ANFA Statement: No Nuclear Submarines for Australia
Publish Date:
26th October 2021
Note: Mirarr are founding members of ANFA, the Australian Nuclear Free Alliance, which was formed in 1997.
Australian Nuclear Free Alliance (ANFA) Statement, October 26th, 2021
Since 1997 the Australian Nuclear Free Alliance (ANFA) has brought together Aboriginal people and civil society groups concerned about existing or proposed nuclear developments in Australia, particularly on Aboriginal homelands.
ANFA opposes the plan for nuclear-powered submarines. The federal government wants to use highly-enriched uranium fuel in submarines, material which can be used directly in weapons. This would undermine global efforts to phase out the use of highly-enriched uranium. It would encourage other countries to seek nuclear submarines fuelled with highly-enriched uranium.
ANFA members are living with the legacy of nuclear weapons testing on their country. ANFA representatives have been involved in the Nobel Peace Prize-winning International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, which helped establish the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.
Australia should be working to rid the world of nuclear weapons, not making the situation worse. The Australian government not only refuses to sign the UN Treaty but actively undermined negotiations at every step.
ANFA will continue to push the Australian government to sign and ratify the UN Treaty and to ensure justice, recognition and repair for country and communities that continue to be impacted by nuclear weapons tests and trials in Australia.
All six countries operating nuclear submarines have both nuclear power and weapons. Building a domestic nuclear industry to support nuclear submarines would be extraordinarily expensive and it would impose unnecessary risks.
A nuclear submarine program would leave a legacy of many tonnes of low-, intermediate- and high-level nuclear waste. The Australian government has been silent about disposal of nuclear waste generated by a nuclear submarine program.
Waste from a nuclear submarine program would likely be dumped on Aboriginal land, as is the case with the federal government's current plan to dump Australia's nuclear waste at Kimba in SA despite the unanimous opposition of Barngarla Traditional Owners. The federal government excluded the Traditional Owners from a so-called 'community ballot' and tried to remove their right to pursue a judicial review of the nomination of the site.
The Barngarla Determination Aboriginal Corporation wrote in a 2020 letter:
"It remains shocking and saddening that in the 21st Century, First Nations people would have to fight for the right to vote in Australia and that the Federal Government would deliberately remove judicial oversight of its actions in circumstances where the Human Rights Committee, a bipartisan committee no less, has considered the process to locate the NRWMF flawed."
A nuclear waste dump would be a permanent imposition on country, people, laws, environment and culture. From Elders in the communities to young people now speaking out, generations after generations have said NO to nuclear waste dumps.