The Borneo Post (Sabah)

South Australia could take 13 pct of globe’s nuclear waste – report

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SYDNEY: A nuclear dump in an Australian state could handle 13 per cent of the world’s atomic waste and prove “highly profitable” in the long term, initial findings from a high-level inquiry said Monday.

The prospect of a nuclear dump in the vast nation has proven controvers­ial in the past. Australia has yet to decide where to store its own radioactiv­e waste let alone any imported material.

But the Nuclear Fuel Cycle Royal Commission, establishe­d last year by the South Australia state government, said a facility accepting global waste created by power generation, industry, medicine and research could be viable.

“The storage and disposal of used nuclear fuel in South Australia is likely to deliver substantia­l economic benefits to the South Australian community,” it said in what it described as “tentative findings”.

“An integrated storage and disposal facility would be commercial­ly viable and

The storage and disposal of used nuclear fuel in South Australia is likely to deliver substantia­l economic benefits to the South Australian community. An integrated storage and disposal facility would be commercial­ly viable and the storage facility could be operationa­l in the late 2020s. Nuclear Fuel Cycle Royal Commission statement

the storage facility could be operationa­l in the late 2020s.”

Financial assessment­s suggested that a facility with the capacity to store 138,000 tHM (tonnes heavy metal) of used fuel and 390,000 square metres of intermedia­te-level waste operating over a century “would be highly profitable in a range of scenarios”, it said.

“Those volumes represent about 13 percent of the projected global fuel inventory,” the report said, adding community consent would be essential.

South Australia state Premier Jay Weather ill said his government had not formed a position for or against a nuclear waste dump. “I anticipate that for many South Australian­s, this will understand­ably be an emotioncha­rged debate. However it is important that everyone is afforded the opportunit­y to have their say,” he told reporters.

But the state’s Greens leader Mark Parnell urged the government to fight any proposal for the state to become “the world’s nuclear waste dump”.

“The Royal Commission’s tentative findings on the nuclear waste dump are based on dubious economics, heroic assumption­s and a big dose of guesswork,” he said in a statement.

The commission’s final report is due in May.

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