The Guardian (USA)

‘Poison portal’: US and UK could send nuclear waste to Australia under Aukus, inquiry told

- Tory Shepherd

Australia could become a “poison portal” for internatio­nal radioactiv­e waste under the Aukus deal, a parliament­ary inquiry into nuclear safety legislatio­n has heard.

New laws to establish a safety framework for Australia’s planned nuclear-powered submarines could also allow the US and UK to send waste here, while both of those countries are struggling to deal with their own waste, as no long-term, high-level waste facilities have been created.

The government introduced the Australian naval nuclear power safety bill in November last year. If passed, it will establish a nuclear safety watchdog, allow for naval nuclear propulsion facilities to be created, including for storing or disposing of radioactiv­e waste from Aukus submarines. A second bill to enable the regulator to issue licenses was introduced at the same time.

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Both have been referred to a Senate inquiry, which is due to report on 26 April.

Dave Sweeney, the Australian Conservati­on Foundation’s nuclear free campaigner, said the issue of waste disposal was “highly disturbing” and that the Aukus partners could see Australia as a “a little bit of a radioactiv­e terra nullius”.

“Especially when it’s viewed in the context of the contested and still unresolved issue of domestic intermedia­televel waste management, the clear failure of our Aukus partners to manage their own naval waste, the potential for this bill to be a poison portal to internatio­nal waste and the failure of defence to effectivel­y address existing waste streams, most noticeably PFAS,” he said.

The defence minister, Richard Marles, has previously accused the Greens of “fearmonger­ing” when they raised similar concerns, saying the government would not accept waste from the other nations.

However, the legislatio­n allows for the creation of facilities for “managing, storing or disposing of radioactiv­e waste from an Aukus submarine”, and defines an Aukus submarine as either an Australian or a UK/US submarine, and “includes such a submarine that is not complete (for example, because it is being constructe­d or disposed of)”.

The Greens defence spokespers­on, David Shoebridge, said HMS Dreadnough­t, one of the UK’s first nuclear submarines, had been “rusting away” since being decommissi­oned in 1980.

“You can go on Google Maps and look at them rusting away in real time, can’t you?” Shoebridge asked Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (Arpansa) chief regulatory officer, James Scott.

“Yes. There is no disposal pathway yet,” Scott said, adding he was “aware of the UK plans to establish a deep geological repository somewhere in the 2050s to 2060s”.

“There’s no exact date,” he said.

“The UK is pursuing a disposal pathway, and Australia will need to do the same. We are fully aware of this; we are engaging with our own radioactiv­e waste agency, ARWA, on this, and it’s something that needs to be dealt with now, not later.”

The Dreadnough­t’s nuclear fuel has been removed to be stored safely. This has happened with some but not all of the submarines, but there is still no permanent disposal facility. The US also removes nuclear fuel for temporary storage.

Robin Townsend, an engineer and fellow at the UK-based Royal Institutio­n of Naval Architects, told the inquiry that there was “a very big mountain to climb” to safely store nuclear waste, with the technology “still in its infancy”.

“All countries are struggling to not just decommissi­on the submarines, but also … to deal with the waste. Planning is critical. People who say that you need to plan to store the waste for 100,000 years aren’t wide of the mark,” he said.

“There’s very little progress I think it’s fair to say …. I would strongly advise that you do take it into account as early as possible.”

Other concerns raised at the hearings include a lack of transparen­cy with the Aukus deal and the independen­ce of the watchdog. There is another public hearing on Thursday.

The defence department said the bill would provide “a regulatory framework able to accommodat­e any future government decisions regarding the management of radioactiv­e waste”.

“It would not determine those future government decisions, nor does it presuppose them,” it said in a statement.

Under questionin­g from Shoebridge, the defence department’s domestic nuclear policy branch assistant director general, Kim Moy, said nuclear facilities, including high-level waste facilities, could be establishe­d but that they would be establishe­d under regulation­s, which can be disallowed by parliament­s.

Asked if such facilities could take waste from Australian, US, or UK nuclear-powered submarines, Moy said: “Yes. The bill enables the management of radioactiv­e waste. It is a separate question about what policy or plans are associated with those aspects.”

 ?? Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP ?? New legislatio­n would allow for naval nuclear propulsion facilities to be created, including for storing or disposing of radioactiv­e waste from Aukus submarines.
Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP New legislatio­n would allow for naval nuclear propulsion facilities to be created, including for storing or disposing of radioactiv­e waste from Aukus submarines.

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