Nuclear dumps, storage and waste

The Australia-United States military alliance and the complexities of building an anti-war movement were discussed听at the Sydney Anti-AUKUS Coalition conference. Jim McIlroy reports.

Climate march NYC

Ahead of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Summit on September 18鈥19, thousands of people in 16 cities across 8 countries gathered to call on the UN and governments to stop Japan's discharge of nuclear waste into the Pacific Ocean, reports Kerry Smith.

Fuskushima protest Sydney

Katti Jisuk Seo, a young Korean-German woman, told a Sydney protest against Japan's dumping of radioactive contaminated wastewater that the danger posed to marine life and the food chain is unacceptable, reports Peter Boyle.

Protesters took a stand against Japan's听dumping of Fukushima鈥檚 nuclear waste into the Pacific Ocean and called on Australia to do more. Jim McIlroy reports.

Jason Bilney, Chair of the Barngarla Determination Aboriginal Corporation that led the fight to stop the radioactive听dump,听described the judge鈥檚 finding as a 鈥渧ictory for all First Nations people鈥. Renfrey Clarke reports.

Sign on to this open letter to Prime Minister Scott Morrison and defence minister Peter Dutton, initiated by several听peace groups.

Opponents of the federal push for a national nuclear waste dump near Kimba,听South Australia, argue it is unnecessary and dangerous, writes Renfrey Clarke.

Close to 1000 people gathered outside Parliament House in Adelaide on November 3 to protest against federal government plans to build a national radioactive waste dump in South Australia.

A nuclear waste facility site is on the cards for South Australia. But the majority of people have come out strongly against what they see as a natural disaster coming their way.

More than 1500 people, including some who travelled hundreds of kilometres from the Eyre Peninsula and the Flinders Ranges, gathered outside Parliament House in Adelaide on December 2 for the Don鈥檛 Dump on SA rally.

Last November, two-thirds of the 350 members of a South Australian-government initiated rejected "under any circumstances" the plan to import high-level nuclear waste from around the world as a money-making venture.

Usually, when people mention dying in a ditch, they are discussing something they would much rather avoid. But for the South Australian state Labor government of Premier Jay Weatherill, dying in a ditch seems a positive ambition.

For Weatherill and his cabinet, the 鈥渄itch鈥 is the government鈥檚 plan to host up to a third of the world鈥檚 high-level nuclear waste in a giant dump in the state鈥檚 remote north. The dump scheme was rejected decisively on November 6 by a government-organised 鈥淐itizens鈥 Jury鈥.