Sat. Jun 15th, 2024
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The federal resources minister has revealed that the Australian government spent more than $100 million on the now abandoned plan to build a nuclear waste dump near Kimba in regional South Australia.

In response to a question from Liberal Senator Gerard Rennick in August, Resources Minister Madeleine King said the Commonwealth had spent approximately $108.6 million towards establishing the National Radioactive Waste Management Facility (NRWMF) between July 2014 and August 2023.

The federal government formally abandoned plans to build the facility after the Federal Court ruled in favour of the area’s traditional owners — the Barngarla people — who argued they were not properly consulted by the former Coalition government about the decision to choose the site.

Senator Rennick also questioned whether the government would find a new location for the NRWMF before May 17, 2025 and if the government would consider placing the facility within the Woomera Prohibited Area. 

Ms King said that information about a future site and any further spending would be available once the government had “considered options and made decisions in due course”.

A group of protestors wearing facemasks with signs that read No Nuclear waste dump for SA, Call to Action and No waste dump
Protestors at a rally in 2021 on the steps of parliament. (ABC News: Patrick Martin)

Former South Australian senator Rex Patrick, who advocated for a Senate inquiry into the site selection process for the facility in February 2018, said that the “waste” of taxpayer money could have been avoided.

“This is an extraordinary amount of money that’s been wasted and wasted because the former government simply didn’t consult properly,” he said.

The Commonwealth acquired the site at Napandee, near Kimba, in November 2021 with plans to make it a low and intermediate-level nuclear waste storage facility.

The Barngarla Determination Aboriginal Corporation (BDAC) launched a challenge in the Federal Court in December 2021, in a bid to stop the site from going ahead altogether.

Former resources minister had ‘foreclosed mind’

Federal Court Justice Natalie Charlesworth found there had been apprehended bias in the decision-making process under then-resources minister Keith Pitt.

Justice Charlesworth found that Mr Pitt — who formally declared the site in 2021 — could be seen to have had a “foreclosed mind” on the issue “simply because his statements strongly conveyed the impression that his mind was made up”.

The court set aside the declaration from 2021 that the site at Napandee, a 211-hectare property, be used for the facility.

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