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Muckaty Station nuclear waste site

Greens TV | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Tuesday 2nd March 2010, 12:18pm

Source: Stateline NT
Published: Friday, February 26, 2010 9:35 AEDT
Expires: Thursday, May 27, 2010 9:35 AEDT

Will a nuclear waste facility be built near Tennant Creek?

MELINDA JAMES, PRESENTER: More than two years after coming to power, Federal Labor this week honoured an election promise and moved to repeal a law that would have forced the Territory to accept a nuclear waste dump. Many who fought against the facility thought it would be welcome news. But a close reading of Labor's new laws reveals the Territory government is still powerless to stop a dump being built at the only site being considered - Muckaty Station near Tennant Creek. In a moment we'll hear from the Chief Minister, but first a look back at how Muckaty Station has become the likely site for the waste facility.

MARTIN FERGUSON, FEDERAL RESOURCES MINISTER: The last election we gave the Australian community an undertaking to actually put in place a new process based on full and proper consultation.

DAVE SWEENEY, AUSTRALIAN CONSERVATION FOUNDATION: Largely it's a cut and paste of the former Howard government legislation which Labor so vigorously opposed in opposition.

TRISH CROSSIN, NT LABOR SENATOR: I think what Territorians wanted, was legislation that actually has balance and I believe that this is legislation that delivers that.

MELINDA JAMES: The prospect of a nuclear waste dump in the Territory has been contentious since it was flagged in 2004. Strong public opposition in other states saw the Federal Government turn its sights on the NT. But in a pre-emptive move, the then Martin government legislated to ban the transport and disposal of nuclear waste in the Territory.

CLARE MARTIN, CHIEF MINISTER, 2005: Why put nuclear waste on our roads, transport it across half of Australia, and then put it into a facility that's so remote you can't really assure its security?

MELINDA JAMES: But, as expected, the Federal Government used its constitutional might to push through overriding legislation, the Commonwealth Radioactive Waste Management Act. With its legal options exhausted, the only hope for the Territory Government was a Labor win federally given the party's election promise to repeal the Act.

SCOTT LUDLUM, GREENS SENATOR: They promised consultation, they promised some accountability and then when you read the bill it's a legislative bulldozer, it's a battering ram.

MARTIN FERGUSON: Mr Speaker, I present the National Radioactive Waste Management Bill 2010 and the explanatory...

MELINDA JAMES: This week, Federal Labor finally came good on its promise and moved to repeal the Howard government's Radioactive Waste Management Act that forced a nuclear waste dump on the Territory - and replaced it with a law that, according to some, forces a nuclear waste dump on the Territory.

SCOTT LUDLUM: It pushes aside the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act, as far as site selection is concerned. It invalidates any state or Territory legislation that gets in the way, and it abolishes the rights of private land holders. If you happen to find yourself in the path of this thing or its access corridors then you can have your rights taken away.

MELINDA JAMES: This is Muckaty Station, an Aboriginal-owned cattle property 120 kilometres north of Tennant Creek. It's held by an Aboriginal Land Trust. In 2007, the Northern Land Council announced that traditional owners from the Ngapa clan had secured a $12 million deal with the Howard government to have the facility on their land. Senior Ngapa people were even taken on a tour of the Lucas Heights nuclear reactor in Sydney where most of the waste is generated. Labor says it's dutybound to pursue Muckaty and Muckaty only.

MARTIN FERGUSON: There is an existing deed of agreement going to a voluntary nomination by the Ngapa people in the Northern Territory. That deed of agreement requires me to actually take it forward in good faith.

MELINDA JAMES: But there's fierce opposition to the dump from other land holders on the Mucakty Land Trust.

SAMMY SAMBO - Traditional Owner, 2007: Yeah, they can put $100 million in front of me and I'd say no for this country where I'm sitting down.

MELINDA JAMES: A petition opposing the dump and signed by 57 traditional owners of the Land Trust, including some who say they're members of the Ngapa clan has been sent to Martin Ferguson.

DAVE SWEENEY: It's clear that the full and informed consent isn't there in as much as there's many people with strong affiliation, and that are on the Muckaty Land Trust and the association and they're saying they don't agree and they don't want it.

KIM HILL, NORTHERN LAND COUNCIL: We have followed and done our due diligence in regards to what my officers and what I'm required to do under the Land Rights Act. And that is to receive the informed consent of the Ngapa people who are the traditional owners for the area in question.

MELINDA JAMES: The Northern Land Council acknowledges some traditional owners of nearby land are unhappy but insists the agreement is watertight. The NLC also defends its decision to keep the agreement - said to be valid for 200 years - confidential.

KIM HILL: This is a matter of commercial-in-confidence and we will not be releasing that report.

(GOVERNMENT VIDEO): "Waste transport to the facility will be strictly governed by stringent national and international standards ..."

MELINDA JAMES: While it looks increasingly likely that Australia's first purpose-built radioactive waste facility will be built at Muckaty station, Martin Ferguson says he's prepared to meet with traditional owners. And the proposal still has hurdles to overcome.

MARTIN FERGUSON: We will proceed with scientific considerations, if they actually stack up, then the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Act will kick in and we will proceed step by step to make sure that we tick every box so we get to a point so that Australia at long last accepts its responsibilities.

MELINDA JAMES: And time is running out. Spent fuel rods sent to France and Scotland are due back in Australia in 2014. The Greens have referred the new law to a Senate inquiry that's due to report at the end of April. But a man who's fought two federal election campaigns on the nuke dump issue reckons despite the years of protest and Labor opposition, radioactive waste is almost certainly Territory-bound.

DAVE TOLLNER - CLP Member for Fong Lim: Look, the fact is the states have all said that they agree that we need a national repository, but they've all said not in our backyard. It became abundantly clear to the Howard government that really there was nowhere else in the country that it could be stored without a massive constitutional fight.

Question on the nuclear waste dump

Greens TV | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Tuesday 23rd February 2010, 6:20pm

Senator Ludlam's question without notice on the proposed nuclear waste dump at Mukaty Station in the Northern Territory.

 

Senator Scott Ludlam on the CPRS

Greens TV | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Wednesday 25th November 2009, 11:04pm

Senator Scott Ludlam delivers a speech in the Senate about the Government's planned Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme.

The Age of Stupid

Greens TV | Spokesperson Bob Brown, Christine Milne, Rachel Siewert, Sarah Hanson-Young, Scott Ludlam
Tuesday 28th July 2009, 11:58am

The Age of Stupid is the new four-year epic from McLibel director Franny Armstrong. Oscar-nominated Pete Postlethwaite stars as a man living alone in the devastated world of 2055, looking at old footage from 2008 and asking: why didn’t we stop climate change when we had the chance?

 

Climate Rally News Reports

Greens TV | Spokesperson Bob Brown, Christine Milne, Rachel Siewert, Sarah Hanson-Young, Scott Ludlam
Monday 15th June 2009, 8:27am

TV news reports about the rallies across Australia

Protecting the climate is a job for everyone

Greens TV | Spokesperson Bob Brown, Christine Milne, Rachel Siewert, Sarah Hanson-Young, Scott Ludlam
Monday 4th May 2009, 3:25pm

Australia can, must and will meet 40% cuts by 2020. The Greens are confident that once we set off on the path to 25% cuts, delivered mostly at home, we can easily accelerate our effort towards 40% and beyond to carbon neutrality. Putting 25% on the table will see Australia taken seriously at the Copenhagen negotiations.

Stimulating Sustainability on A Current Affair Perth

Greens TV | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Friday 20th March 2009, 3:42pm

Scott appeared on Perth's A Current Affair in 11 March 2009, talking about water and energy efficency measure that can be bought using the government's $900 tax bonus and the generous rebates available. For more information click here.

Atomic Australia presentation by Scott Ludlam

Greens TV | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Wednesday 21st January 2009, 3:07pm

Scott's informative presentation which details the nuclear fuel cycle, from uranium mining, to nuclear power plants and weapons production, to current attempts at nuclear waste management. It also investigates the economics of uranium mining and looks at the alternatives to nuclear energy.

Scott, or an appropriate representative, is available to come to community groups or public meetings to give the Atomic Australia presentation. To request a presentation contact Senator Ludlam's office on (08) 9225 5799 or the Anti-Nuclear Alliance of WA on (08) 9271 8786.

For additional information visit www.anawa.org.au

  

Perth Protest Against Internet Censorship

Greens TV | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Sunday 14th December 2008, 12:00am

Citizen journalism report on the December
13th, 2008 protest in Perth Australia against the Federal Government's
proposed mandatory internet censorship legislation

Scott Ludlam & Jane Clark at Uranium Mine turnoff

Greens TV | Spokesperson Scott Ludlam
Wednesday 3rd December 2008, 9:56pm

Scott, WA Senator for The Greens, and Jane Clarke, Greens Candidate for Braitling, NT - wait for media at the 10 mile turnoff to the proposed Angela Pamela Uranium mine. Hop, step & jump from the eco-tourism centre of Australia 'A Town Like Alice'! Will it still be in 100 years if we go down this track?