HMAS Stirling announced as a nuclear dump site, also for US and British waste

July 22, 2024
Issue 
HMAS Stirling and Fleet Base West in Western Australia
HMAS Stirling and Fleet Base West in Western Australia. Photo: Australian Defence Forces

Australia鈥檚 nuclear regulator greenlit the Australian Submarine Agency (ASA) on July 17 to proceed with plans for a nuclear waste storage facility at HMAS Stirling Base in Rockingham, Western Australia.

ASA applied in March to the Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) to prepare such a site, also known as a 鈥淐ontrolled Industrial Facility鈥.

Without it, visiting United States and British nuclear-powered submarines could not undertake maintenance in Australia, making it an intrinsic part of the AUKUS military pact.

Greens Senator David Shoebridge said Labor is caught in a bind because its bill to allow the US and Britain to dump high-level nuclear waste in Australia has been tabled but it does not want to allow debate as Opposition leader Peter Dutton is spruiking his civil nuclear plan.

尝补产辞谤鈥檚 , introduced in March, sets out the framework for a regulator 鈥 the Australian Naval Nuclear Power Safety Regulator (ANNPSR) 鈥 to manage US and British dumping of high-level nuclear waste.

Until it becomes law (and it will as the Coalition supports all things nuclear), ARPANSA will regulate nuclear and radiological safety for ASA.

on July 17 the licence 鈥渋ntends鈥 to cover low-level waste from the submarines.聽

Shoebridge disputes this. He said ASA admitted in a Senate Estimates hearing in June that the licence would also cover 鈥渋ntermediate-level鈥 nuclear waste, which emits higher levels of radiation and requires additional shielding.聽

ASA had 鈥渇ailed to include in its public consultation material the fact that this licence allows for the handling of intermediate-level waste鈥, Shoebridge said.

鈥淭his waste is significantly more toxic than any other nuclear waste currently stored in Australia.鈥

He said the licence was 鈥渜uietly pushed through鈥 and resembled a 鈥渞ushed plan B鈥 from Labor, which is trying to avoid political backlash to its naval nuclear waste bill while Dutton聽spruiks his聽civil nuclear plan.

The regulation allows authorities to prepare to accept nuclear waste without more public or parliamentary scrutiny on the proposed law.

ARPANSA sought to downplay the regulation, saying it is just the 鈥渇irst stage鈥 of a 鈥渟tringent licensing process鈥 for new naval nuclear propulsion facilities and, in the future, for storing or disposing of radioactive waste from AUKUS submarines.

Contradicts nuclear-free policy

Critics of AUKUS and the Rotational Force 鈥 West program have warned against nuclear-powered and -armed submarines berthing at HMAS Stirling Naval Base.

They are worried at the prospect of any mishaps and the submarines would have to traverse the ecologically rich Cockburn Sound inlet.

The regulation also contradicts the long-time nuclear free zone policy adopted by the City of Fremantle and its endorsement of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons鈥 appeal for cities to support the Treaty to Ban Nuclear Weapons.

The Conservation Council of WA (CCWA) is among many groups and individuals opposing the AUKUS-inspired plan.

CCWA鈥檚 June submission to ARPANSA said the proposed nuclear submarine facility is 鈥渨ithin an area of dense population鈥 and close to 鈥渋mportant and diverse heavy industrial facilities, including a major shipping port鈥.

鈥淭here are unaddressed community concerns regarding an accident involving the dispersal of radioactive material,鈥 it said.聽 In addition, there has been a 鈥渓ack of transparency and rigour in the proposed regulatory processes鈥. It said allowing for US and British nuclear submarine waste is 鈥渦nacceptable鈥 either at Garden Island 鈥渙r elsewhere in Western Australia鈥.

ARPANSA received 165 public submissions concerning its application to prepare a site at HMAS Stirling, but did not reveal how many were opposed.

However, its , published on July 17, shows many were, including because of the lack of public information, community and ecological impacts and decision-making.

However, it concluded that: 鈥淥verall, we found that there were no submissions that justified refusal of the licence鈥 and that 鈥渢he application provided sufficient evidence of the radiological safety of the proposed facility鈥.

Dorinda Cox, WA Greens Senator and spokesperson for First Nations, Resources, North Australia and Trade and Tourism said the licence approval 鈥渟ilences our voices鈥.

She said Labor wants to make anywhere in Australia a nuclear waste dumping ground, with no public consultation or First Nations鈥檚 consent.

Cox said she was given assurances that there would be consultation but 鈥渢here has been no respect shown to the community and to Traditional Owners who opposed this licence鈥.

She said First Nations peoples have seen nuclear storage 鈥渄evastate their lands, waterways and communities before.

鈥淭his storage is costly and will destroy irreplaceable cultural heritage, including intangible heritage such as song lines and the local biodiversity.鈥

, an expert on radiation health and safety, and who served on the Expert Advisory Committee for the South Australia Royal Commission on the Nuclear Industry, has been a vocal critic of Labor committing to AUKUS without having a nuclear waste disposal solution.

In in March last year he said: 鈥淲ith this [AUKUS] deal, we have committed ourselves to managing highly radioactive reactor waste when these submarines are decommissioned 鈥 and guarding it, given the fuel for these submarines is weapons-grade uranium.鈥

When nuclear submarines , the reactor is treated as waste.

He said the White House鈥檚 about AUKUS states that Australia 鈥渉as committed to managing all radioactive waste generated through its nuclear-powered submarine program, including spent nuclear fuel, in Australia鈥.

This 鈥渨aste鈥 includes pulling out and disposing of Virginia-class submarine reactors.

鈥淪mall, in this context, is relative,鈥 Lowe said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 small compared to nuclear power plants. But it weighs over 100 tonnes and contains around 200 kilograms of highly enriched uranium, which is nuclear weapons-grade material.鈥

He said when the first three AUKUS聽 submarines are at the end of their lives 鈥 30 years from when they are commissioned 鈥 Australia will have 600 kilograms of so-called 鈥渟pent fuel鈥 and 鈥減otentially tonnes of irradiated material from the reactor and its protective walls鈥.

鈥淏ecause the fuel is weapons-grade material, it will need military-scale security.鈥

Australia鈥檚 failure, for decades, to find a single site for disposal of low-level radioactive waste, is because 鈥渆very single proposal has run into strong local opposition鈥.

The plan to locate a dump at Kimba, on South Australia鈥檚 Eyre Peninsula, had to be dropped after opposition by local communities and First Nations groups.

鈥淎nd we鈥檙e still dithering about what to do with the intermediate level waste produced by the at Lucas Heights in Sydney.鈥

He said even the AUKUS allies have 鈥渘ot figured out long-term waste storage鈥.

As Sweden and Finland build storage systems in stable rock layers, neither Britain or the United States have moved beyond temporary storage.鈥

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