Nuclear
power PR campaign debunked
by Takver
Melbourne,
Australia - Anti-nuclear activists have replied
to advocates of nuclear power with a comprehensively damning
report, “Nuclear power - no solution to climate change”.
Fifty people attended the launch of the report at Northcote
Town Hall on October 6, organised by Friends of the Earth.
Speakers included the report’s author, Dr Jim Green; physicist
Dr Alan Roberts; and the president of the Medical Association
for the Prevention of War (MAPW), Dr Tilmin Ruff.
Green gave a comprehensive summary of the report and debunked
the current marketing that nuclear power is a necessary
method of reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The report
says that a doubling of nuclear power output by 2050 would
reduce greenhouse gas emissions by just 5%, while increasing
the hazards of potential nuclear accidents, terrorism, nuclear
proliferation and the still unsolved problem of waste storage.
The report outlines that the solutions to greenhouse gas
emissions from energy production lie in energy efficiency
and renewable energy generation, such as in wind, bio-energy,
solar and tidal power.
Green made the point that only one-third of greenhouse gas
emissions come from power generation, with the majority
caused by the burning of oil as petrol in automobiles.
Roberts stated up front that he can’t see the nuclear energy
campaign succeeding. He outlined the background to the nuclear
industry public relations campaign, which started with background
briefings to the media in Britain in May 2004. The campaign
has several prominent public relations firms involved, and
a former British minister for energy.
The campaign has stressed that nuclear energy is needed
for diversification of energy supply, and that nuclear power
generation does not contribute any greenhouse gases.
Roberts said this ignored the fact that substantial greenhouse
gas emissions are caused in the total nuclear cycle - mining,
extraction an d transportation of uranium, building reactors,
transport of waste and decommissioning nuclear reactors.
The nuclear industry does not want an open debate on nuclear
power, according to Roberts. He told an anecdote of a chance
meeting with a Uranium Information Bureau official several
years ago, who told him: “We decided we would not engage
in any debates. We found it counterproductive.”
Ruff outlined the dangers of radiation, in the threat of
nuclear terrorism and nuclear war, and said, “this is not
a solution to global warming ... it delays us getting on
with real solutions.”
During discussion it was revealed that up to half the existing
nuclear power reactors need decommissioning in the next
10 years. No foolproof solution has been found to the waste
storage problem. Most high-level waste is currently stored
on site with the nuclear reactors.
With BHP now making up 7% of the Australian stock exchange,
several ethical investment schemes have been reassessing
their opposition to investment in companies involved with
uranium mining, a member of the audience said. The questioner
suggested that most people, as members of superannuation
funds, should pressure their funds not to invest in companies
involved in uranium mining, or to choose ethical funds explicitly
opposed to uranium mining.
The meeting was held in Northcote because the federal member
for Batman, Labor’s Martin Ferguson, has been pushing very
strongly for the expansion of uranium mining and export
of uranium to China. Members of the audience called on Ferguson
to publically debate uranium mining and nuclear power with
his electors.
It was announced that Nuclear Free Australia is having an
anti-nuclear tour of the city on October 11, meeting at
12.30pm at the GPO in the Bourke Street Mall.
The meeting wound up with a Friends of the Earth Anti-uranium
Collective spokesperson Michaela Stubbs outlining some activities
that people could do. The Anti-uranium Collective holds
meetings at 312 Smith Street each Wednesday at 6.30pm.
The meeting chair, Dimity Hawkins from MAPW, described an
intriguing invitation from the US Consulate to MAPW to attend
a briefing on how Iran is breaching non-proliferation conditions
in their nuclear program. Something to ponder about in regard
to preparing public relations for a possible US attack on
Iran?
Download
the Nuclar Map of Australia (PDF) 
(publicated
on 18 October 2005 - from GreenLeft Weekly)