Dutton’s bold pledge on nuclear power
Watch and learn here :Dutton’s bold pledge on nuclear power (msn.com)
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has for the first time spruiked the Coalition’s controversial nuclear energy plan in an electorate earmarked for a new “modular reactor”, promising the ambitious project will be more efficient than replacing wind turbines “every 25 years”.
The Liberal leader on Monday championed the contested energy project in Mount Murchison, a town of little more than 100 people in the Shire of Banana on Queensland’s central coast, following the unveiling earlier this year of the Coalition’s nuclear energy plan.
Dutton’s bold pledge on nuclear power© Provided by NewsWire
Despite pushback from energy experts about the proposal’s feasibility, Mr Dutton said nuclear power would be “good for jobs” and “the underpinning of24/7 reliable power into the future”, blaming Labor for warnings about future power shortages.
“The Coalition’s policy of renewables and gas and of nuclear (power) is absolutely essential to keeping the lights on, to having cheaper power and to making sure that we can reduce our emissions,” Mr Dutton said on Monday alongside Liberal Flynn MP Colin Boyce.
He claimed warnings by the energy regulator about brownouts were based on Labor policies. “The PM and Chris Bowen have us on this 100 per cent renewables-only path which is what’s driving up the price of your power bill. It’s what is making our system unreliable,” Mr Dutton said.
“If we want to have cheaper power, if we want greener power, and if we want reliable power, then nuclear is the way in which we’ll provide that 24/7power into the future … let’s have an honest discussion because Australians are really struggling under this government.”
Mr Dutton hit out at investments by Labor in “green hydrogen” projects that he said were “not proven, not scalable” and claimed that nuclear reactors did not need to be replaced “every 25 years” like wind and would provide jobs amid the winding down of coal power.
The Liberal leader said he was “encouraged by discussions with the local community” about nuclear power but remained mum of how much the ambitious project would cost amid doubts about the targeted start date of as early as2035.
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Of the seven sites selected, five are in Coalition-held seats. In an earlier press release, Mr Dutton said the sites offered “important technical attributes needed for net-zero emissions nuclear plants”, including water capacity and transmissions infrastructure.
Under the plan, the Coalition proposed the government would fund the construction of the plants in partnership with experienced nuclear energy companies. The government would own the sites in a similar system set-up to the Snowy Hydro and NBN networks.
Without nuclear in the mix, the mad Bowen's scheme of an attempted 100% renewables will fail dismally and let the future generations of Australian's seriously down and Australia with insufficient reliable base load power for essential 100% power requirements. eg. Hospitals; data centres: A.I.; Emergency services; the Military etc, and who knows what in the future!!!