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Australia Gives a Firm ‘No’ to UK-US Agreement to Advance Nuclear Technology

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Australia Gives a Firm ‘No’ to UK-US Agreement to Advance Nuclear Technology

The Albanese government declined to join its AUKUS partners in advancing the nuclear energy industry, sparking criticism from the opposition. 

Australia Gives a Firm ‘No’ to UK-US Agreement to Advance Nuclear Technology
Credit: Depositphotos

The Albanese government has been put on the spot by a new agreement – which it has declined to join – signed by the United Kingdom and the United States to speed up the deployment of “cutting edge” nuclear technology.

The original version of the British government’s press release announcing the agreement said Australia, among a number of other countries, was expected to sign it. But the reference was removed from the statement.

Later The Guardian reported, “The U.K. government has conceded it made a mistake in including Australia in a list of countries that has signed up to a U.S.-U.K. civil nuclear deal.”

Australia is working with the U.K. and the U.S. in AUKUS, a trilateral alliance that will provide Australia with its first nuclear-powered submarines.

The new agreement promotes nuclear technology to help decarbonize industry and boost energy security. U.K. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband and the U.S. deputy Secretary of Energy, David Turk, signed the deal in Baku during COP29.

A spokesperson for Australian Energy Minister Chris Bowen, who is at the COP meeting, said: 

Australia is not signing this agreement as we do not have a nuclear energy industry.

We recognize that some countries may choose to use nuclear energy, depending on national circumstances.

Our international partners understand that Australia’s abundance of renewable energy resources makes nuclear power, including nuclear power through small modular reactors, an unviable option for inclusion in our energy mix for decarbonization efforts.

Australia would remain as observers to the agreement to continue to support its scientists in other nuclear research fields, the spokesperson said.

Opposition leader Peter Dutton responded by saying, “Australia is starting to become an international embarrassment under Chris Bowen and Mr Albanese.”

In Parliament, Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles – who was the acting prime minister while Albanese was attending the G-20 summit in Brazil – said that if Australia pursued a path of nuclear energy, it would add AU$1,200 to the bills of each household in the country.

The statement from the British government said the agreement “will help pool together billions of pounds worth of nuclear research and development – including the world’s leading academic institutions and nuclear innovators.”

New technologies such as advanced modular reactors could help decarbonize heavy industry including aviation fuel, and hydrogen or advanced steel production, the statement said.

Nuclear power is at the heart of the Dutton opposition’s energy policy. The Coalition has identified seven sites around the country for proposed nuclear power plants.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article

The Conversation

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