Will any major Australian political party change its stance on nuclear energy by end of 2025?
Labor supports nuclear energy • 25%
Coalition drops nuclear plan • 25%
Both parties support nuclear • 25%
No change in stance • 25%
Official party announcements or policy documents
Australia's Coalition Unveils A$331 Billion Nuclear Plan Led by Peter Dutton, Claims A$264 Billion Savings Over Labor's Renewables
Dec 14, 2024, 09:02 PM
Australia's opposition Coalition, led by Peter Dutton, has unveiled a nuclear energy policy projected to cost A$331 billion ($211 billion) over a decade. Dutton claims this plan will be A$264 billion cheaper than the current Labor government's renewable energy strategy. Energy Minister Chris Bowen has criticized the proposal, labeling it as the 'most expensive form of energy' and asserting that it would burn more carbon and disrupt the economy. Despite Dutton's assertions, energy analysts have expressed skepticism about the plan's cost-effectiveness and feasibility, noting potential hurdles in construction timelines and a lack of bipartisan support. The Coalition's proposal aims to construct seven nuclear power plants, with some sources estimating the construction costs at A$140 billion, potentially saving an additional A$20 billion compared to earlier estimates. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has dismissed the idea of lifting the nuclear energy moratorium, attributing high electricity prices to global factors such as the Ukraine War.
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Other changes • 25%
Adopt nuclear elements • 25%
Increase renewable targets • 25%
Maintain current policy • 25%
Insufficient data • 25%
Majority support nuclear • 25%
Majority oppose nuclear • 25%
Evenly split opinion • 25%
Opinion evenly split • 25%
Majority oppose nuclear • 25%
No clear majority • 25%
Majority support nuclear • 25%
No significant progress • 25%
Ahead of schedule • 25%
On schedule • 25%
Behind schedule • 25%
Plan partially implemented • 25%
Plan significantly altered • 25%
Plan abandoned • 25%
Plan fully implemented • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Adoption of a pro-Israel stance • 25%
Return to previous neutral stance • 25%
Further alignment with UN resolutions • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Majority support nuclear energy • 25%
Inconclusive • 25%
Evenly split • 25%
Majority oppose nuclear energy • 25%