Townsville Bulletin

Future secured in subs

Exclusive: Australia’s most influentia­l union is behind a move to a nuclear industry, writes

- Joe Hildebrand

AUSTRALIA must develop a nuclear industry for the sake of national security and to protect ourselves against China or any other potential foreign threat, the nation’s top blue collar union has declared.

The Australian Workers Union, arguably the most influentia­l union body in the nation, said the recent deal to purchase nuclear submarines from the US and UK meant Australia must have a nuclear industry or our sovereignt­y would be at risk.

While the AWU has supported nuclear energy in the past, this is the first time the influentia­l body has directly linked it to Australia’s national security and the growing aggression of China.

AWU national secretary Daniel Walton said it was absurd that Australia would rely on nuclear submarines for its defence and yet lack the capacity to build and maintain them.

“If Australia is going to have nuclear subs our national security demands we develop the capacity to build and maintain them, and includes their reactors,” he told News Corp Australia. “If these subs are going to help secure our national interest against China or anyone else, we need to be able to develop and maintain them ourselves.”

Mr Walton said given national security dictated Australia would need to build nuclear reactors for defence purposes, it was therefore ludicrous not to use that technology to build civil reactors providing clean emissions-free energy.

“If we go to all the effort of developing that manufactur­ing capability we should maximise the potential to also manufactur­e modern small modular reactors (SMRS) to power emission-free industry,” he said. “If we are going to develop the forging capability to build the very small nuclear reactors required for submarines, it only makes sense to ensure we simultaneo­usly develop the forging capacity to make the slightly larger components required for small modular reactors. That would make Australia part of the internatio­nal supply chain for this nascent, zero-emissions energy technology.”

Mr Walton said Australia already mined its own uranium only to send it offshore for other nations to use for nuclear power.

Moreover, the major powers selling us the submarines – and with whom Australia is in a new strategic alliance – are heavily relying on nuclear power to reach their net zero targets, as Australia is being urged to do.

“Small Modular Reactors – and nuclear power options – are at the core of the US and UK plans to create zerocarbon economies,” Mr Walton said. “Australia should be following suit.”

He said the reactors could be attached to factories, steel mills, and aluminium smelters to provide the kind of reliable, constant energy such facilities needed to survive and thrive. This would rapidly increase our manufactur­ing capability.

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