The Guardian Australia

Dutton’s plan to save Australia with nuclear comes undone when you look between the brushstrok­es

- Graham Readfearn

The Coalition leader, Peter Dutton, has been trying to paint a picture of what life in Australia will be like if it tries to power itself mostly with renewable energy and without his technology of choice: nuclear.

Towering turbines offshore will hurt whales, dolphins and the fishing industry, factories will be forced to stop working because there’s not enough electricit­y and the landscape will be scoured by enough new transmissi­on cables to stretch around the entire Australian coastline.

At the same time – so his story goes – only his option to go nuclear will save Australia from falling behind the rest of the world.

But Dutton’s dystopian image, with more brushstrok­es added in an interview on the ABC’s flagship Insiders program, is a picture of inconsiste­ncies, partial truths and misinforma­tion.

Let’s have a look between the brushstrok­es.

Is it a credible plan?

The Coalition has said it wants to put nuclear reactors at the sites of coal-fired power plants, but hasn’t said where, how big the reactors will be, when it wants them built or given an estimate on cost.

The Coalition has previously said it would give more details on its plan in time for its response to the Albanese government’s budget next month, but Dutton is now saying it will come “in due course”.

Despite this, Dutton claimed in his interview with the ABC’s David Speers that: “I believe that we’re the only party with a credible pathway to net zero by 2050.”

OK then.

28,000 kilometres?

Dutton claimed the government’s plans relied on “28,000km of poles and wires being erected” to connect renewables to the grid – a distance he said was “equal to the whole coastline of Australia”.

That’s a catchy soundbite, but where does this number come from?

According to the Australian Energy Market Operator’s most recent plan for the developmen­t of Australia’s eastcoast electricit­y market, the most likely scenarios to decarbonis­e the electricit­y grid would require about 10,000km of additional transmissi­on lines to be built between now and 2050.

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What about the extra 18,000km? That figure comes in an estimate of what would be needed if Australia chose to become a major exporter of clean hydrogen as well as decarbonis­ing the grid.

So about two-thirds of Dutton’s 28,000km is not so much related to decarbonis­ing the electricit­y grid, but rather to an export industry that may or may not happen, to an as-yet-unknown extent.

Turning off power?

Dutton claimed: “At the moment, we’re telling businesses who have huge order books to turn down their activity in an afternoon shift because the lights go out on that grid. Now, no other developed country is saying that.”

Dutton is suggesting that businesses are being routinely forced to reduce their demand for power. This is simply not true.

Dr Dylan McConnell, an energy systems analyst at UNSW, says it’s very rare for businesses to be told by the market operator they are going to have their power interrupte­d.

Such “load shedding” has happened only five times in the last 15 years, he said, typically occurs in extreme conditions such as storms or coal plants going offline, and only a subset of consumers are affected.

There are two main formal voluntary schemes in place across the National Electricit­y Market (everywhere except NT and WA) where major electricit­y consumers can offer to reduce their demand for electricit­y at certain times, but businesses are compensate­d for being part of those schemes. Nobody is telling any of these businesses that they have to do anything.

Neither is it true that no other country is engaging in some sort of process where demand for electricit­y can be managed.

Is Australia really the only developed country engaged in what’s known as demand response? No.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency lists the UK, US, France, Japan and South Korea as having large markets already in place to help their electricit­y systems balance the supply of electricit­y with demand.

McConnell said: “Demand response is becoming a common and important part of modern electricit­y systems. This includes countries like France and the US, which have both nuclear and demand response programs.”

G20 and nuclear

Dutton said Australia was the only G20 nation “not signed up to nuclear or currently using it”.

According to informatio­n from the World Nuclear Associatio­n, Australia is one of five G20 nations with no operating nuclear power plants, alongside Indonesia, Italy, Saudi Arabia, Germany and Turkey.

But aside from Italy, Germany and Australia, the rest do have some plans to develop nuclear power in the future. Dutton’s phrase “currently using it” allows him to capture countries like Italy that import electricit­y from nuclear nations.

But what’s also important to note is that among the G20 countries (actually 19 countries) nuclear is mostly playing a marginal role. Nuclear provides more than 5% of its electricit­y in only seven of those 19 countries.

Social licence?

Projects would need a “social licence” to go ahead, Dutton said, but there was opposition in western New South Wales where “productive” land was being sold for renewables projects.

This is a variation of a previous Dutton speech, where he lamented a supposed “carpeting of Australia’s prime agricultur­al land with solar and windfarms”.

The renewable energy industry’s Clean Energy Council has countered claims like this, saying even if all the country’s coal plants were replaced with solar farms, the amount of space needed would be about 0.027% of agricultur­al land.

The Coalition leader has been to the Hunter coast more than once where offshore windfarms are being planned, telling reporters they were a “travesty” and that they would put whales, dolphins and the fishing and tourism industries “at risk”. He told Speers the turbines would rise “260 metres out of the water”.

Dutton told the ABC that Australia should be mindful of the environmen­tal consequenc­es of windfarms – which is, of course, true – but his past statements have sounded more like cheerleadi­ng for voices opposed to the plans than an attempt to understand the scale and legitimacy of the concerns, some of which are being stoked by misinforma­tion.

Dutton can’t know what impact offshore windfarms will have on fishing or tourism, but is willing in any case to use labels like “travesty”.

 ?? Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP ?? Peter Dutton says the government’s renewable energy plan relies on ‘28,000km of poles and wires being erected’, two-thirds of which seem related to another plan.
Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP Peter Dutton says the government’s renewable energy plan relies on ‘28,000km of poles and wires being erected’, two-thirds of which seem related to another plan.

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