Townsville Bulletin

Bowen misses his chance

- VIKKI CAMPION

THE PROBLEM with Parliament House Canberra is ministers become so isolated they may as well be on a spaceship. The Ministry is disconnect­ed from the backbench: the offices are disconnect­ed from each other; building is disconnect­ed from Canberra; and Canberra is disconnect­ed from the rest of Australia.

So when eminent engineers and nuclear scientists, with a combined 500 years of real-life internatio­nal experience at the top level of complex power systems and an alphabet of letters after their names from Phds to OAMS come into Parliament House, wouldn’t you think the Government MP’S would want to listen to these people?

Apparently, Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen, a former Fairfield Councillor and political adviser, knows more about powering the largest grid on earth than they do.

The Teals must believe they are satisfied with their enlightenm­ent and require no further knowledge, as they also failed to attend the two-day Power Generation in Australia’s Clean Energy Future featuring engineers who have worked on the most complex systems on earth.

They should have heard the warning that we are betting the entire Australian economy on a net zero scheme that cannot work, on renewable systems that are not significan­tly-reducing emissions, and that the actual cost of renewables to 2050 to us is an estimated $1.2 trillion.

Despite repeated invitation­s, Mr Bowen could not make a moment of the two-day conference, about a twominute walk from his desk. He could have even asked questions.

He would have learned that the transition is not cheaper. That once we build wind factories over our prime agricultur­al land, dig up our National Parks for high-voltage transmissi­on lines, chop down our state forests for solar panels, the electricit­y price we pay will never go down - because we will never stop rebuilding them.

Minister Bowen uses costs as an excuse for why he won’t consider nuclear - yet engineer Dr David Hayden Collins, using AEMO figures, calculates the first generation of renewable capital at $383 billion. When you include the costs of replacing batteries every 15 years, wind towers and solar every 20 years to 2050, the cost is five times greater than what Mr Bowen has budgeted - and still reliant on fossil fuel backup.

Where we once built power stations that would serve three generation­s on Australian resources, under Minister Bowen’s plans, we will be relying on Chinese-imported batteries that won’t see your child go from nappies to their Year 9 Naplan test.

Wind towers and solar panels must be pulled down and replaced every 20 years.

Then we must figure out where to bury them - three times before 2050. There is no viable method to recycle wind factories or solar, so they get thrown in landfill.

As NSW virtue signals on banning plastic straws at the pub, all states will need giant landfills for expired renewable junk.

Minister Bowen’s plan requires at least 28,000 kilometres of new transmissi­on lines. His government signed off on Malcolm Turnbull’s legacy project, which will rip up 81 hectares of Kosiosko National Park to erect a 330-kilovolt overhead double-circuit transmissi­on line connecting Snowy Hydro 2.0 to the Australian Energy Market.

This will be repeated over and across regional Australia, as solar and wind farms stamped over prime agricultur­al land from as far as Melton, Ballarat, Hume and New England need to power Sydney and Melbourne.

While Minister Bowen couldn’t make it, his Department of Climate Change in another room briefed out its community batteries program, where they will spend more than the average Australian does on their house, on Chinese batteries they don’t expect to last the decade.

Once each community solar

battery, at a price to the taxpayer of about $550,000 each, dies for good, we will be dropped in an internatio­nal bidding war for more Chinese-made batteries that rely on rare minerals to produce.

This is why no other G20 nation is looking at a grid solely powered by intermitte­nt flows.

As we rely on batteries, solar panels and wind turbines made in China, we impoverish Australia before an aggressive socialist behemoth that has no interest in us having a robust economy.

If he had come, he would have heard not only are we weakening our grid, but we will be expecting it to do more. When his 2050 policy says everything from cars to cement plants will be electric, we will need a 215 per cent increase on the 200 terawatt hours of electricit­y we generate now.

He would have heard advice from the Internatio­nal Energy Associatio­n that you need nuclear to decarbonis­e, from electrical engineers like James Fleay, who deployed major solar farms and built deep sea gas projects, like Prof Stephen Wilson, who developed the bankabilit­y model to store Hungary’s gas in an old oil field after Putin turned off the gas tap from Russia.

Like Dr David Hayden Collins, who cannot believe we are destroying the environmen­t to apparently save the planet.

He could have learned that Canada lead the way with small modular reactors, the only lowemissio­n power generator that can operate reliably, independen­t of the weather. That fission reactors can give an infinite supply of energy on 2.7 acres, plugged into the existing grid with no extra transforme­rs necessary.

They wanted to hear from him too. Why does Minister Bowen say nuclear is too expensive when more than 30 countries in the world rely on nuclear and pay less than we do? Why are family energy bills on nuclear in Canada, South Korea, the US, Taiwan and China are half of ours?

When Minister Bowen tells his colleagues in Question Time that no one will accept nuclear in their electorate, why are millions of Londoners and New Yorkers happy

to live within 60km of a nuclear power plant?

Why do protestors in Finland wave “Go Nuclear” placards? Why do the Finnish Greens adopt it? Why has California’s Parliament voted 157 to 3 to keep their last remaining nuclear power plant open?

The shame is Minister Bowen can go to the dispatch box every day and repeat the junk-level sugar advice he readily accepts.

If he could spend just one conversati­on with any systems engineer, he would learn the crisis we are leaping towards.

If a single engineer could replace the swagger of Bowen at the dispatch box with the cogent details of the grid before us, Australia would be better informed, better placed and less afraid.

Minister Bowen’s office on the blue carpet was a few hundred metres away from the room of experts on Thursday after the house rose and Friday when he was tweeting victorious­ly of his electric vehicle discount passing the Senate.

Just a few small steps for a very fit man could have been a giant leap in his knowledge.

 ?? ?? Chris Bowen during Question Time. Picture: NCA Newswire / Gary Ramage
Electrical engineer James Fleay.
Chris Bowen during Question Time. Picture: NCA Newswire / Gary Ramage Electrical engineer James Fleay.
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 ?? ?? Professor Stephen Wilson.
Professor Stephen Wilson.
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