Conservative parties in Australia believe that nuclear power is popular 鈥 based on biased push-polling.
A Newspoll survey led to a page one听听in Murdoch鈥檚 Australian, under this headline: 鈥淧owerful majority supports nuclear option for energy security鈥.
The听Australian鈥檚听political editor Simon Benson听听in February: 鈥淟abor is now at risk of ending up on the wrong side of history in its fanatical opposition to nuclear power.鈥
The party 鈥渋gnores this community sentiment potentially at its peril鈥, he added.
The story was prominent across the Murdoch-owned media including .
The Newspoll question was: 鈥淭here is a proposal to build several small modular nuclear reactors around Australia to produce zero-emissions energy on the sites of existing coal-fired power stations once they are retired. Do you approve or disapprove of this proposal?鈥
Push-polling
The results were: 55% approval; 31% disapproval and 14% 鈥渄on鈥檛 know鈥.
However, the poll was a crude example of push-polling designed to generate pro-nuclear results and headlines. Its many faults were identified by polling experts听听and听听and economist听.
To give just one example of the bias: replacing Australia鈥檚 21,300 megawatts of coal-fired power generation capacity with small modular reactors (SMRs) would require a large number of reactors, not 鈥渟everal鈥, as Newspoll asserted.
If, for example, NuScale Power鈥檚 77-megawatt reactors were chosen, 277 reactors would be required.
In broad terms, the tricks used by pro-nuclear push-pullers involve swaying opinions with biased preliminary comments, biased questions, limited response options, and misreporting the findings.
Specific tricks include:
鈥 Presenting or implying a narrow or false choice - as with the implication in the Newspoll survey that Australians could choose between nuclear reactors or coal.
鈥 Asking respondents if nuclear power should be 鈥渃onsidered鈥 or if they support an 鈥溾, and then conflating support for those bland propositions with support for nuclear power itself.
鈥 Linking nuclear power to climate change abatement without mention of the downsides or expense of nuclear power, or alternative and arguably better ways to address climate change.
鈥 Asking respondents if they support 鈥溾 nuclear power or 鈥溾 without noting that 鈥渁dvanced鈥 nuclear power reactors are few in number, they aren鈥檛 really 鈥渁dvanced鈥 in any meaningful sense and, in some cases, they are听 or pose increased weapons proliferation risks.
鈥 Reporting on poll results without clearly stating what the actual survey questions were.
鈥 Avoiding the word 鈥渘uclear鈥 by referring to small modular reactors, or avoiding the word reactors by using phrases such as 鈥渢he latest nuclear energy technologies鈥.
鈥 Using the word 鈥渟mall鈥, as in 鈥渟mall modular reactors鈥: expect to see more of this, it seems to work well despite the听听of the most advanced SMR project in the US, the NuScale project in Idaho.
鈥 Reporting self-selecting, online polls as if the results mean anything. For example Australian academic Oscar Archer is听听by a meaningless ABC poll, a meaningless Murdoch tabloid poll and a meaningless Channel 7 Sunrise poll.
Conservative parties fall for push-polling
Partly because of the Murdoch media鈥檚 promotion of nuclear power and its push-polling, the federal Coalition opposition has 鈥溾 to introduce nuclear power to Australia by the mid-2030s if it wins the election to be held no later than May 2025.
The Coalition believes that most support nuclear power, that younger people are particularly enthusiastic and that local communities will welcome a nuclear power reactor.
The problem is that those views are underpinned by nothing other than biased听.听
Unbiased听听find that support for nuclear power falls short of a majority; that Australians support renewables to a far greater extent than nuclear power and nuclear power is among the least popular energy sources; that a majority do not want nuclear reactors built near where they live; and that most Australians are concerned about nuclear accidents and nuclear waste.
Even the push-polling results should raise red flags for the Coalition.
A 2019 Roy Morgan听听preceded its question with this highly dubious assertion: 鈥淚f the worries about carbon dioxide are a real problem, many suggest that the cleanest energy source Australia can use is nuclear power.鈥
Even with that blatant attempt to frame a response, a bare 51% majority expressed support for nuclear power.
Locals 鈥榟ostile鈥櫶
The Coalition hasn鈥檛 even formally released its nuclear power policy yet 鈥 that will happen in the coming weeks.
But already the policy has been disastrous for the Coalition with near-zero support beyond the far-right of the Coalition and the far-right media, in particular the Murdoch-Sky echo chamber.
Opposition to locally-built nuclear power reactors has been consistently demonstrated in opinion polls for 20 years or more.
A听听was typical of the others: 28% of respondents 鈥渨ould be comfortable living close to a nuclear power plant鈥 while 60% would not.
The Coalition proposes replacing retiring coal power plants with nuclear reactors and expects an enthusiastic response from local communities. A 鈥淐oalition source鈥澨齮he Murdoch media that Coalition MPs 鈥渉ad convinced themselves that people would be queuing up鈥 for nuclear reactors.
But recent focus group research carried out in the Hunter Valley in NSW and the Latrobe Valley in Victoria 鈥 two of the coal regions that might be targeted 鈥 found that voters are 鈥溾 to plans for reactors in their areas.
Local hostility is just one of the problems facing the Coalition鈥檚 nuclear policy. Coalition MPs have repeatedly said that the development of nuclear power would require bipartisan support.
But nuclear power isn鈥檛 supported by the Labor Party and it even faces strong resistance from within the Coalition.
There is bipartisan opposition to nuclear power in most of the four states with operating coal plants that are likely to be targeted in a coal-to-nuclear program 鈥 Victoria, Queensland, New South Wales, and Western Australia.
Labor state governments in those four states are opposed to nuclear power and Liberal/Coalition opposition leaders are听either 听to nuclear power, or have failed to endorse it.
Colourful commentary
Tony Barry, former deputy state director and strategist for the Victorian Liberal Party and now a director at the research consultancy RedBridge,听听the Coalition鈥檚 decision to make nuclear power the centrepiece of its energy and climate policy as 鈥渢he longest suicide note in Australian political history鈥.
On the strength of a detailed RedBridge analysis of Australians鈥 attitudes to nuclear power, Barry听听that just 35% support nuclear power and that only coal is less popular.
He said if the Coalition is to have any chance of winning the next election, it will not be with nuclear power.听
Colourful commentary has also been offered to Murdoch journalists by Coalition MPs under cover of anonymity.
One Coalition MP said the nuclear policy is 鈥溾; another听听the Liberal and National Party rooms are 鈥渋n a panic鈥 about the nuclear policy and 鈥渢hey don鈥檛 know what to do鈥, and another said the nuclear policy is 鈥溾.
Former Coalition prime minister Malcolm Turnbull also听听the nuclear policy as 鈥渂onkers鈥.
He said听nuclear power鈥檚 only utility is 鈥渁s another culture war issue for the right-wing angertainment ecosystem, and a means of supporting fossil fuels by delaying and distracting the rollout of renewables鈥, and that nuclear power 鈥渋s exactly what you don鈥檛 need to firm renewables.鈥 Turnbull describes ultra-conservative Coalition leader Peter Dutton as a 鈥溾 who says 鈥溾 about nuclear power.
Matt Kean, the NSW Liberal MP and former deputy premier,听: 鈥淚 not only regard advocacy for nuclear power as against the public interest on environmental, engineering and economic grounds, I also see it as an attempt to delay and defer responsible and decisive action on climate change in a way that seems to drive up power prices in NSW by delaying renewables.鈥
John Hewson, the former federal Liberal leader,听听the Dutton opposition has become 鈥渞idiculous鈥 with its pro-nuclear, anti-renewables stance which is economic 鈥渘onsense鈥, and that Dutton may be promoting nuclear 鈥渙n behalf of large fossil-fuel donors knowing nuclear power will end up being too expensive and take too long to implement, thereby extending Australia鈥檚 reliance on coal and natural gas鈥.
鈥楧og whistle to climate denialists鈥
The cynicism reflects concerns about the Coalition鈥檚听听to federal Labor鈥檚 target of 82% renewables by 2030 and the Coalition鈥檚 plans to expand gas and prolong the use of coal.
The Nationals want a听听on the rollout of large-scale renewables.
Professor John Quiggin听听that, in practice, support for nuclear power is support for coal; he has described nuclear advocacy in Australia as a听.
Even in the Murdoch-Sky right-wing echo-chamber, splits are emerging.
A Murdoch media editor听听the Coalition鈥檚 nuclear policy is 鈥渟tark raving mad鈥 and 鈥渕adness 鈥 total madness鈥.
Australia鈥檚 big private electricity generators 鈥 AGL Energy, Alinta, EnergyAustralia and Origin Energy 鈥 have听听nuclear energy as a viable source of power for their customers. One senior executive听听that power bills would triple if the nuclear path was pursued. Industry isn鈥檛 interested and trade unions are听.
The chief scientist opposes to the introduction of nuclear power to Australia, as do at least two former chief scientists and the NSW chief scientist.
A recent听听by the Investor Group on Climate Change asked big institutional investors with $37 trillion under management which energy and climate solutions they believed had good long-term returns. Nuclear power was ranked听听of the 14 options, renewable energy first.
History repeats itself
In the mid-2000s, then Coalition prime minister John Howard鈥檚 promotion of nuclear power, hoping it would split the Labor Party and the environment movement.
Labor wasn鈥檛 split, nor was the environment movement. But at least 22 Coalition candidates publicly distanced themselves from Howard鈥檚 nuclear policy during the 2007 campaign.
Howard lost his seat, the Coalition lost the election and the nuclear policy was ditched immediately.
History would repeat itself with Dutton鈥檚 ill-advised promotion of nuclear power.
Labor MPs can鈥檛 believe their luck. Speaking in parliament, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese听听 Dutton to a nuclear reactor: 鈥淥ne is risky, expensive, divisive and toxic; the other is a nuclear reactor. The bad news for the Liberal Party is that you can put both on a corflute and we certainly intend to do so.鈥
[Dr Jim Green is the national nuclear campaigner with听听and a member of the听. This article was first published in .]