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Australia's Overflowing Nuclear Waste Dumps

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    [dramatic music]
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    Deep beneath the West Australian outback
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    lies the germ of an idea.
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    A dream about
    making the world a safer place
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    that's gone beyond just the dreaming.
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    (man) "We have a very specific goal,
    dispose of nuclear wastes,
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    pull out the nuclear weapons
    and get them out of the way."
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    Jim Voss envisages a catacomb
    500 metres beneath his feet
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    that would keep safe forever
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    one of the most toxic poisons
    known to humankind.
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    (Voss) "Australia has the opportunity
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    to use its democratic forces
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    to say this is something
    we should be doing for the world.
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    [alarm blaring]
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    For half a century,
    the problem of nuclear waste disposal
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    has dogged the world,
    and one company called Pangea,
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    backed by big money and influence,
    wants to bury it in Australia.
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    You'll find a great deal
    of enthusiasm in the United States,
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    and I suspect around the world.
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    They have backing from incredible people
    within government and industry.
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    (ad) To make the world a safer place
    for the people we love...
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    Tonight, Four Corners
    goes inside the company called Pangea.
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    We examine a scheme
    that's provoked accusations of secrecy
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    and back-door influence peddling,
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    a scheme that forces Australia
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    to confront its role
    in the nuclear world.
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    (ad) Australia will make
    our world a safer place
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    We're not interested in nuclear power
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    and we're not interested in being
    the world's nuclear waste dump.
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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    (Voss) We're just headed out
    here into the desert.
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    (man) What you're looking for,
    of course
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    is the most remote areas
    you can find, right?"
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    (Voss) Well, in part.
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    The geology is far more important
    than the remoteness.
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    Pangea's Jim Voss
    and scientist Charles McCombie
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    took Four Corners on the long trip
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    from Perth, 340 kilometres
    north east of Kalgoorlie,
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    to the edge of the Great Victoria Desert.
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    (McCombie) The flatness, even more
    important than how it looks on the surface
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    if you look out at the horizon
    it's all very flat.
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    This is one of the flattest areas
    in the world and that's a real key issue
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    to the– what we call a high isolation site
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    (helicopter blades whirring)
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    Latitude 28 south, longitude 123 east.
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    (whirring continues)
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    Out in this area
    the size of Western Europe
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    lies a patch of ground
    20 kilometres square
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    that they believe could house
    a repository for up to 20 percent
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    of the world's nuclear waste.
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    Out here you find pangea rock --
    very old, very stable --
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    the geology from which
    the company gets its name.
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    (McCombie) And in the basin area
    and where we're on the edge now,
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    it's 300 to 800 million years
    of quiet build-up of sediments.
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    So this is one of the most
    stable geological areas
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    that you'll find in the world.
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    But it's not just science.
    Politics are just as crucial
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    in dealing with radioactive waste
    and nuclear disarmament
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    and that's what makes Australia
    more attractive than Argentina,
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    Namibia, and China,
    where pangea rock is also found.
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    (Voss) Well, it's the political stability
    that we're concerned about.
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    Australia's tradition
    in democratic principles,
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    Australia's environmental activism
    is vital to us. Australia's role
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    in the international community
    for disarmament for all sorts of weapons
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    nuclear, land mines, chemical weapons,
    very important facets to us for Australia
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    Behind Pangea stand
    three international organisations.
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    The huge British government-owned
    nuclear conglomerate, BNFL
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    British Nuclear Fuels Limited,
    which owns 80 percent
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    a Canadian company
    called Golder Associates
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    world experts in toxic waste management
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    and Nagra, a Swiss organisation
    responsible for finding
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    a nuclear waste dump
    for Switzerland's nuclear industry.
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    (advertisement) The simple fact
    is that more than 30 countries
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    use nuclear power.
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    Pangea originally planned
    to launch its scheme on Australians
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    last month, with a 9 million dollar
    war chest for advertising and promoting
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    a scheme it knew would meet
    an incredulous public
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    and skeptical politicians.
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    Those plans fell apart in December
    last year, when the British arm
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    of Friends Of The Earth
    got hold of the video
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    Pangea prepared for the launch
    and sent it to Australia.
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    (Pangea promotional video) Above all,
    Pangea will provide the world
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    with a safe solution
    to the disposal of nuclear materials.
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    (man) Oh, it arrived in
    an unmarked brown envelope
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    on my desk, and I had no idea
    where it came from. I felt that this
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    should not be sprung on Australians in a
    kind of hole-in-the-wall secret underhand way
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    but they should learn as soon as possible
    what was being planned for them.
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    (Pangea promotional video)
    Before any responsible country
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    would send their waste for disposal,
    they must be certain
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    not only that the respository is safe,
    but also that its safety must be seen
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    to be clearly and rigorously regulated.
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    (Voss) We were of course, disappointed.
    It was our intention to roll Pangea out
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    in a very public and planned manner,
    to give everybody an opportunity to debate.
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    (woman) "My question is to
    Senator Minchin, Minister for Resources -"
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    The response to the video was immediate.
    Opponents were appalled
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    at the idea of a nuclear dumping ground.
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    (woman) " ... Will he rule out completely
    any involvement of his government
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    in setting up an international nuclear
    waste repository in Australia?"
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    The Federal Government
    moved to distance itself.
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    (Senator Minchin) "And the Government
    has absolutely no intention of accepting
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    the radioactive waste of other countries.
    The policy is clear - "
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    In the following months,
    the Industry and Resources Minister's line
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    has hardened.
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    (Senator Minchin) "There may be
    other countries that
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    in far less fortuitous
    economic circumstances than Australia
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    that do decide they want to accept
    international nuclear waste.
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    Well that's their business,
    and that may be one way
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    in which those countries
    with a waste problem deal with it.
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    But Australia won't be that nation
    that accepts the waste."
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    But Pangea's plans for the outback
    are a reminder of Australia's part
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    in the nuclear world:
    an exporter of uranium,
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    part of the American nuclear umbrella
    and a leading advocate of disarmament.
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    What Pangea is doing
    is putting together a growing network
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    of international
    and Australian businessmen,
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    scientists and policy makers who believe
    that Australia should also have a role
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    to play in resolving one of the
    nuclear age's most pressing problems:
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    what to do with the stockpiles
    of nuclear waste
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    that have been growing now
    for half a century.
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    It's a debate they say
    that Australia has to have
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    one that can't be dodged forever,
    and one upon which Australians themselves
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    will eventually have to take a stand.
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    (indistinct lecturing)
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    Amongst those who believe Australia
    should play a role is the president
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    of the Australian Academy of Science
    who's personally backing Pangea
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    and will sit on
    its scientific review panel.
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    (professor) "I think it is important
    that they engage the Australian public
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    and engage the Australian public's
    representatives, namely the politicians
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    so that the politicians get
    as clear a view as it's possible to get
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    of what the proposal's really about.
    The existence of nuclear waste
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    is a world problem and Australia
    in this respect is part of the world
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    and if we can help reduce that danger
    by putting that particular problem to bed
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    that is great."
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    (Jenkins) "This industry thinking that
    it can solve its problems by shifting them
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    to some remote place,
    and also onto future generations
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    and that makes one quietly angry."
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    ♪ (ominous music) ♪
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    The creeping poison of nuclear waste
    began with the advent of the nuclear age
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    more than half a century ago,
    but it took three decades
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    before governments
    began to take it seriously.
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    In 1943, the 2,000 citizens of Hanford
    and neighbouring Bluff Cliffs
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    in the northwest US state of Washington
    got 30 days notice to move out
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    when the top-secret Manhattan Program
    to build the first atomic bomb
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    got underway.
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    They never came back.
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    Fifty-six years later, what's left behind
    is abandoned, no longer top secret
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    but still deadly.
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    1,400 square kilometres
    of poisoned land, a wilderness
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    of dumped nuclear waste
    from the reactors
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    that produced plutonium
    for bombs and warheads
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    fodder for 30 years of cold war.
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    (construction machinery)
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    The detritus lies scattered and buried.
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    (more machinery)
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    A clean-up's underway,
    but it'll take 50 years
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    at a cost of five and a half
    million dollars every single day.
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    David Pentz first came to Hanford
    in the '80s at the behest
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    of the American government.
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    A specialist in waste disposal,
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    Pentz spent three years investigating
    whether the contaminated site
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    might become the world's first permanent
    dump for highly radioactive waste.
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    It didn't work,
    because the geology
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    proved too complex,
    and it's not yet worked
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    anywhere else in the world.
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    (Pentz) "I think total costs, probably
    we've spent in the world today,
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    is certainly in excess of $20 billion,
    and we obviously don't have a repository
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    licenced repository,
    anywhere in the world."
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    Pentz went home to Seattle,
    but the idea of a disposal site
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    deep underground did not go away.
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    He nagged at the problem
    and it nagged at him.
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    Pentz was chairman of Golder Associates,
    the industrial waste experts
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    and under its umbrella in March 1997,
    he set up Pangea Resources Limited.
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    (Pentz) "We see ourselves as an ambassador
    of a problem, a world problem,
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    and we think Australia should
    at least talk about it and consider it
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    in a rational sense
    because of, that we at least,
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    and I think you will find
    others in the world
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    believe that Australia
    has an incredible opportunity
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    to help the world,
    and if you want to call that
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    as being good neighbourly, so be it.
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    To me it's, uh, good neighbourly
    doesn't put enough dimension
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    on the challenge that the world faces.
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    From modest offices
    in the high-tech part of Seattle
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    that is home to Microsoft,
    Pentz is working to ensure
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    the idea doesn't die.
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    (woman) "Mr. Pentz, I have Australia
    and the UK on the line
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    - for the conference call."
    - "Thank you very much."
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    (Pentz) "I could say our tactics
    are absolutely a disaster, unequivocally.
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    I would say however our tactics
    were not of our own making, right?"
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    (George) "So in retrospect, the secrecy
    with which you've cloaked your proposal
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    has been a mistake?"
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    "Yes I think that, and some people,
    and I have questioned myself
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    whether that was right."
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    (George) "Because one of the great
    criticisms of the whole nuclear industry
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    and all the, in it's history,
    has always been its secrecy, hasn't it?"
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    "Absolutely, and that's tied
    both sides of the nuclear industry.
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    Obviously on the weapons side
    and even on the commercial side.
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    I couldn't agree with you more."
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    - (man) "Hello, David."
    - (Pentz) "Well hi, Jim! Welcome aboard!"
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    Pentz still runs about 60 people
    around the world, some half of them
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    contracted on a part-time basis.
    Amongst them, Ralph Stoll
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    a former US nuclear submarine commander.
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    (Stoll) "It looks like, there's a reason
    to go to Washington next week,
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    to follow up with some of these ideas."
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    In Australia, Jim Voss is looking
    for new ways to open doors for Pangea.
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    (Voss on phone) "The Pangea papers were
    right where we wanted them, that is
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    presenting where we stand
    in our feasibility studies."
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    (Pentz) "Yeah."
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    There's no shortage of funds.
    Pangea had a $40 million budget this year
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    but much of it won't now get spent
    because the political heat in Australia
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    has delayed plans for exploration
    in Western Australia.
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    (George) "So if the government is saying,
    no, it's against our policy
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    why pursue it?
    Why not just go away?"
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    (Pentz) "Because the idea
    of an international repository
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    and the benefits
    it will bring the world is real.
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    We think we have begun to see how we
    could put the genie back into the bottle
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    and, you know, ideas
    of this size ...
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    don't go away."
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    ♪ (music) ♪
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    From Seattle, Pentz and Stoll
    are on the move across the continent.
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    "I have, I think received
    a very good response
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    both in and outside of the government
    to the concept that Pangea represents."
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    ♪ (solemn music) ♪
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    "I wonder if these ...
    kinds will work with Pangea."
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    In the 18 months since
    Ralph Stoll's first visit to Washington
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    Pangea's briefed officials
    in the US State Department, the Pentagon
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    the Department of Energy,
    and presidential advisers
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    in two powerful arms of American security,
    the National Security Council
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    and the National Security Agency.
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    And to reach the administration's
    highest political levels, Pangea's hired
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    a big-hitter lobbyist, the man slated
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    to run Vice President Al Gore's
    presidential campaign next year.
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    And Pangea's struck a chord
    that shifts its focus
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    from a commercial venture,
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    to play to America's
    strategic preoccupation
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    with growing stockpiles
    of nuclear warheads.
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    "The world has a serious problem
    with nuclear waste.
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    There are thousands and thousands
    of tons of it, and thousands of tons more
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    coming on-line each year, so to speak,
    as well as many thousands of tons
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    that are derivative
    from former nuclear weapons programs,
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    and these have to be stored
    safely and securely for thousands of years
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    and the world simply doesn't
    have a solution to this
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    and as long as this waste
    is stored in an imperfect fashion
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    which it is now, virtually everywhere,
    it represents something of a threat."
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    Until the end of last year,
    Jan Lodal was responsible
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    for running nuclear policy
    for the Pentagon.
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    "I think that the American government
    is likely to be very attracted
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    to the possibility of such a site,
    and it will also see the attractiveness
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    of Australia's location."
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    At Washington's Georgetown University,
    Pangea has another influential ally
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    in President Clinton's special adviser
    for disarmament, who's concerned
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    about bombs or the raw material
    falling into the hands
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    of rogue states and terrorist groups.
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    "In the United States,
    we are very concerned
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    about what is generally called
    in the literature the loose nuke problem.
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    We are working with the Russians
    in a very cooperative way,
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    but still there are hundreds of tons,
    when it only takes a few kilograms
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    to make a bomb, there are hundreds
    of tons of this material
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    inadequately protected.
    That's what we wanna take care of too.
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    ♪ (western music) ♪
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    On the trail you'll find me lopin',
    while the spaces are wide open
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    in the land of the old AEC, yee-hoo
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    why, the cedar is attractive,
    and the air is radioactive
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    oh, the Wild West is
    where I want to be
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    'mid the sagebrush and the cactus
    I'll watch the fellas practice
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    droppin' bombs through
    the clean desert breeze, ah-ha
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    (bomb explosion)
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    If nuclear disarmament
    was the peace dividend
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    from the end of the Cold War,
    then the problem of dealing
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    with today's unwanted nuclear bombs
    is the peace headache.
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    In pursuit of superiority
    over the Russians,
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    America detonated 928 bombs
    at the Nevada test site,
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    a hundred of them above ground.
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    The tests took 40 years to conduct,
    but the combined time
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    for all those explosions
    amounts to a mere 60 seconds
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    a minute of the most destructive power
    created by humankind.
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    (explosions, wind, breaking glass, planes)
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    The Cold War legacy is
    100,000 nuclear warheads around the world.
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    Disarmament talks call
    for a reduction to 4,000 in 10 years.
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    Pangea reckons
    it can help disarmament
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    by burying plutonium
    from decommissioned warheads
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    a claim questioned by critics
    who say nothing in the plans
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    ensure it can never be retrieved.
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    "They cloak it as
    a nuclear non proliferation
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    and arms control proposal,
    but when you look at the fine print
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    it really is, at this point in time
    at least, a bail-out
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    for the nuclear industry and
    for the plutonium industry in particular."
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    "These need not be inconsistent at all.
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    So I think that
    it is a commercial enterprise
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    but the potential for
    a very positive impact
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    on international security is very real."
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    "That's the rhetoric.
    That's the broad brush
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    but the fine strokes indicate
    that this spent fuel
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    will be put underground
    on a retrievable basis
  • 21:24 - 21:26
    so that countries
    that want to get it out, can."
  • 21:26 - 21:30
    "The fact that there may be
    retrievability doesn't bother me
  • 21:30 - 21:33
    provided, of course,
    the retrievability is
  • 21:33 - 21:36
    something that were very easily
    monitored and prevented
  • 21:36 - 21:39
    if the international community
    wished to prevent it
  • 21:39 - 21:41
    and if you had
    a remote site in Australia,
  • 21:41 - 21:42
    I think you could assure that."
  • 21:51 - 21:53
    Fifty kilometres from
    the Nevada test site
  • 21:54 - 21:58
    lies Yucca Mountain,
    and a stark reminder that America
  • 21:58 - 22:01
    like the rest of the world,
    has a growing problem
  • 22:01 - 22:02
    with commercial waste.
  • 22:03 - 22:07
    10,000 tons is created globally each year.
  • 22:08 - 22:11
    "The alternative is the stuff
    right now sitting in swimming pools
  • 22:11 - 22:15
    and the basement of power plants
    in metropolitan areas.
  • 22:16 - 22:18
    What's that going to do
    to our future generations?
  • 22:18 - 22:20
    We can't make this stuff go away."
  • 22:20 - 22:26
    Like Pangea, Jim Niggemeyer believes
    the answer lies beneath his feet.
  • 22:26 - 22:30
    (Niggemeyer) So for me,
    this I think is safe for
  • 22:30 - 22:34
    hundreds of thousands of years.
    I don't see any other alternative
  • 22:34 - 22:36
    that gets us beyond tens of years.
  • 22:38 - 22:43
    (George) Fifteen kilometres of tunnel
    lie inside Yucca Mountain.
  • 22:43 - 22:47
    It represents America's
    and the world's best bet yet
  • 22:47 - 22:52
    for a nuclear waste dump.
    But it's not a good bet at all.
  • 22:52 - 22:55
    (Niggemeyer) And you'll notice
    as we go down
  • 22:55 - 22:59
    you'll see uh, ties of fairly heavy steel
    around the tunnel.
  • 22:59 - 23:03
    That's to hold up the rock and
    give us general support.
  • 23:04 - 23:10
    (George) The Yucca Mountain project's
    cost the US $10 billion so far
  • 23:10 - 23:13
    and it will be at least two years
    before the US government
  • 23:13 - 23:16
    decides whether it's safe to go ahead.
  • 23:17 - 23:21
    The people of Nevada have already
    decided: they don't want it.
  • 23:21 - 23:25
    But they know they're up against
    powerful nuclear interests.
  • 23:26 - 23:32
    (Reid) They do it in a number of ways.
    One is through fear and the distribution
  • 23:32 - 23:35
    of bad information, false information.
  • 23:35 - 23:38
    What they do is say
    we need to get it outta here,
  • 23:38 - 23:40
    and then everybody here'll be safe.
  • 23:40 - 23:43
    And so that's the game they've played,
    and they've done a good job.
  • 23:43 - 23:47
    They have done a good job with
    their government relations work
  • 23:47 - 23:55
    here in Washington, they've got
    the best lobbyists money can buy. (laughs)
  • 23:56 - 23:59
    (George) If the nuclear industry
    does get its way,
  • 23:59 - 24:04
    this is what an underground
    nuclear repository would look like.
  • 24:04 - 24:09
    Kilometres of tunnels containing
    steel and concrete canisters,
  • 24:09 - 24:14
    radiating heat for hundreds of years;
    their contents deadly
  • 24:14 - 24:16
    for tens of thousands of years.
  • 24:20 - 24:25
    And if the Americans have problems
    finding a place for their nuclear waste,
  • 24:25 - 24:27
    imagine the problems across the Atlantic.
  • 24:35 - 24:40
    Europe's denser population and smaller
    land mass have left the problem of
  • 24:40 - 24:43
    getting rid of waste from
    nuclear power stations
  • 24:43 - 24:48
    mired in political, social,
    and scientific rouse.
  • 24:48 - 24:52
    Nowhere more so than Britain,
    where a decade-long search
  • 24:52 - 24:56
    for an underground waste dump has
    collapsed in utter failure
  • 24:56 - 24:58
    after costing half a billion dollars.
  • 24:59 - 25:03
    (Blowers) Well in one sense, there is
    some urgency, 'cause I think
  • 25:03 - 25:07
    it would be true to say that to do nothing
    is not an option at the present time
  • 25:07 - 25:10
    because wastes are accumulating
    in every country.
  • 25:10 - 25:12
    (George) A member of the
    British government's
  • 25:12 - 25:16
    radioactive waste management committee,
    Professor Andy Blowers
  • 25:16 - 25:19
    brings a critical eye to bear
    on the nation's nuclear industry.
  • 25:20 - 25:24
    (Blowers) On the other hand, the kind of
    urgency that the industry puts forward,
  • 25:24 - 25:27
    I think, is an urgency that is backing
    their own particular interests.
  • 25:27 - 25:32
    They do need a solution to this
    intractable problem of nuclear waste.
  • 25:32 - 25:36
    If they get the solution which appears to
    be acceptable, then that,
  • 25:36 - 25:39
    to a high degree,
    will underpin the future of
  • 25:39 - 25:41
    the nuclear industry as they perceive it.
  • 25:41 - 25:44
    (Voss) We're not motivated by providing
    the opportunity for
  • 25:44 - 25:46
    new nuclear plants in the future.
  • 25:46 - 25:51
    We're motivated by providing a solution
    to the problems that are there today.
  • 25:52 - 25:56
    (George) And yet if you do provide a
    solution to the problems that are there
  • 25:56 - 25:59
    today, the problem of nuclear waste...
  • 25:59 - 26:01
    (Voss) Yes...
    (George) You end up do you not,
  • 26:01 - 26:04
    justifying the continued existence
    of the nuclear industry?
  • 26:05 - 26:09
    (Voss) Under some circumstances one could
    interpret that. Remember that our...
  • 26:09 - 26:13
    (George) One suspects the nuclear industry
    will interpret it exactly that way.
  • 26:13 - 26:16
    (Voss) They can interpret it as they like.
  • 26:16 - 26:38
    [Music]
  • 26:39 - 26:43
    (George) Behind the nuclear industry's
    sense of urgency lies an enterprise
  • 26:43 - 26:46
    situated in Britain's beautiful
    Lake district in Cambria.
  • 26:46 - 26:56
    [music]
  • 26:56 - 26:59
    It's called Sellafield.
  • 27:00 - 27:06
    It's owned by BNFL, British Nuclear Fuels,
    one of the world's most powerful
  • 27:06 - 27:11
    commercial nuclear conglomerates,
    and it has only one shareholder :
  • 27:11 - 27:16
    the British government, and it's
    BNFL that's behind Pangea.
  • 27:17 - 27:22
    (Bonser) BNFL have looked at a number of
    different ideas and thoughts about
  • 27:22 - 27:27
    how to deal with nuclear waste, and this
    Pangea concept in my view
  • 27:27 - 27:28
    is the strongest I've seen.
  • 27:28 - 27:32
    It's technically extremely
    well founded and
  • 27:32 - 27:36
    has a very good and explainable
    safety case.
  • 27:36 - 27:39
    I think those things are
    extremely important.
  • 27:40 - 27:47
    Of course the real unknown is whether
    that will be accepted and welcomed
  • 27:47 - 27:50
    once it's been explained
    and properly debated.
  • 27:50 - 28:14
    [Music]
  • 28:14 - 28:19
    (George) BNFL's got a problem.
    After America, Britain has
  • 28:19 - 28:23
    the largest stockpile of high-level
    radioactive waste in the world.
  • 28:23 - 28:28
    [Music]
  • 28:28 - 28:31
    It sits quietly in canisters
    beneath the water,
  • 28:31 - 28:35
    cooling down for years
    before it can be touched.
  • 28:42 - 28:48
    What's more, it's not just British waste.
    A big part of BNFL's business is
  • 28:48 - 28:52
    reprocessing nuclear fuel rods from power
    stations in other parts of the world.
  • 28:54 - 28:58
    But reprocessing produces
    radioactive waste, too,
  • 28:58 - 29:04
    and BNFL's customers around the world don't
    know what to do with their waste either.
  • 29:04 - 29:09
    (Bonser) Some of those customers will
    look for an international repository
  • 29:09 - 29:14
    rather than a national repository
    and so we feel that
  • 29:14 - 29:18
    where there's a unique and potentially
    very valuable solution to
  • 29:18 - 29:20
    what is a worldwide problem
  • 29:20 - 29:24
    that as a global nuclear company we would
    wish to be involved in that.
  • 29:24 - 29:28
    (George) So in no case would
    British nuclear waste
  • 29:28 - 29:30
    end up in a repository in Australia?
  • 29:30 - 29:33
    (Bonser) Well of course in the
    very long term, that's a
  • 29:33 - 29:36
    matter for government policy
    rather than a commercial company,
  • 29:36 - 29:40
    and we will always work within
    the UK government policy.
  • 29:42 - 29:46
    (George) On the River Esk, a few
    kilometres south of Sellafield,
  • 29:46 - 29:49
    Martin Forwood checks radiation levels.
  • 29:50 - 29:55
    The plant's reputation for radioactive
    leaks followed by cover-ups
  • 29:55 - 29:59
    and allegations of leukemia clusters and
    pollution of the Irish Sea
  • 29:59 - 30:03
    have spawned deep mistrust
    amongst environmentalists
  • 30:03 - 30:05
    and local opposition groups.
  • 30:06 - 30:10
    (Forwood) They haven't changed at all.
    They're still the murky
  • 30:10 - 30:12
    deceitful company that they always were.
  • 30:13 - 30:17
    (Bonser) We need to build confidence,
    we need to build trust.
  • 30:17 - 30:21
    We'll accept we've made mistakes
    and try to put them right.
  • 30:21 - 30:25
    We operate in a number of different
    countries on a number of different sites
  • 30:25 - 30:29
    and we try to adopt that
    open approach towards
  • 30:29 - 30:31
    what we do wherever we operate,
  • 30:31 - 30:34
    and we would do
    just the same in Australia.
  • 30:37 - 30:40
    (George) Martin Forwood, like most
    British environmentalists,
  • 30:40 - 30:44
    believes BNFL should abandon plans
    for underground dumps and
  • 30:44 - 30:49
    be forced to keep its waste on site until
    safer ways are found to deal with it.
  • 30:52 - 30:55
    (Forwood) The industry's option which is
    to push it underground,
  • 30:55 - 31:00
    very much out-of-site, out-of-mind,
    has so many flaws in it that
  • 31:00 - 31:07
    it would be crassly wrong, I believe,
    on behalf of future generations
  • 31:07 - 31:10
    to allow that to go ahead.
    The second point--
  • 31:10 - 31:15
    I think I've already mentioned that it
    would not be right, it would be immoral,
  • 31:15 - 31:19
    in our view, to land a country--
    let's say Australia,
  • 31:19 - 31:23
    with everybody else's waste problems.
    That would be wrong.
  • 31:25 - 31:29
    (George) To London, where BNFL's woes
    have not endeared it to
  • 31:29 - 31:31
    its owner, the British government.
  • 31:42 - 31:45
    The latest investigation into
    radioactive waste--
  • 31:45 - 31:48
    a select committee of the House of Lords--
  • 31:48 - 31:53
    concluded last month that underground
    repositories are still the best bet.
  • 31:53 - 32:00
    (Tombs) But since it will take 24 years
    even to open a deep geological disposal,
  • 32:00 - 32:04
    you need to start now, because
    procrastination is the thief of time,
  • 32:04 - 32:08
    and that 24 years can stretch into
    50, 60, sometime, never,
  • 32:08 - 32:11
    and it's a problem of such magnitude
    that it has to be tackled.
  • 32:12 - 32:16
    (Lord Tombs) That is probably the way in
    which international development of take—
  • 32:16 - 32:21
    (George) Lord Tombs believes Britain will
    have to dispose of its own waste at home,
  • 32:21 - 32:25
    but says BNFL has every right to
    explore the Pangea idea
  • 32:25 - 32:27
    for other countries' wastes.
  • 32:28 - 32:32
    (Tombs) Well it could well be because
    there are nuclear reactors in the far east
  • 32:32 - 32:34
    for which may provide a
    market for Australia.
  • 32:34 - 32:36
    I'm not qualified to comment on that.
  • 32:36 - 32:39
    All I'm saying is I don't think
    the UK's a very good prospect
  • 32:39 - 32:40
    for the reasons I've outlined.
  • 32:41 - 32:43
    (George) Do you think perhaps those
    a little politically insensitive
  • 32:43 - 32:45
    -- the government owned body in Britain...
    (Tombs) ...Not at all...
  • 32:45 - 32:47
    (George) ...Should be
    investigating in Australia?
  • 32:47 - 32:51
    (Tombs) No I would put it in a way which
    may, you may not appreciate.
  • 32:51 - 32:54
    I would say that they have enormous
    expertise which Australia doesn't,
  • 32:54 - 32:59
    and by helping Australia to develop
    possibilities that they're actually
  • 32:59 - 33:01
    helping Australia, which
    I'm all in favour of.
  • 33:02 - 33:05
    (George) Whether BNFL is doing
    Australia a favour with
  • 33:05 - 33:08
    its Pangea proposal is a moot point.
  • 33:13 - 33:17
    Pangea's backers say a mining state
    like Western Australia already has
  • 33:17 - 33:22
    the expertise to build a port,
    a railway line into the desert,
  • 33:22 - 33:24
    and the catacomb to handle the waste.
  • 33:24 - 33:28
    Investments that would give the state
    an economic shot in the arm--
  • 33:28 - 33:32
    a $6 billion jolt in start-up
    costs alone--
  • 33:32 - 33:37
    $200 billion to Australia over 40 years.
  • 33:38 - 33:42
    Pangea chose one of the Liberal Party's
    favoured economic modellers
  • 33:42 - 33:44
    to assess its figures.
  • 33:44 - 33:48
    (Voss) Access Economics has estimated
    that this leads to about a
  • 33:48 - 33:53
    1% increase in the gross domestic product
    and that brings another 50,000
  • 33:53 - 33:56
    jobs just from economic development,
    economic stimulation.
  • 33:56 - 33:58
    (Minchin) I mean you might as well
    suggest that Australia take
  • 33:58 - 34:01
    the world's prison population--
  • 34:01 - 34:03
    you know we've got plenty of space, why
    not build a great big prison
  • 34:03 - 34:05
    in Alice Springs and take
    all the world's prisoners?
  • 34:05 - 34:09
    Well you know that's, that's ridiculous.
    So is this proposal.
  • 34:09 - 34:11
    (Lawrence) The amount of money being
    talked about is mind boggling,
  • 34:11 - 34:14
    and it might be in the future,
    particularly if there are further economic
  • 34:14 - 34:17
    problems flying out of what's
    happened in Asia that some
  • 34:17 - 34:20
    Australian government somewhere might say
    "Well let's have a look at this."
  • 34:20 - 34:28
    [People shouting]
  • 34:28 - 34:31
    (George) Jobs and profits are one thing
  • 34:31 - 34:34
    -- the politics of the nuclear debate
    another thing entirely.
  • 34:34 - 34:41
    [People chanting]
  • 34:41 - 34:45
    The Government's already faced with
    the passions aroused by the go-aheads
  • 34:45 - 34:48
    for the Jabiluka and Beverley
    uranium mines,
  • 34:48 - 34:52
    by its own search for a dump
    for Australia's low-level and intermediate
  • 34:52 - 34:55
    nuclear waste, and by plans for a new
  • 34:55 - 34:58
    nuclear research reactor at Sydney's
    Lucas Heights.
  • 34:59 - 35:03
    To add Pangea to the menu would
    seem cause political indigestion.
  • 35:04 - 35:05
    Senator Nick Minchin, Minister
    for Industry & Resources:
  • 35:05 - 35:08
    Q: Is your policy determined on the
    science of the matter,
  • 35:08 - 35:12
    the environmental issues of the
    matter, or the simple politics of it?
  • 35:12 - 35:16
    A: Well it's a combination. I mean the
  • 35:16 - 35:18
    position of the Australian
    community is critical
  • 35:18 - 35:20
    and as I say, I don't think there's
  • 35:20 - 35:23
    any basis on which the community
    is prepared to accept this.
  • 35:26 - 35:29
    Peter George: But Pangea's
    been at work on this area too.
  • 35:30 - 35:33
    While proposals to replace the old
    Lucas Heights reactor
  • 35:33 - 35:36
    are causing controversy, Pangea believes
  • 35:36 - 35:39
    Australian antagonism to nuclear
    issues is not
  • 35:39 - 35:41
    as deep rooted as it seems.
  • 35:43 - 35:45
    Peter George:
    Over 18 months, Pangea's spent a quarter
  • 35:45 - 35:47
    of a million dollars on polling by the
  • 35:47 - 35:50
    Liberal Party's own pollster Mark Textor
  • 35:50 - 35:56
    whose report warns Pangea that most
    Australians are ill-informed and afraid of
  • 35:56 - 35:57
    nuclear issues.
  • 35:58 - 35:59
    But crucially, the report
  • 35:59 - 36:03
    goes on to say: "as long as people's
    safety concerns can be satisfied,
  • 36:03 - 36:07
    and we cannot over-emphasise the
    importance of the magnitude
  • 36:07 - 36:08
    of this task,
  • 36:08 - 36:11
    People could see the benefits of a
    nuclear waste dump".
  • 36:13 - 36:16
    Jim Voss, General Manager, Pangea:
    There's about 35 per cent of the
  • 36:16 - 36:21
    populous believes that Pangea may
    well be in the national interest.
  • 36:21 - 36:26
    A very solid 25-28 per cent
    are absolutely convinced
  • 36:26 - 36:29
    that it wouldn't be in the nation's
    best interest.
  • 36:29 - 36:34
    The group in the middle are asking the
    fundamental question of why?
  • 36:35 - 36:37
    Why dispose of this material?
  • 36:38 - 36:40
    Why now? Why Australia?
  • 36:40 - 36:41
    Senator Nick Minchin, Minister for
    Industry & Resources: I've, as you know,
  • 36:41 - 36:44
    been involved in the professional side
    of the Liberal Party for 14 years.
  • 36:44 - 36:46
    I did a lot of polling myself.
  • 36:46 - 36:50
    I'd have to say I know all the
    tricks of the trade
  • 36:50 - 36:51
    and I know you can get any result you like
  • 36:51 - 36:53
    depending on the way you ask the question
  • 36:53 - 36:56
    Footage - Pangea advertisement:
    "There's no safer place in the
  • 36:56 - 37:00
    world to make the world a safer place"
  • 36:59 - 37:02
    Peter George:
    For now, Pangea's advertising
  • 37:02 - 37:04
    campaign is on hold; plans to start
  • 37:04 - 37:07
    field studies this year are postponed,
  • 37:08 - 37:10
    but with so much money behind it, Pangea
  • 37:10 - 37:14
    and those who support it believe time
    can be used to advantage.
  • 37:14 - 37:17
    Footage -- Pangea advertisement:
    "...And a kilometre under a remote dessert
  • 37:17 - 37:22
    in Australia is a gigantic non-porous
    rock that hasn't moved for millions of
  • 37:22 - 37:27
    years... and won't for millions more."
  • 37:26 - 37:28
    Prof. Brian Anderson, Australian National
    University: I certainly believe
  • 37:28 - 37:34
    there's a chance for the proposal to get
    off the ground. I'm not sure of the time
  • 37:34 - 37:40
    scale, but this is a problem that's going
    to be with us for a very very long time
  • 37:40 - 37:47
    and you know -- governments change
    and, and politicians, Ministers change and
  • 37:47 - 37:54
    our relationships with other countries
    change so to imagine that we could
  • 37:54 - 37:58
    continue to maintain an attitude that
    we're not even going to look
  • 37:58 - 38:01
    at the proposal -- I don't think
    that's sustainable.
  • 38:01 - 38:03
    Dr. Carmen Lawrence, MP for
    Fremantle, Labor: If any illustration
  • 38:03 - 38:07
    was needed of the fact that you can't
    dispose safely of waste -- it's the Pangea
  • 38:07 - 38:12
    proposal. I've actually learned of this
    proposal in some detail. I made it my
  • 38:12 - 38:17
    business to find out about it. They are
    serious, they are well-funded...
  • 38:17 - 38:21
    they're people who've worked around the
    mining industry for a very long time and
  • 38:21 - 38:25
    I think it would be foolish of anybody --
    government or people such as me opposed to
  • 38:25 - 38:29
    what they're proposing to underestimate
    their long term commitment
  • 38:29 - 38:31
    to this proposal.
  • 38:32 - 38:36
    Peter George: Faced with closed doors
    at a federal level, Pangea's strategy
  • 38:36 - 38:41
    has focused on Perth, where it thinks
    political opposition may be softer and
  • 38:41 - 38:43
    divisions may exist.
  • 38:44 - 38:48
    While no member of the West Australian
    government would speak to Four Corners,
  • 38:48 - 38:52
    Premier Richard Court recently ruled out
    the Pangea proposal,
  • 38:52 - 38:58
    though in 1994 he did support a national
    dump for low and medium-level waste
  • 38:58 - 39:00
    in the state's gold fields.
  • 39:01 - 39:06
    Though the Resources Minister also rejects
    Pangea -- the company thinks the state is
  • 39:06 - 39:09
    nevertheless sending mixed signals.
  • 39:09 - 39:11
    Colin Barnett (26 March 1999):
    Now I can see
  • 39:11 - 39:16
    a scenario developing in future where
    countries that supply uranium will share
  • 39:16 - 39:20
    some of the obligations for disposing of
    the waste but that in the first instance
  • 39:20 - 39:24
    is an issue for the Australian government,
    and I think Australia as a signatory to the
  • 39:24 - 39:29
    non-proliferation treaty needs to be part
    of the international debate about uranium.
  • 39:29 - 39:31
    Peter George: Are there doors open?
    Is there interest?
  • 39:33 - 39:37
    Voss: I don't think overtly there is
    or there is any evidence there is not.
  • 39:37 - 39:42
    There's a long educational process that
    would have to be done before we'd be,
  • 39:42 - 39:43
    we'd know whether there really are
    doors open.
  • 39:44 - 39:48
    Senator Minchin: The only way this could
    advance, in fact, is if a state government
  • 39:48 - 39:55
    um, decided that it would like to entertain
    this proposition and grant the relevant
  • 39:55 - 39:59
    state approvals for such a project
    to proceed.
  • 39:59 - 40:03
    But it's not going to go anywhere without
    the Commonwealth authorising
  • 40:03 - 40:05
    the importation of the materials.
  • 40:06 - 40:12
    Peter George: Senator Minchin has said to
    us, to Four Corners, "We will not become a
  • 40:12 - 40:14
    dumping ground for the world's nuclear
    waste."
  • 40:14 - 40:16
    Voss: Mmm-hmm.
  • 40:16 - 40:20
    George: Premier Court has said, "We don't want
    to be the dump for other countries' waste."
  • 40:20 - 40:24
    Now those seem pretty clear policies,
    don't they?
  • 40:24 - 40:25
    Voss: Yes.
  • 40:26 - 40:30
    George: Do you see any door open at all
    under those circumstances?
  • 40:31 - 40:36
    Voss: Taken at face value, those words
    would say absolutely there's no door open.
  • 40:36 - 40:40
    George: So why not pack up and go away
    under those circumstances?
  • 40:41 - 40:46
    Voss: It's as I said to you a moment ago, the–
    if you, you have to turn this on it's ear.
  • 40:46 - 40:52
    If they've said yes today, would it be any
    more meaningful to us in the long term?
  • 40:53 - 40:59
    If our board and our investors would
    like us to move forward and to try to
  • 40:59 - 41:04
    turn a no into a yes on a bipartisan
    basis, then that's what we'll do.
  • 41:05 - 41:11
    [This is the sedimentary basin area
    that we're looking at, and we
  • 41:11 - 41:16
    wanted to go and look in more detail at
    what this terrain looks like in particular]
  • 41:16 - 41:19
    Peter George: Ten days ago, Pangea
    representatives from Britain and the
  • 41:19 - 41:25
    United States flew in to Melbourne for a
    two-day strategy meeting, while last week
  • 41:25 - 41:30
    in Perth, Pangea hosted a dozen Australian
    and international scientists for a first
  • 41:30 - 41:34
    private meeting of its scientific
    review board.
  • 41:34 - 41:36
    Peter George: So how much more money,
  • 41:36 - 41:39
    how much more time are you prepared
    to put into this before you actually have
  • 41:39 - 41:40
    to make a decision?
  • 41:40 - 41:42
    Voss: Well first up that's not
    my decision,
  • 41:42 - 41:44
    that's, that's the decision of the
    board of directors.
  • 41:44 - 41:47
    George: Mmm, but you speak for Pangea,
    you must know what the view is?
  • 41:47 - 41:52
    Voss: In the broader sense the, sometime
    during this calendar year there will be
  • 41:52 - 41:57
    a decision as to what course of action
    to take next, which country,
  • 41:57 - 42:00
    which course, which strategy.
  • 42:01 - 42:07
    (Pentz) In terms of predictability from one
    place to another, do we got any more feel
  • 42:07 - 42:10
    from that, and some of these particular
    areas you've started to look at?
  • 42:10 - 42:15
    (George) Pangea's strategy has brought
    about its own undoing, opening it to the
  • 42:15 - 42:20
    same accusations of secrecy that has
    dogged the nuclear industry from birth.
  • 42:22 - 42:28
    But succeed or fail, it's an uncomfortable
    reminder that Australia is, after all,
  • 42:28 - 42:30
    a part of the nuclear world
    and its problems.
  • 42:31 - 42:37
    (Pentz): At the present moment Australia
    provides a significant quantity of uranium
  • 42:37 - 42:41
    to the world. If, in fact, there is a
    repository, it's kind of like...
  • 42:43 - 42:49
    womb to tomb. So to say that Australia
    is not a nuclear power
  • 42:49 - 42:55
    state is correct, right, but it is in the
    nuclear fuel cycle.
  • 42:55 - 43:00
    (Minchin): It does not then follow that
    Australia is required to receive back
  • 43:00 - 43:05
    all that waste material, and I really do
    think countries have to take a very
  • 43:05 - 43:11
    responsible approach when they enter
    into the business of generating their
  • 43:11 - 43:12
    electricity by nuclear power.
  • 43:12 - 43:15
    (Lawrence): Australia is putting itself,
    I think, in a difficult position by
  • 43:15 - 43:19
    continuing to expand the nuclear industry
    by, as the current government is doing,
  • 43:19 - 43:22
    expanding the mining of uranium in
    this country.
  • 43:22 - 43:25
    We are in a sense placing ourselves
    in some position of obligation
  • 43:25 - 43:27
    to the disposal of those wastes.
  • 43:35 - 43:41
    Peter George: If it fails in Australia,
    Pangea says it'll turn its focus to Argentina.
  • 43:42 - 43:48
    But it's the unique combination of geology,
    political stability and international
  • 43:48 - 43:51
    credentials that first brought Pangea to
    Australia.
  • 43:52 - 43:56
    Credentials which have put Australia
    in the nuclear limelight and
  • 43:56 - 44:02
    will continue to do so as concern about
    nuclear waste and nuclear disarmament
  • 44:02 - 44:03
    grows into the next century.
  • 44:03 - 44:39
    [dramatic jazz music]
Title:
Australia's Overflowing Nuclear Waste Dumps
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
Captions Requested
Duration:
44:46

English subtitles

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