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US and China will be ‘competing for data'

US and China will be ‘competing for data'

Sky News AU16-07-2025
Former DFAT Australia-China Council scholar Andrew Phelan says China and the Western world have 'very different' operating systems.
Mr Phelan told Sky News Australia that the two operating systems are 'incompatible' with one another.
'The US and China are going to be competing for data.'
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"We'll use the capital costs for generation and storage from GenCost in the upcoming Draft Integrated System Plan in December," she said. Nuclear technology is banned as an energy source in Australia, which has a target of achieving 82 per cent renewable energy in the national grid by 2030 and reaching net zero by 2050. Next-generation nuclear reactors are the most expensive of all energy-producing technologies, a report has found, and would significantly increase electricity prices in Australia. Establishing a large-scale nuclear power plant for the first time would also require more than double the typical costs, and estimates for wind projects had inflated by four per cent due to unforeseen requirements. The CSIRO, Australia's national science agency, released its GenCost report on Tuesday, revealing rising construction and finance costs would push up prices for energy projects of all kinds in the coming years. The findings come after a heated debate about introducing nuclear power to Australia and after members of the federal coalition questioned the nation's reliance on renewable energy projects to achieve net zero by 2050. The final GenCost report for 2024-2025 analysed the cost of several energy-generating technologies, including variations of coal, gas, nuclear, solar and wind projects. Renewable technology continued to provide the cheapest energy generation, the report's lead author and CSIRO chief energy economist Paul Graham said. "We're still finding that solar PV and wind with firming is the lowest-cost, new build low-emission technology," he told AAP. "In second place is gas with (carbon capture storage) ... then large-scale nuclear, black coal with CCS, then the small modular reactors." Small modular nuclear reactors proved the most expensive technology of the eight options by a large margin, with the report basing its costs on Canada's Darlington nuclear project, announced in May. The 1200-megawatt development is estimated to cost $23.2 billion and will be the first commercial small modular reactor built in a Western country. The new reactors produce one-third the power of typical nuclear reactors and can be built on sites not suitable for larger plants, but have only been built in China and Russia. "This is a big deal for Canada - it's their first nuclear build in 30 years," Mr Graham said. "It's not just about meeting electricity demand ... they've said a few things that indicate they're trying to build a nuclear SMR industry and export the technology." 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"We'll use the capital costs for generation and storage from GenCost in the upcoming Draft Integrated System Plan in December," she said. Nuclear technology is banned as an energy source in Australia, which has a target of achieving 82 per cent renewable energy in the national grid by 2030 and reaching net zero by 2050.

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