Thursday, July 18, 2024

Issue:

Mackay and Whitsunday Life

Canavan Amps Up On LNP Energy Policy By Paul Gellatly

Prominent federal National Party hardman, fossil fuels supporter, climate change denier  and renewable energy sceptic Matt Canavan was in Bowen last week to spruik energy policy, LNP style.

Bowen Chamber of Commerce staged the Coffee with Senator Matt Canavan event at the Larrikin Hotel on Thursday July 11 in place of the usual evening monthly meeting to fit in with the senator's busy schedule.

Sen. Canavan, who is a regular commentator for Sky News, wasted no time in putting the blowtorch on the rapidly growing renewable energy sector to turn the debate towards a nuclear future for Australia, as outlined by LNP Leader Peter Dutton with a proposal to build seven nuclear plants around the country, featuring a mix of conventional and SMR (small modular reactor) plants. Under the plan, the closest nuclear plant could be built at Callide, near Gladstone.

Whitsunday Life asked Sen. Canavan how the LNP nuclear policy could be justified with the failures of the Edf project in France, the NuScale project in the US, and the Hinkley C project in the UK over cost and build time blowouts, and could the LNP assure the electorate that they could deliver SMRs as well as conventional nuclear plants on time and within budget, and affordable energy to the electorate?

"I'm in favour of a mix of all technologies," Sen. Canavan said, saying he understood the focus had been on SMRs and agreeing they had problems at present.

"We can do this," he said. "We built the Snowy Mountains Scheme, the LNG industry, our coal industry … Just invest in everything; don't put all your eggs in one basket."

"I think we need to use more coal and gas, too. If we don't build something, NSW will have blackouts soon."

Sen. Canavan is a staunch supporter of the Adani (now Bravus) coal project near Bowen and he became fired up over the protest movement against its expansion.

The project will result in 10 million tonnes of coal a year being exported, prompting Sen. Canavan to ask why protesters did not protest directly to India over their 160 million tonnes a year of domestically mined coal, claiming that "They've built 16 Adanis in just a year."

China, with 55 million tonnes, also prompted him to ask: "Where is the boycott of those countries? Why are they (protesters) not chaining themselves to the Chinese embassy?"

Electric vehicles also were in Sen. Canavan's sights and he claimed that Australia had "lost 10,000 jobs in nickel" because of a unfulfilled boom in demand for the metal in EV batteries. "We are just getting our pants pulled down, really," he said.

Of the "net zero" meetings in Glasgow, Sen. Canavan said: "We seem to be one country in the world that stands up for this. I think we need to stand up against this. We are going to wake up in a completely different country soon."

Sen. Canavan expressed his concern about the lack of corporate involvement and support for energy sector reform. "It is my biggest regret that the corporate sector has fallen behind in recent years … We need to have some corporate leaders stand up," he said. "The most dangerous thing is that we all want to get along."

Sen. Matt Canavan enjoys catching up with Bowen Chamber of Commerce chairman Bruce Hedditch. Photo credit: Paul Gellatly

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