a liability and it was ditched immediately after the election.
Those of us opposed to nuclear power can take some comfort in its increasing marginalisation to the far right. But there are far-right figures highly placed in the federal government and several state governments.
Right-wing National Party MPs are lobbying for a Senate inquiry and for a repeal of the legislation banning nuclear power. It has the sense of a political set-piece: the far right wins control of the numbers on a Senate inquiry and the government agrees with its pro-nuclear findings and repeals the legislation banning nuclear power.
But would PM Scott Morrison agree to repeal the ban given that there is no prospect of nuclear power being a viable option for Australia in the foreseeable future?
Surely that would be an own goal, providing ammunition to political opponents and opening up divisions within the Coalition.
[Dr Jim Green is the editor of the newsletter and national nuclear campaigner with .]