The Times Australia
Fisher and Paykel Appliances
The Times World News

.

Is nuclear the answer to Australia's climate crisis?

  • Written by Reuben Finighan, PhD candidate at the LSE and Research Fellow at the Superpower Institute, The University of Melbourne

This article is part of a series by The Conversation, Getting to Zero[1], examining Australia’s energy transition.

In Australia’s race to net zero emissions, nuclear power has surged back into the news. Opposition leader Peter Dutton argues[2] nuclear is “the only feasible and proven technology” for cutting emissions. Energy Minister Chris Bowen insists Mr Dutton is promoting “the most expensive form of energy[3]”.

Is nuclear a pragmatic and wise choice blocked by ideologues? Or is Mr Bowen right that promoting nuclear power is about as sensible as chasing “unicorns”[4]?

For someone who has not kept up with developments in nuclear energy, its prospects may seem to hinge on safety. Yet by any hard-nosed accounting, the risks from modern nuclear plants are orders of magnitude lower than those of fossil fuels.

Read more: Australia's new dawn: becoming a green superpower with a big role in cutting global emissions[5]

Deep failures in design and operational incompetence caused the Chernobyl disaster. Nobody died at Three Mile Island or from Fukushima. Meanwhile, a Harvard-led study found more than one in six deaths globally[6] – around 9 million a year – are attributable to polluted air from fossil combustion.

Two more mundane factors help to explain why nuclear power has halved as a share of global electricity production since the 1990s. They are time and money.

The might of Wright’s law

There are four arguments against investment in nuclear power: Olkiluoto 3[7], Flamanville 3[8], Hinkley Point C[9], and Vogtle[10]. These are the four major latest-generation plants completed or near completion in Finland, the United States, the United Kingdom and France respectively.

Cost overruns at these recent plants average over 300%, with more increases to come. The cost of Vogtle, for example, soared from US$14 billion to $34 billion (A$22-53 billion), Flamanville from €3.3 billion to €19 billion (A$5-31 billion), and Hinkley Point C[11] from £16 billion to as much as £70 billion (A$30-132 billion), including subsidies. Completion of Vogtle has been delayed[12] by seven years, Olkiluoto[13] by 14 years, and Flamanville[14] by at least 12 years.

Read more: How to beat 'rollout rage': the environment-versus-climate battle dividing regional Australia[15]

A fifth case is Virgil C[16], also in the US, for which US$9 billion (A$14 billion) was spent before cost overruns led the project to be abandoned. All three firms building these five plants – Westinghouse, EDF, and AREVA – went bankrupt or were nationalised. Consumers, companies and taxpayers will bear the costs[17] for decades.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton and Energy Minister Chris Bowen together in Parliament.
Not seeing eye-to-eye on nuclear: Opposition Leader Peter Dutton and Energy Minister Chris Bowen have clashed on approaches to net zero. Mick Tsikas/AAP[18]

By contrast, average cost overruns for wind and solar are around zero[19], the lowest[20] of all energy infrastructure.

Wright’s law[21] states the more a technology is produced, the more its costs decline. Wind and especially solar power and lithium-ion batteries[22] have all experienced astonishing cost declines[23] over the last two decades.

Read more: Why Australia urgently needs a climate plan and a Net Zero National Cabinet Committee to implement it[24]

For nuclear power, though, Wright’s law has been inverted. The more capacity installed, the more costs have increased. Why? This 2020 MIT study[25] found that safety improvements accounted for around 30% of nuclear cost increases, but the lion’s share was due to persistent flaws in management, design, and supply chains.

In Australia, such costs and delays would ensure that we miss our emissions reduction targets. They would also mean spiralling electricity costs, as the grid waited for generation capacity that did not come. For fossil fuel firms and their political friends, this is the real attraction of nuclear – another decade or two of sales at inflated prices.

Comparing the cost of nuclear and renewables

Nevertheless, nuclear advocates tell us we have no choice: wind and solar power are intermittent power sources, and the cost of making them reliable is too high.

But let’s compare the cost of reliably delivering a megawatt hour of electricity to the grid from nuclear versus wind and solar. According to both the CSIRO[26] and respected energy market analyst Lazard Ltd[27], nuclear power has a cost of A$220 to $350 per megawatt hour produced.

Read more: Beyond Juukan Gorge: how First Nations people are taking charge of clean energy projects on their land[28]

Without subsidies or state finance, the four plants cited above generally hit or exceed the high end of this range. By contrast, Australia is already building wind and solar plants at under $45[29] and $35 per megawatt hour[30] respectively. That’s a tenth of the cost of nuclear.

The CSIRO has modelled the cost[31] of renewable energy that is firmed – meaning made reliable, mainly via batteries and other storage technologies. It found the necessary transmission lines and storage would add only $25 to $34 per megawatt hour.

In short, a reliable megawatt hour from renewables costs around a fifth of one from a nuclear plant. We could build a renewables grid large enough to meet demand twice over, and still pay less than half the cost of nuclear.

Model of a small modular reactor provided by Rolls-Royce SMR.
Small modular reactors like the one seen in this model might have a place in Australia, but not before the 2040s. Rolls-Royce SMR/AP/AAP[32]

The future of nuclear: small modular reactors?

Proponents of nuclear power pin their hopes on small modular reactors[33] (SMRs), which replace huge gigawatt-scale units with small units that offer the possibility of being produced at scale. This might allow nuclear to finally harness Wright’s law.

Yet commercial SMRs are years from deployment. The US firm NuScale[34], scheduled to build two plants in Idaho by 2030, has not yet broken ground, and on-paper costs have already ballooned[35] to around A$189 per megawatt hour.

Read more: The original and still the best: why it's time to renew Australia's renewable energy policy[36]

And SMRs are decades away from broad deployment. If early examples work well, in the 2030s there will be a round of early SMRs in the US and European countries that have existing nuclear skills and supply chains. If that goes well, we may see a serious rollout from the 2040s onwards.

In these same decades, solar, wind, and storage will still be descending the Wright’s law cost curve. Last year the Morrison government was spruiking the goal of getting solar below $15 per megawatt hour by 2030[37]. SMRs must achieve improbable cost reductions to compete.

Finally, SMRs may be necessary and competitive in countries with poor renewable energy resources. But Australia has the richest combined solar and wind resources in the world.

Read more: Too hard basket: why climate change is defeating our political system[38]

Should we lift the ban?

Given these realities, should Australia lift its ban on nuclear power? A repeal would have no practical effect on what happens in electricity markets, but it might have political effects.

A future leader might seek short-term advantage by offering enormous subsidies for nuclear plants. The true costs would arrive years after such a leader had left office. That would be tragic for Australia. With our unmatched solar and wind resources, we have the chance to deliver among the cheapest electricity in the developed world.

Mr Dutton may be right that the ban on nuclear is unnecessary. But in terms of getting to net zero as quickly and cheaply as possible, Mr Bowen has the relevant argument. To echo one assessment from the UK, nuclear for Australia would be “economically insane[39]”.

References

  1. ^ Getting to Zero (theconversation.com)
  2. ^ argues (ipa.org.au)
  3. ^ the most expensive form of energy (www.abc.net.au)
  4. ^ chasing “unicorns” (www.abc.net.au)
  5. ^ Australia's new dawn: becoming a green superpower with a big role in cutting global emissions (theconversation.com)
  6. ^ more than one in six deaths globally (seas.harvard.edu)
  7. ^ Olkiluoto 3 (en.wikipedia.org)
  8. ^ Flamanville 3 (en.wikipedia.org)
  9. ^ Hinkley Point C (en.wikipedia.org)
  10. ^ Vogtle (en.wikipedia.org)
  11. ^ Hinkley Point C (illuminem.com)
  12. ^ has been delayed (www.reuters.com)
  13. ^ Olkiluoto (www.reuters.com)
  14. ^ Flamanville (www.nucnet.org)
  15. ^ How to beat 'rollout rage': the environment-versus-climate battle dividing regional Australia (theconversation.com)
  16. ^ Virgil C (en.wikipedia.org)
  17. ^ will bear the costs (www.telegraph.co.uk)
  18. ^ Mick Tsikas/AAP (photos.aap.com.au)
  19. ^ around zero (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
  20. ^ lowest (www.sciencedirect.com)
  21. ^ Wright’s law (ark-invest.com)
  22. ^ lithium-ion batteries (ourworldindata.org)
  23. ^ astonishing cost declines (www.irena.org)
  24. ^ Why Australia urgently needs a climate plan and a Net Zero National Cabinet Committee to implement it (theconversation.com)
  25. ^ 2020 MIT study (www.cell.com)
  26. ^ the CSIRO (publications.csiro.au)
  27. ^ Lazard Ltd (www.lazard.com)
  28. ^ Beyond Juukan Gorge: how First Nations people are taking charge of clean energy projects on their land (theconversation.com)
  29. ^ $45 (reneweconomy.com.au)
  30. ^ $35 per megawatt hour (reneweconomy.com.au)
  31. ^ modelled the cost (www.csiro.au)
  32. ^ Rolls-Royce SMR/AP/AAP (photos.aap.com.au)
  33. ^ small modular reactors (www.iaea.org)
  34. ^ NuScale (www.nuscalepower.com)
  35. ^ ballooned (ieefa.org)
  36. ^ The original and still the best: why it's time to renew Australia's renewable energy policy (theconversation.com)
  37. ^ $15 per megawatt hour by 2030 (www.smh.com.au)
  38. ^ Too hard basket: why climate change is defeating our political system (theconversation.com)
  39. ^ economically insane (www.bloomberg.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/is-nuclear-the-answer-to-australias-climate-crisis-216891

Times Magazine

Can bigger-is-better ‘scaling laws’ keep AI improving forever? History says we can’t be too sure

OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman – perhaps the most prominent face of the artificial intellig...

A backlash against AI imagery in ads may have begun as brands promote ‘human-made’

In a wave of new ads, brands like Heineken, Polaroid and Cadbury have started hating on artifici...

Home batteries now four times the size as new installers enter the market

Australians are investing in larger home battery set ups than ever before with data showing the ...

Q&A with Freya Alexander – the young artist transforming co-working spaces into creative galleries

As the current Artist in Residence at Hub Australia, Freya Alexander is bringing colour and creativi...

This Christmas, Give the Navman Gift That Never Stops Giving – Safety

Protect your loved one’s drives with a Navman Dash Cam.  This Christmas don’t just give – prote...

Yoto now available in Kmart and The Memo, bringing screen-free storytelling to Australian families

Yoto, the kids’ audio platform inspiring creativity and imagination around the world, has launched i...

The Times Features

The rise of chatbot therapists: Why AI cannot replace human care

Some are dubbing AI as the fourth industrial revolution, with the sweeping changes it is propellin...

Australians Can Now Experience The World of Wicked Across Universal Studios Singapore and Resorts World Sentosa

This holiday season, Resorts World Sentosa (RWS), in partnership with Universal Pictures, Sentosa ...

Mineral vs chemical sunscreens? Science shows the difference is smaller than you think

“Mineral-only” sunscreens are making huge inroads[1] into the sunscreen market, driven by fears of “...

Here’s what new debt-to-income home loan caps mean for banks and borrowers

For the first time ever, the Australian banking regulator has announced it will impose new debt-...

Why the Mortgage Industry Needs More Women (And What We're Actually Doing About It)

I've been in fintech and the mortgage industry for about a year and a half now. My background is i...

Inflation jumps in October, adding to pressure on government to make budget savings

Annual inflation rose[1] to a 16-month high of 3.8% in October, adding to pressure on the govern...

Transforming Addiction Treatment Marketing Across Australasia & Southeast Asia

In a competitive and highly regulated space like addiction treatment, standing out online is no sm...

Aiper Scuba X1 Robotic Pool Cleaner Review: Powerful Cleaning, Smart Design

If you’re anything like me, the dream is a pool that always looks swimmable without you having to ha...

YepAI Emerges as AI Dark Horse, Launches V3 SuperAgent to Revolutionize E-commerce

November 24, 2025 – YepAI today announced the launch of its V3 SuperAgent, an enhanced AI platf...