Skip to content
Political

Nuclear won’t deliver the lowest-cost energy system

Rewiring Australia 2 mins read

 

 

Rooftop solar and distributed energy resources will deliver the cheapest form of energy whereas nuclear energy will likely be too expensive and slow to solve any problems for Australia, said Rewiring Australia founder and chief scientist Dr Saul Griffith.

 

“A lowest cost energy system will maximise rooftop solar and distributed energy resources, because that delivers the lowest priced electricity to consumers, while also lowering transmission requirements,” said Dr Griffith. 

 

Rooftop solar in Australia is delivering energy at five cents per kilowatt hour while new nuclear power in the US is delivering it at 20 cents before it even hits the grid.

 

“Electrification could bring $1.7 trillion in savings for Australian households but there is a risk that a focus on nuclear will prevent this cost of living dividend being realised.  

 

“Nuclear is proposed as so-called “baseload” power, which has never been the problem for Australia. The challenge is meeting demand peaks and industrial loads at low cost. 

 

“Industry needs energy to be very cheap, something that nuclear is not, so it’s not solving any real problems here.”

 

Dr Griffith proposed that Australia should be involved in the research effort to develop genuine next-generation nuclear technologies, both fusion and fission. This could contribute to international efforts to lower the price and increase the safety of nuclear power.

 

“Some countries that are small, cold, and with higher population density and minimal solar and wind resources will need nuclear to replace fossil fuels, but Australia has the opposite population and geographical characteristics,” said Dr Griffith.

 

“Furthermore, we are a water-starved nation and each nuclear power plant will guzzle 1.8-2 litres of water per kilowatt hour of electricity produced.”  A GW-sized nuclear plant will need up to 2 million litres of water every hour, which will limit its applicability in Australia.


Charlie Moore 0452 606 171




More from this category

  • Political
  • 13/12/2024
  • 14:10
Health Services Union

Asmar restrained from carrying out duties of branch secretary

The National Health Services Union (HSU) has secured a significant legal victory in the Federal Court, with Health Workers Union (HWU) Secretary Diana Asmar restrained from carrying out any duties of branch secretary, meaning she effectively is stood aside from her position. The Federal Court has also reinstated two employees who were stood down. This ruling comes in the wake of serious allegations of financial impropriety within the Victorian branch, including claims of misappropriation of over $2.7 million in union funds. A HSU National action to have the HWU branch placed into administration remains live. HSU National Secretary Lloyd Williams…

  • Political
  • 13/12/2024
  • 12:10
Rail, Tram and Bus Union

IN-PRINCIPLE AGREEMENT ON NEW ENTERPRISE AGREEMENT FOR METRO TASMANIA BUS DRIVERS

TheRTBU and Metro Tasmania management have reached in-principle agreement on a new Enterprise Agreement for bus drivers. As such, all Protected Industrial Action has been withdrawn, including all existing work bans and planned work stoppages. RTBU Tasmania Secretary Byron Cubit today said bus drivers would now vote on whether to accept the proposed Enterprise Agreement. “It’s been a long and difficult negotiation, but we now believe we have reached proposed Enterprise Agreement that is worthy of being put to bus drivers for their consideration. “We set out to achieve three things with these negotiations: lock-in the 10% temporary pay rise…

  • Energy, Political
  • 13/12/2024
  • 10:22
Climate Media Centre

Talent alert: Coalition’s nuclear scheme risks higher power bills, more climate pollution and the safety of our communities

December 13, 2024 Federal Opposition Leader PeterDutton’s nuclear proposal will cost Australians dearly – wasting money, time and energy we can’t afford while doing nothing to lower people’s power bills or cut climate pollution today. Further details from the Coalition, to be released today, fail to explain the costs of keeping Australia’s coal-fired power stations open for longer, ignore Australia’s growing energy needs, underestimate the cost and time needed to build nuclear reactors, and exclude significant costs from its calculations. Locals have also expressed concerns about the risks to their communities from hosting risky reactors in the region and delaying…

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.