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Coal would work harder, longer under Dutton’s nuclear plan

Photo: Diego Fedele/AAP

Peter Dutton’s nuclear policy would have coal-fired power stations operating for a lot longer, says political columnist MICHELLE GRATTAN.

A Dutton government would keep coal working hard for much longer under its nuclear policy, while renewables would provide only a little over half the electricity generated in 2050.

Michelle Grattan.

The opposition has finally put in place the last piece of its controversial nuclear policy, with modelling claiming its alternative would come in substantially cheaper than Labor’s transition path to net zero.

The Coalition policy ensures the issues of coal and climate change will be strongly contested at next year’s election.

The key breakdown in the opposition policy is that by 2050, renewables would provide 54% of electricity generation and nuclear 38%, with 8% a combination of storage and gas.

This compares with Labor’s transition plan for renewables to provide nearly all the generation by then (and 82% by 2030).

The modelling, done at no charge by Frontier Economics, costs the Coalition plan for the transition of the National Electricity Market (which covers the east coast and South Australia but excludes Western Australia) at $263 billion (about 44%) cheaper than its estimate for Labor’s transition. It includes nuclear construction costs.

The modelling, including a range of assumptions (the same assumptions as Australian Energy Market Operator except for inclusion of nuclear), puts the cost of Labor’s transition in the National Electricity Market at $594 billion and that of the Coalition’s at $331 billion.

A central feature of the plan is to keep existing coal-fired power stations going for longer. Then the first of them would be replaced by nuclear generation, in the mid-2030s. The Coalition policy is for seven publicly-owned nuclear plants spread around the country although the modelling is on the basis of units in Queensland, NSW and Victoria.

The Coalition argues coal-fired power stations do not need to be, and should not be, phased out as soon as is now planned by AEMO. Prolonging their lives as compared to AEMO assumptions would save money, it says.

Another important saving, the Coalition says, is that its plan to have its nuclear plants located at or near existing power plant sites does away with the need for a huge new transmission grid.

Peter Dutton says: “Nuclear energy is at the heart of our plan, providing the ‘always-on’ power needed to back up renewables, stabilise the grid, and keep energy affordable”.

“The Coalition’s approach integrates zero-emissions nuclear energy alongside renewables and gas, delivering a total system cost significantly lower than Labor’s. This means reduced power bills for households, lower operating costs for small businesses, and a stronger, more resilient economy,” Dutton says.

The release of the costings unleashes a tsunami of claims and counterclaims about numbers. That debate will be eye-glazing for many voters.

Not to worry. We are talking the span of a generation. Numbers that stretch out to 2050 don’t mean a great deal. Hundreds of things – in technology and politics, for starters – can and will change as the years pass.

Moreover, numbers from modelling have an extra layer of complexity and uncertainty. They depend heavily on their assumptions that are, in many cases, necessarily arbitrary.

Anyone inclined to take modelling at face value should reflect on the Labor experience. Before the 2022 election it released modelling that gave it the basis to promise a $275 reduction in household power bills by next year. We all know what happened to that.

Regardless of the problems in attempting to be precise, the broad debate about nuclear’s cost will be intense.

The opposition’s plan is up against, for example, the recently released GenCost report, prepared by the CSIRO. This gave a thumbs down to the nuclear option in cost terms. The opposition attempted to cast doubt on the CSIRO’s expertise, but that is unlikely to fly.

The Coalition policy will go down differently according to which constituency is judging it.

Most obviously, given its reliance on extending the life of coal, it will be unpopular with those for whom climate change is a top-line issue. Teal MPs and candidates will hope to get mileage out of that. Under the Coalition plan emissions would remain higher for longer than under Labor’s transition.

On the other hand, in some regional communities where there has been a bad reaction to the planned new power grid and to wind farms, the policy is likely to be well received.

The question is how it will play in the outer suburban electorates that Dutton hopes will help him cut deeply into Labor’s majority.

For these voters, stressed by the cost of living, climate change is probably less of a priority than it once might have been. And nuclear is less scary than in bygone years.

But whether they will see the Coalition policy as more practical than Labor’s, or as a pie-in-the-sky nuclear dream – that’s too early to say.

Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen was dismissive when the Coalition first promoted nuclear. But Labor would be unwise to be complacent, especially in what’s shaping as a difficult election for the Albanese government.

Labor’s strongest arguments will be on climate change – the evils of the extension of the use of coal – and cost (relying on GenCost findings and the like).

But it is vulnerable in its rejection of calls to lift the ban on nuclear. Bowen argues to do this would be a “distraction”, potentially harming investment in renewables.

That’s a weak argument. To suggest those looking to invest very large sums are likely to be distracted if there wasn’t a ban on the nuclear option is simplistic.

Firstly, this underestimates the financial nous of such investors.

On Labor’s own argument, they wouldn’t want to invest in nuclear because it wouldn’t be profitable to do so.

Secondly, investors currently know if there were a change of government, the Coalition would lift the ban (notwithstanding  the present opposition of various states).

The strongest reason Labor won’t contemplate lifting the ban is politics. Any such move would outrage the left of the party, and also risk driving voters to the Greens. It would also require a change in the Labor’s party platform, which says Labor will “prohibit the establishment of nuclear power plants and all other stages of the nuclear fuel cycle in Australia”.

With households highly focused on their immediate power bills, the government has been tipped to extend more relief as it burnishes its cost-of-living credentials for the election. The Coalition would have to decide whether to match this. It would be hard not to do so.

The Coalition’s plan for nuclear power is a big idea, of which we don’t see that many in our current politics. It will test Dutton’s ability to cope with detail under the pressure of a campaign. There will be another test. If the Coalition remains in opposition, will it throw its grand plan into the policy dust bin, so the nuclear debate will be gone for another decade or two?The Conversation

Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra. Republished from The Conversation.

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Michelle Grattan

Michelle Grattan

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3 Responses to Coal would work harder, longer under Dutton’s nuclear plan

Jim says: 13 December 2024 at 11:20 am

Why on earth would you want to derobe the wolf Michelle? We all know what is really behind the nuclear push – its the ability to find massive amount of taxpayer $ to subsidise coal power plants. Dutton couldn’t care less about whether nuclear is ever built, if his buddies can get on the public teat in the process.

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David says: 16 December 2024 at 9:13 am

What? It is not about subsidising coal plants. The coalition is just doing a me too with the rest of the world who have taken the pragmatic view of, we just don’t have the storage solution we need to guarantee reliable power across the predicted seasonal changes to renewable generation. As such nuclear power is used to provide that guarantee since it provides zero emissions in terms of green gases.

The coalition are admitting that since we are so far behind the rest of the world on this stage and it is so difficult to do anything in Australia we are going to need to pollute longer.

On the other side of the fence Labor seems to have no plan it can actually guarantee so it is trying to mask that it doesn’t actually have a viable storage solution (in terms of price, reliability etc) by talking about the price of renewable generation. The debate is not about renewable generation, it’s about storage. The proof of this is we already have renewable energy going to waste during the day and it is causing such a problem the AEMO wants the power to turn it off in all states. They wouldn’t need this option if they had a storage solution.

The funny thing is, there is a form of storage solution already available, batteries on houses with solar panels. However, ask yourself why AEMO isn’t going to the government and asking for all houses with solar panels to be fitted with batteries to take them of the grid. The answer is that the private power companies don’t make money out of this. What they are hanging out for is a viable storage solution, preferably subsidised by the tax payer, which Labor is likely to do, which they can make money from. While we wait for this the coal/gas fired power stations will need to keep running and renewable generated power will keep getting wasted. You have wasted power lapping around your feet because it is too expensive to collect. Better to let it get wasted than have to admit how much collecting it will cost.

You actually have the argument back to front. It is Labor planning on sudsidising the private power companies while the coalition is planning for a state owned power generation which could actually be setup to reduce power prices for all. Yes, that is a very weird thing to say but think about it. Our biggest problem in our quest to zero emissions is the privatisation of the power grid. They will only support solutions they can make money out of and when they can’t the tax payer will need to subisidised them because it has become political.

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Jim says: 13 December 2024 at 11:23 am

“Anyone inclined to take modelling at face value should reflect on the Labor experience. Before the 2022 election it released modelling that gave it the basis to promise a $275 reduction in household power bills by next year. We all know what happened to that.”

I wish this would be reported properly by people that know better. I’m not defending the claim – but it was never a claim of a $275 reduction. It was a $275 reduction in power bills compared to the alternative scenario – they may well miss that target too, but don’t present something as something else, because the media has proven too incompetent to report things accurately. Labor did a horrendous job at framing it (probably deliberately), but it shouldn’t mean often repeated falsehoods should be presented as truth.

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