Ausatralia's Nuclear Reactor in your backyard?
Nuclear Reactor - will it be in your backyard?
Any
government prepared to enter into the nuclear debate must
also be
prepared to name which communities it will
impose any proposed nuclear
facilities upon, said Greens
MLC Ian Cohen today.
“No community in Australia will be
willing to put up with a nuclear
reactor in its
backyard. The fury expressed by residents in and around
Port Stephens will be echoed no matter where you go.” Mr
Cohen said.
“The Australia Institute’s naming of Port
Stephens as an appropriate
place for a nuclear power
plant according to energy experts brings to the
fore the
debate which must occur about the location of any proposed
nuclear facilities. It’s all very well for the federal
government to talk
about nuclear energy as an
inevitability in abstract terms, but when
you start
looking at whose backyard the plant would actually be
located
in, the argument for nuclear power looks a lot
shakier.
“At present the construction of a nuclear power
facility in NSW would
be illegal under the Uranium
Mining and Nuclear Facilities
(Prohibitions) Act 1986.
It is crucial that the NSW government stand up against any
moves by the federal government to implement its crazy
nuclear agenda.
“I am greatly concerned about some
elements of the ALP and of this
state government
supporting nuclear power. None of the problems of safety
and disposal of nuclear waste have been dealt with in
the decades that
nuclear power has been around. I
implore the state government to show
leadership on this
issue and categorically reject nuclear power.
“Today I
asked Treasurer and Minister for the Hunter Michael Costa a
question in Parliament about whether he supported the
location of a
nuclear power plant in Port Stephens or
any other part of the Hunter. He
skirted around the
issue and failed to answer the question. This is hardly
comforting for residents of the Hunter region.” Mr
Cohen
said.