Skip to content
Energy, Environment

Hunter earthquake exposes fault lines in Coalition’s nuclear scheme for Gippsland

Solutions for Climate Australia 2 mins read

The 4.8 magnitude earthquake in the Hunter today raises serious questions about the Liberal National Coalition's plans for nuclear reactors in regions across Australia that are prone to earthquakes, said Solutions for Climate Australia.

The earthquake's epicentre was very close to the Liddell power station where the Liberal National Coalition has claimed they would site at least one nuclear reactor. The Loy Yang A power station in Traralgon has also been earmarked for a nuclear reactor by the Liberal Nationals. This is deeply concerning as the region has regular earthquakes, with six in 2024 alone.  

Solutions for Climate Australia Senior Campaigner Elly Baxter said the Liberal National Coalition needed to answer serious questions about safety, emergency response, radioactive waste and water availability at the Loy Yang A site.

"The Liberal Nationals need to tell local residents how an emergency at a nuclear reactor would be handled and who would handle it," Baxter said.

"Would local firefighting volunteers handle the nuclear material? What training would local firefighting volunteers receive in handling nuclear radiation? Who would train them? Would the army come in to help? 

“How would iodine tablets be distributed to locals to try to reduce cancer risk? What would be the fallout zone and where would the local emergency staging area be? Where would nuclear refugees be accommodated?

"Would the Federal Government be responsible for the emergency management given under the Liberal National policy, the Federal Government would own the nuclear reactor?

"What would happen to the radioactive waste and who would be responsible for that? Where would the enormous volume of water come from to deal with the toxic, radioactive emergency?

“These safety issues only compound our concerns that nuclear reactors will take too long to build to protect Australians from the worst impacts of climate change. 

"We need to have a mature conversation about the safety and security of nuclear reactors. The risk of a nuclear meltdown due to an earthquake is real and the consequences would be very serious for local families and children."

ENDS


Contact details:

For interview:
Senior Campaigner for Solutions for Climate Australia Elly Baxter: 0407 163 921

More from this category

  • Environment
  • 19/09/2024
  • 11:28
NSW Environment Protection Authority

EPA INVESTS OVER HALF A BILLION DOLLARS TO BUILD A CIRCULAR FUTURE

Over the last decade, the NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) has awarded more than half a billion dollars in grants helping industry, councils, businesses, universities and community groups deliver more than 3,000 projects. The funding has been invested in a diverse range of projects to restore, protect and enhance the NSW environment. NSW EPA Acting CEO, StephenBeaman said over the last decade we’ve supported more than 960 organisations, delivering thousands of projects to help drive better environmental outcomes and a circular economy. “The investments we’ve made over the past decade have been critical to driving NSW towards a circular economy…

  • Contains:
  • Energy
  • 19/09/2024
  • 05:00
The Climate Council

Lower bills are just the beginning: Aussies to benefit if nation reaches rooftop solar potential

September 19 2024 THE CLIMATE COUNCIL HAS LAUNCHED a new plan to seize the sun and capitalise on Australia's rooftop solar strengths, double our solar power capacity and install two million household batteries by the end of the decade. Supercharging rooftop solar will slash household and business energy bills, cut climate pollution further and faster, and keep building our clean energy workforce. The report comes as a YouGov poll for the Climate Council shows: More than 80% of people who already have solar would recommend it to their families and friends, underlining the real benefits millions of Aussie households are…

  • Contains:
  • Environment
  • 19/09/2024
  • 02:00
UNSW Sydney

Embargoed 2am Thursday 19th September: UNSW’s Professor Matthew England receives international honour for climate change communication

UNSW Sydney’s Scientia Professor Matthew England has been named as the recipient of the 2024 American Geophysical Union’s Pavel S. Molchanov Climate Communications Prize. This is only the second time in the prize’s history that it has been awarded to a scientist outside of the United States, and Prof. England is the first Australian to receive the honour. Awarded annually by the world’s largest Earth and space science association,AGU, the prize recognises climate science communication that promotes scientific literacy, clarity of message, and efforts to foster respect and understanding of science-based values, particularly around climate change. Prof. England obtained his…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.