greggerypeccary wrote on Jun 24
th, 2024 at 8:43am:
Baronvonrort wrote on Jun 24
th, 2024 at 12:16am:
The real experts say this can be done in 5-6 years ...
Show us. Link?
I too would also like to see that. I suspect, in the shadow of people accusing you of playing semantics, that this is exactly what's happening in this case, only from Baron.
Before we even get to the construction of the first plant, there is so much to overcome including regulatory and policy hurdles such as legislative barriers, and the policy shifts requiring a change of government.
Then there is the licensing and approval process, including regulatory approvals, safety and compliance.
Don't forget the physical infrastructure and technology requirements, including site preparation etc and of course, the high costs that will require significant upfront investment and long-term financial commitments and the only way for any of this to work is to cripple competing energy sources which won't be coal or gas, not by the Coalition.
It will have to be renewables.
And since Australia has abundant renewable energy resources, such as solar and wind, which are becoming increasingly cost-competitive and quicker to deploy, it's going to need a solid misinformation campaign to sway public opinion, with the first step being the Coalition Nuclear plan.
And that's all before construction.
So when I say it's likely a semantics argument, with Baron being disingenuous as always, he'll likely be referring to a single aspect of the path to Nuclear, but the whole trail.
It won't be 5-6 years from the moment the Libs regain office, IF they are to even push ahead with this plan.
And that's a big if.
The goal of this plan is to drive investment away from renewables and push further coal and gas as the means of production for our energy needs as long as possible without the Coalition have to come out and say they don't accept Climate Change as real and want to attack renewables to help protect the interests of the Minerals Council and other mining benefactors.