rhino wrote:Well, Mike Rann is rather adamant that the desalination plant will not be powered by nuclear energy.
CRAIG BILDSTIEN, CITY EDITOR
September 13, 2007 02:15am
THE State Government has been urged to run its proposed Adelaide desalination plant on nuclear power.
International expert Professor Leslie Kemeny said nuclear power plants were "uniquely suited" to seawater desalination.
"If South Australia wants a plant with minimum greenhouse gas emissions, you should eventually go nuclear," he said.
"It is the answer to desalination."
Professor Kemeny, a founding member of the International Nuclear Energy Academy and former consultant to resource giants Western Mining and Hamersley Iron, was yesterday one of three speakers at an Adelaide nuclear energy forum sponsored by the Property Council.
Council executive director Nathan Paine attacked Premier Mike Rann for "refusing numerous requests" to explain why he had ruled out nuclear power in SA.
Opposition Leader Martin Hamilton-Smith addressed the forum, as did the chairman of the Federal Government's 2006 Review of Uranium Mining, Processing and Nuclear Energy, Dr Ziggy Switkowski, and international anti-nuclear campaigner Dr Helen Caldicott.
Dr Switkowski said the nuclear power debate would "go on the backburner" for a long time if Labor won the next federal election.
He said a Rudd Government would stifle the debate, even though he said Australia had to consider the nuclear option if it wanted to "decarbonise" the economy, yet still improve living standards.
This was despite the fact national demand for energy would double by 2050, as would greenhouse emissions at a time when more and more countries around the world were introducing nuclear power.
Thirty-one countries now operate 443 nuclear reactors, generating 15 per cent of global electricity needs.
Mr Rann yesterday stood by his refusal to consider nuclear power. "We've already ruled out nuclear power for South Australia," he said. "It would massively increase the cost. It's the last thing we need."
The argument for nuclear power is not done and dusted! Its just not a consideration at this point in time. In my opinion nuclear is the way to go and will sustain our energy requirements for the future. God knows, we have enough uranium to power them!
At this point in time my guess would be that the Desal plant will be powered by a combination of coal and renewable energy sources.