Nuclear Energy

Greens Leader’s statement on the Canberra convoy

Media Release | Spokesperson Bob Brown
Sunday 21st August 2011, 3:52pm

"Some might call the predicted thousands of trucks descending on Canberra ending up as hundreds (ABC, 21/8/11) a ‘flop', but these Australians have every right to a peaceful presence on the parliamentary lawns," Greens Leader Bob Brown said today.


"It seems like the prime qualification to be there is to be angry about something - these are Abbott's angry people," Senator Brown said.


"But it seems their views on some issues are fairly shorted sighted, very ‘me-now'."


"The number of angry people in Canberra tomorrow will increase much more than the numbers of truckers arriving in town," Senator Brown predicted.


 


 

West Australians to march 1000km in protest against uranium mining

Media Release | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Friday 19th August 2011, 3:42pm

Western Australians will begin a one thousand-kilometre protest march against uranium mining this Sunday 21 August.


Australian Greens nuclear affairs spokesperson, Senator for Western Australia Scott Ludlam, will join the ‘Walk Away From Uranium Mining' on Sunday as it begins the long journey from Wiluna to Perth.


"This is an extraordinary moment for our state and for the future. The nuclear industry is in decline around the world and public awareness of the dangers of uranium mining and nuclear power is growing.


"This march is a powerful statement from Western Australians who do not want uranium mining in WA and who do not want their state to support the nuclear industry in any way.


"Uranium mining has a horrendou

As British Fukushima cover-up exposed, our own Government still ducks questions

Media Release | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Friday 1st July 2011, 3:35pm

Revelations that British officials conspired with the nuclear industry to downplay the scale of the Fukushima nuclear disaster raise more questions about what the Australian Government knows and is not disclosing, the Australian Greens said today.


Greens spokesperson for nuclear issues Senator Scott Ludlam said the Australian Government had gone weeks without answering questions on when it first knew the full extent of the Fukushima disaster.


"On June 1st Japanese authorities revealed they had suppressed the truth about Fukushima for more than two months. I asked our own government to explain when they knew this disaster was twice as bad as the Japanese government had initially claimed. One month later there has been no answer."


"Last week Labor and the Opposition voted against a motion that simply called on the government to maintain the interdepartmental emergency task force and publicly reveal information gleaned from Australian nuclear experts and equipment. Why? What are they hiding?"


It was revealed yesterday that British officials approached nuclear companies to co-ordinate a public relations campaign to down-play the Fukushima nuclear accident just two days after the March 11th earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Internal emails seen by the Guardian newspaper show how the British business and energy departments worked closely with multinational companies EDF Energy, Areva and Westinghouse to try to ensure the crisis did not derail their plans for a new generation of nuclear stations in the UK.


"Instead of full-disclosure on this issue, what we do see from the Australian Government is a senior Minister - Martin Ferguson - speaking at endless uranium forums and backing the uranium industry to the hilt with funds as well as rhetoric," said Senator Ludlam.


"One month ago I asked the Australian Government what it knew about Fukushima and when it knew it. It's time for the whole truth to be heard."



Media Contact: Giovanni Torre 0417 174 302


 

Fukushima 3 Months On - Still a Matter of Public Importance

Speech | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Wednesday 15th June 2011, 9:09pm

Senator LUDLAM (Western Australia) (13:10): I rise to express my concern, the concern of my colleagues and the concern of people all over the world for the people of Japan, including our friends and colleagues whose lives changed on 11 March this year, when the triple disaster of an earthquake, a tsunami and a nuclear plant accident occurred. I am continually moved by the strength, ingenuity and improvisation of the Japanese people and by their remarkable capacity for efficient and large-scale organisation. They have endured through the crisis and trauma stages and are now continuing into the long-term recovery and clean-up phases.

When did the Australian Government know the full extent of the Fukushima crisis?

Media Release | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Wednesday 15th June 2011, 1:58pm

The Government must reveal when it first knew that radiation impacts from the Fukushima meltdown were twice as bad as first claimed by Japanese authorities, the Australian Greens said today.


Senator Scott Ludlam raised the issue as a matter of public importance today in the Senate while honouring the victims of the tsunami that struck Japan on March 11th.


"On June 1st, the world learned that Japanese authorities had suppressed detection of radioactive tellurium 6km from Fukushima since March 12th. The presence of this isotope indicates that the temperature of the fuel rods was over 1000 degrees, indicating that 24 hours after the crisis, Japanese authorities knew a meltdown had started.


"Did the Australian interdepartmental emergency task force set up by DFAT as a result of the emergency know this? Did ARPANSA? If not, why not? Did the Australian Government assist in suppressing this information, or was it not passed on at all by Japanese authorities?

Australian National Radiation Dose Register

Estimates Transcripts | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Friday 10th June 2011, 2:36pm

Senate Community Affairs Committee
ANSWERS TO ESTIMATES QUESTIONS ON NOTICE
HEALTH AND AGEING PORTFOLIO
Additional Estimates 2010-11, 23 February 2011
Question: E11-259

Senator Ludlam asked:
Would you undertake to find out when the workforce radiation workers will be able to access that archive and when researchers will be able to access that archive, presumably de-identified?

ANSTO Comcare report

Question | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Friday 10th June 2011, 2:12pm

Question Number: PQ654

SenatorLudlam asked the Minister for Tertiary Education, Skills, Jobs and Workplace Relations, in writing, on 5 May 2011:
With reference to the independent review of the Comcare report regarding the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation and the alleged breach of section 76 of the Occupational Health and Safety Act 1991 (Investigation Number 4245):
(1) Who is leading and serving on the review panel,
(2) Why was the reporting date extended for the review,
(3) When will the report be finalised and will it be made public.

Australia and the International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation

Question | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Friday 10th June 2011, 1:40pm

QUESTION NUMBER: 651

Question
SENATOR SCOTT LUDLAM asked the Minister for Resources and Energy, in writing, on 5 May 2011:

(1) Who represents Australia on the International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation (IFNEC).
(2) Who represented Australia at the Infrastructure Development Working Group and Reliable Nuclear Fuel Services Working Group meetings held in Paris in April 2011.
(3) Who will represent Australia at the 6th Steering Group Meeting to be held in Jeju Island, Republic of Korea, on 18 May and 19 May 2011.
(4) What qualifies as an ‘observer organisation' to the IFNEC.
(5) What are the Government's objectives in engaging with the IFNEC.
(6) To date, what is the total cost arising from Australian delegations engaging with the IFNEC.

Uranium industry still pushes nuclear as Fukushima revealed to be twice as bad as first claimed

Media Release | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Thursday 9th June 2011, 3:54pm

The nuclear industry and its chief supporter Martin Ferguson are in a state of denial as they continue to promote nuclear power in the shadow of the Fukushima disaster, the Australian Greens said today.


A day after the Japanese Government admitted the radiation leaked from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant was twice that originally claimed, the Australian Uranium Association called for a nuclear power sector in Australia.


At a debate between Greens spokesperson for nuclear issues Senator Scott Ludlam and AUA CEO Michael Angwin, Senator Ludlam described the nuclear industry's climate credentials as "commercial self-interest masquerading as energy policy".

Europeans line up to reject nuclear power

Media Release | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Wednesday 1st June 2011, 3:28pm

The Australian Greens welcome the news that eight European countries have formed an anti-nuclear alliance.

Greens nuclear affairs spokesperson Senator Scott Ludlam said that following announcements from Germany and Switzerland that those nations would completely abandon nuclear power, eight other European countries have banded together to take a stand against the dilapidated industry.

"Ministers and other delegates from the eight nations met in Vienna last week and issued a declaration on the need to phase out nuclear power," he said. "The delegations said nuclear power ‘is not compatible with the concept of sustainable development and... does not provide a viable option to combat climate change'. They are completely right on both counts."