The Guardian Australia

Australia risks being ‘world’s nuclear waste dump’ unless Aukus laws changed, critics say

- Daniel Hurst Foreign affairs and defence correspond­ent

Australia risks becoming the “world’s nuclear waste dump” unless the Albanese government moves to rewrite its proposed Aukus laws, critics say.

A Labor-chaired inquiry has called for the legislativ­e safeguard to specifical­ly rule out accepting high-level nuclear waste from the US and the UK. One of the members of a Senate committee that reviewed the draft laws, independen­t senator Lidia Thorpe, said the legislatio­n “should be setting off alarm bells” because “it could mean that Australia becomes the world’s nuclear waste dump”.

The government’s bill for regulating nuclear safety talks about “managing, storing or disposing of radioactiv­e waste from an Aukus submarine”, which it defines broadly as Australia, UK or US submarines.

In a report published on Monday, the Senate’s foreign affairs, defence and trade legislatio­n committee said this wording did not reflect the government’s promise not to accept high-level nuclear waste.

It recommende­d that the government consider “amending the bill so that a distinctio­n is made between Australia’s acceptance of low-level nuclear waste from Aukus partners, but non-acceptance of high-level nuclear waste”.

The government has left the door open to accepting low-level waste from US and UK nuclear-powered submarines when they conduct rotational visits to Western Australia in the first phase of the Aukus plan. Lowlevel waste contains small amounts of radioactiv­ity and include items such as personal protective equipment, gloves and wipes.

“According to the Australian Submarine Agency, nuclear-powered submarines only generate around a ‘small skip bin’ of low-level naval nuclear waste per submarine per year and that intermedia­te- and high-level waste will not become a concern until the first naval nuclear reactor requires disposal in the mid-2050s,” the Senate committee report said.

The government has yet to decide on the location for the disposal of radioactiv­e waste from the submarines.

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But infrastruc­ture works proposed for HMAS Stirling – the naval base in Western Australia – to support the increased rotational visits are expected to include an operationa­l waste storage facility for low-level radioactiv­e waste.

The Department of Defence has argued any changes to the definition­s should not prevent “regulatory control of the management of low-level radioactiv­e waste from UK or US submarines” as part of those rotational visits.

Thorpe, an independen­t senator, said the call to prohibit high-level nuclear waste from being stored in Australia was “backed by experts in the field and was one of the major concerns raised during the inquiry into the bill”.

“The government claims it has no intention to take Aukus nuclear waste beyond that of Australian submarines, so they should have no reason not to close this loophole,” Thorpe said.

“They also need to stop future government­s from deciding otherwise. We can’t risk our future generation­s with this.”

The government’s proposed legislatio­n would set up an Australian naval nuclear power safety regulator to oversee the safety of the nuclear-powered submarines.

The committee made eight recommenda­tions, including setting “a suitable minimum period of separation” to prevent a revolving door from the Australian Defence Force or Department of Defence to the new regulator.

The main committee report acknowledg­ed concerns in the community that Australia might become a “dumping ground” for the Aukus countries, but it said the term was “not helpful in discussing the very serious question of national responsibi­lity for nuclear waste”.

It also said the bill should be amended to ensure the regulator was transparen­t about “any accidents or incidents” with the soon-to-be-establishe­d parliament­ary oversight committee on defence.

The Labor chair of the committee, Raff Ciccone, said the recommenda­tions would “further strengthen the bill” and help “ensure Australia maintains the highest standards of nuclear safety”.

In a dissenting report, the Greens senator David Shoebridge said the legislatio­n was “deeply flawed”, including because the regulator would report to the defence minister.

“The proposed regulator lacks genuine independen­ce, the process for dealing with nuclear waste is recklessly indifferen­t to community or First Nations interests and the level of secrecy is a threat to both the environmen­t and the public interest,” Shoebridge said.

The defence minister, Richard Marles, was contacted for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP ?? A Senate committee has recommende­d Aukus legislatio­n be amended to clearly show Australia will reject ‘high-level nuclear waste’ from its defence partners, the UK and the US.
Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP A Senate committee has recommende­d Aukus legislatio­n be amended to clearly show Australia will reject ‘high-level nuclear waste’ from its defence partners, the UK and the US.

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