Exclusion zones: is Peter Dutton’s campaign avoiding proposed nuclear power sites? | Australian election 2025

Exclusion zones: is Peter Dutton’s campaign avoiding proposed nuclear power sites? | Australian election 2025


Peter Dutton is avoiding visiting any of the seven sites for his proposed nuclear reactors, Anthony Albanese and the Labor party claim, arguing the issue has become “radioactive” for the Coalition.

The Liberal leader says he is still committed to nuclear power, even as he concedes it may not be “politically popular”.

Asked earlier this month about visiting communities near the proposed sites on the campaign, Dutton said he had been to some in recent years, but would not “be able to get to all of them”.

But is he actually avoiding the towns near where he wants to build nuclear reactors?

The ‘Voldemort’ of policies

Labor has long ridiculed the Coalition’s plan for the commonwealth to underwrite the construction of seven plants on the sites of decommissioned coal stations. Journalists tailing Dutton on the campaign trail have repeatedly questioned why no planned nuclear site has featured in Dutton’s dozens of photo ops and press conferences since the official campaign began.

Sites for nuclear power plants proposed by the Coalition

During Tuesday night’s debate, Albanese claimed Dutton “won’t go anywhere near [the proposed station sites] … because he knows that [the policy] just doesn’t stack up”.

On Wednesday, the prime minister visited the Collie power station, about a 20km drive from another of the proposed sites, Muja power station. Both are due to be decommissioned in coming years; the Western Australian state Labor government is pouring hundreds of millions into the town of Collie to support renewable energy projects in the area. “You would think that there was radiation coming from these sites,” Albanese said, referencing Dutton’s absence, “because he just won’t come and won’t talk about what his plans actually are.”

The energy minister, Chris Bowen, joked that nuclear power was “the dark lord of policies, the Voldemort, the policy whose name cannot be mentioned by [the Coalition]”.

“Peter Dutton has not been within 50km of one of his proposed nuclear reactors in this election campaign,” Bowen claimed.

The education minister, Jason Clare, gave a similar line on Wednesday, claiming: “The earthquake in the Hunter this morning was closer to the site of one of these nuclear reactors than Peter Dutton has even been to them.”

Here’s why Peter Dutton’s nuclear power plan is a fantasy – video

Is Dutton avoiding nuclear sites?

The Coalition’s plan is to build nuclear reactors at seven sites: Tarong and Callide in Queensland; Mount Piper and Liddell in New South Wales; Collie/Muja in Western Australia; Loy Yang in Victoria; and Port Augusta in South Australia.

Asked at a Perth press conference on 3 April if he would visit Collie during the campaign, Dutton said: “I’ve been to Collie before. There are seven locations around the country and I won’t be able to get to all of them.”

In East Maitland on 17 April, in the electorate of Paterson – around an hour’s drive from the proposed plant in the Hunter region – Dutton was asked why he had not visited that site.

“I’m not going to be able to meet every Australian. I’ve had the great honour of meeting many around the country,” he answered.


www.theguardian.com
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