WA uranium mining ban takes centre stage at Diggers and Dealers opener
All that is needed is the stroke of a pen to banish one rule that stands in the way.
Australia already exports enough uranium to offset the emissions of the country's entire coal fleet, but only South Australia and the Northern Territory allow the mining of uranium ore.
Despite Western Australia boasting vast reserves of the radioactive metal, the Labor state government has had a ban on new uranium projects since 2017.
Dr Chris Keefer, a Canadian nuclear influencer headlining the annual Diggers and Dealers mining conference in Kalgoorlie, urged a rethink, arguing it would help global emissions and the Australian economy.
'There's been a lot of talk, and I understand that it's gone up in smoke now, about Australia becoming a hydrogen exporter, a green energy superpower, the Saudi Arabia of hydrogen, right?' Keefer told a tentful of miners and investors in the WA gold mining town.
'And it's ignoring the fact that you already are a clean energy superpower in terms of your exports.
'So one half of Australia's emissions are offset by its uranium exports, which are used around the world instead of, you know, a mix of coal and gas. Your entire coal fleet's emissions are essentially offset by the uranium that you export.
'So hopefully, God willing, sense will return, and you'll be able to contribute more.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
14 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
NBN Co snubs Elon, inks satellite deal with Bezos' Amazon
NBN Co has snubbed Elon Musk's Starlink to sign an agreement with Amazon, the US tech giant founded by fellow tech billionaire Jeff Bezos, in a deal to provide high-speed broadband to hundreds of thousands of Australian users from next year. Amazon's Project Kuiper will offer city-quality broadband to about 300,000 rural and regional Australian premises from the middle of 2026, via a Low Earth Orbit (LEO) constellation of more than 3000 satellites. The deal promises high-quality broadband for rural and regional Australia, and means NBN Co will phase out its current ageing Sky Muster satellites by the early 2030s. Sky Muster had been providing broadband across remote areas of Australia but had been criticised by users for offering inferior speeds to traditional fixed-line broadband and newer rival satellite options such as Musk's Starlink. 'Today we can announce that NBN has reached agreement with Amazon's Project Kuiper to deliver city-quality broadband to remote Australia,' Communications Minister Anika Wells told journalists at a North Sydney press conference on Tuesday. 'The agreement will deliver high-speed broadband to regional, rural and remote Australia via Low Earth Orbit satellites, meaning Australians living anywhere will be better off, whether that is working from home, managing a regional business, accessing telehealth, video conferencing or online learning.' Loading NBN Co chief executive Ellie Sweeney said the government-owned company had carried out a rigorous selection process before deciding to partner with Amazon. Starlink, co-founded by Musk in 2019, has racked up more than 200,000 customers Australia-wide to date. Last week it suffered a global network outage that lasted for more than two hours. 'We're the default provider, so it's incumbent on us to be able to provide broadband access across Australia,' Sweeney said. 'We went through a pretty rigorous and a pretty compelling RFI [request for information] and RFP [request for proposal] process to provide wholesale broadband access via Low Earth Orbit.

The Age
14 minutes ago
- The Age
NBN Co snubs Elon, inks satellite deal with Bezos' Amazon
NBN Co has snubbed Elon Musk's Starlink to sign an agreement with Amazon, the US tech giant founded by fellow tech billionaire Jeff Bezos, in a deal to provide high-speed broadband to hundreds of thousands of Australian users from next year. Amazon's Project Kuiper will offer city-quality broadband to about 300,000 rural and regional Australian premises from the middle of 2026, via a Low Earth Orbit (LEO) constellation of more than 3000 satellites. The deal promises high-quality broadband for rural and regional Australia, and means NBN Co will phase out its current ageing Sky Muster satellites by the early 2030s. Sky Muster had been providing broadband across remote areas of Australia but had been criticised by users for offering inferior speeds to traditional fixed-line broadband and newer rival satellite options such as Musk's Starlink. 'Today we can announce that NBN has reached agreement with Amazon's Project Kuiper to deliver city-quality broadband to remote Australia,' Communications Minister Anika Wells told journalists at a North Sydney press conference on Tuesday. 'The agreement will deliver high-speed broadband to regional, rural and remote Australia via Low Earth Orbit satellites, meaning Australians living anywhere will be better off, whether that is working from home, managing a regional business, accessing telehealth, video conferencing or online learning.' Loading NBN Co chief executive Ellie Sweeney said the government-owned company had carried out a rigorous selection process before deciding to partner with Amazon. Starlink, co-founded by Musk in 2019, has racked up more than 200,000 customers Australia-wide to date. Last week it suffered a global network outage that lasted for more than two hours. 'We're the default provider, so it's incumbent on us to be able to provide broadband access across Australia,' Sweeney said. 'We went through a pretty rigorous and a pretty compelling RFI [request for information] and RFP [request for proposal] process to provide wholesale broadband access via Low Earth Orbit.


Perth Now
14 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Where Aussies are spending their money
Australian households are finding breathing room in their budgets, with the latest data showing an increase in household spending. Data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) on Tuesday shows spending on furnishings and household equipment, clothing, footwear and food have driven a 0.5 per cent household spending rise for June. The data shows people are making more discretionary purchases and spending more often. The 0.5 per cent bump follows a 1 per cent rise in May and is 4.8 per cent higher than June last year. Alcohol and tobacco spending continues to fall, government data shows. NewsWire / Monique Harmer Credit: News Corp Australia 'Goods spending rose 1.3 per cent, as households spent more on food, new vehicles, and electronics,' ABS executive Robert Ewing said. 'Meanwhile, spending on services fell by 0.5 per cent after two months of growth. 'People buying more goods drove the overall rise in household spending in June.' Looking at the three months to June, discretionary spending volumes (the actual dollar value spent) rose because of a 1.8 per cent increase in recreation and cultural activities, plus a 1.6 per cent rise in cafes and restaurants. The volume increase shows people are going out for dinner less often but spending more. Spending on food, vehicles and recreation rose across the country in June. NewsWire / Nikki Short Credit: News Corp Australia This discretionary bump is part of an overall spending volume increase of 0.7 per cent for the June quarter. 'Household spending volumes rose for the third consecutive quarter, reflecting a steady improvement in consumer confidence as price pressures eased over the past year,' Mr Ewing said. Western Australia was the only state or territory where spending fell. The Northern Territory, NSW and then Tasmania had the largest spending increases over the past year. In the NT, the spending increases were driven by health, transport and recreation outlays. In NSW, clothes, shoes, furnishings and food were the largest drivers. While people are consistently spending more on food and homewares across the country, alcohol and tobacco spend is falling, the government data shows.