The Guardian Australia

This is what happens when an uncosted Coalition thought-bubble on nuclear power is presented as a concrete proposal

- Graham Readfearn

What happens when an uncosted Coalition thought-bubble to deploy an unavailabl­e nuclear power technology across the country’s electricit­y grid is presented in an opinion poll as a concrete proposal?

You get a page one story in The Australian under the headline: “Powerful majority supports nuclear option for energy security” backed with two pieces of commentary, an editorial and a narrative reliably echoed by Sky News Australia.

The Australian was reporting the result of its Newspoll survey that asked: “There is a proposal to build several small modular nuclear reactors around Australia to produce zero-emissions energy on the sites of existing coal-fired power stations once they are retired. Do you approve or disapprove of this proposal?”

Anyone reading that question might think there was an actual proposal in place that could be scrutinise­d. Perhaps the proposal says how quickly it could be implemente­d, or explain the costs and benefits?

Except there isn’t any such proposal. The Coalition’s shadow energy spokespers­on Ted O’Brien has floated this concept but, right now, it is a thought-bubble.

Two experts raised concerns with Temperatur­e Check that the results of the poll gave little insight into what the public thought.

“This doesn’t tell you what most Australian­s think about this proposal because most Australian­s haven’t heard of it,” said Dr Kevin Bonham, an independen­t polling analyst.

“What you are getting is when people are asked this question in a poll without exposure to the surroundin­g debate, they respond favourably. I’m not a huge fan of the way this sort of question gets reported.”

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Emeritus professor Murray Goot of Macquarie University, a polling expert, said the poll had made “no attempt to ascertain whether the public has heard of the issue, much less what it knows about it”.

“The fact that such oversights are typical of questions asked by polls about other aspects of public policy, hardly make this shortcomin­g any more acceptable,” he said.

Temperatur­e Check requested comment from The Australian but did not get a response. The polling company Pyxis, which carried out the Newspoll survey, declined to comment.

Powerful majority?

The poll gave respondent­s five options to choose from – strongly approve, somewhat approve, don’t know, somewhat disapprove and strongly disapprove.

In The Australian, the results were characteri­sed as a “powerful majority” by adding the approval categories together to show that 55% of people approved and 31% disapprove­d. Younger people were particular­ly in favour, The Australian reported.

Goot said the results showed most respondent­s did not feel strongly “one way or the other” but this distinctio­n wasn’t made in commentary in The Australian.

According to the poll results, the number of respondent­s who either strongly disapprove­d or chose “don’t know” came to 31% – a higher figure

than the 22% who strongly approved of the “proposal”.

Goot said “majority support” was being confused for “strong support”, adding: “A metre wide doesn’t necessaril­y mean a metre thick.”

But whatever weight is put on a single poll question, the result is not out of kilter with previous polls that have tested public sentiment on nuclear.

Essential poll has asked three times the question: “To what extent do you support or oppose Australia developing nuclear power plants for the generation of electricit­y?”

Overall support (that is, people who said they either strongly or somewhat supported nuclear) was at 50% in September 2021 and in October 2023. That was up from 39% in June 2019.

Small generators and big costs

The Coalition has talked about nuclear mostly in the context of so-called “small modular reactors” (SMRs) – a technology not currently commercial­ly available and a different propositio­n than convention­al nuclear that has helped power several advanced economies for decades.

But as this column has written before, the costs of SMRs and the time it will take to develop them are uncertain, and the outlook is not favourable.

Both The Australian and Sky News featured an artist’s impression of one SMR being proposed by Westinghou­se – a 300MW plant the company has said would cost about $1.5bn each and might be available “in the early 2030s”.

For context, such a plant’s capacity would be about one tenth the size of Australia’s biggest coal plant or about two-thirds the size of one of Australia’s largest windfarms.

The Coalition and other pro-nuclear backers have argued SMRs could be placed near the sites of retired coal plants, reducing the need to build new transmissi­on lines and towers required to connect solar and windfarms to the grid.

But the current government target aims for 82% of electricit­y to be coming from renewables by 2030 – several years before any SMR is likely to be commercial­ly available.

A CSIRO estimate puts a theoretica­l cost of power from SMRs in 2030 between $212 and $353 per MWh, compared to between $66 and $98 per MWh for solar and wind.

Nuclear energy is now banned in Australia but CSIRO says if a decision was made today to allow it, it would not expect to see an SMR operating until 2038.

The only SMR design to have been approved in the US – based in Utah and one promoted by the Coalition – was abandoned in November over rising costs.

Nuclear advocates at the US thinktank the Breakthrou­gh Institute say the policy and regulatory regimes around the world are tilted against nuclear, but the institute has highlighte­d a “graveyard” of setbacks for other advanced nuclear projects, warning “efforts to commercial­ise a new generation of advanced nuclear reactors are simply not on track”.

According to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA), renewable energy currently accounts for 30% of all electricit­y generated globally (about half of which comes from hydropower) compared with nuclear, which accounts for 9%.

The IEA says while the prospects for convention­al nuclear are looking more favourable, it expects the technology’s share of electricit­y generation to stay the same in all its future scenarios for electricit­y generation – even those that would see the world reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions.

 ?? Photograph: Westinghou­se/Reuters ?? The Australian and Sky News featured an artist’s impression of one SMR being proposed by Westinghou­se – a 300MW plant the company has said might be available ‘in the early 2030s’.
Photograph: Westinghou­se/Reuters The Australian and Sky News featured an artist’s impression of one SMR being proposed by Westinghou­se – a 300MW plant the company has said might be available ‘in the early 2030s’.

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