Author Archive: Philip White

Arabana Mound Springs stories v. BHP

Arabana Traditional Owners, elders and rangers, and environmentalist David Noonan got strong ABC media coverage about BHP’s water extraction for its Olympic Dam copper–uranium mine. Long term water extraction has had severe impacts on the unique and fragile Mound Springs of the Great Artesian Basin (GAB).

1. The second of two ABC stories, ‘Call to protect the Springs now’, was broadcast on ABC SA Ch.2 TV News on Monday 24th Nov 2025 and is available on IVIEW. See Intro “Under pressure, how fresh water extraction is taking a toll on an ancient underground reserve” at 30 sec in, and story “Water concerns” at 4 minutes 55 sec in:

https://iview.abc.net.au/video/NU2506S328S00

(ABC IVIEW may ask you to free sign in.)

See also related article on ABC News website, Calls to end water extraction from Great Artesian Basin before culturally significant springs are lost – ABC News, published Monday 24th Nov.

2. The first of two ABC stories with Arabana Elders and Rangers on Mound Springs of GAB was broadcast on ABC SA TV News on Sunday 23rd November 2025. It is also available on IVIEW. Coverage starts about 11 min 25 secs in, and runs 4.5 mins:

https://iview.abc.net.au/show/abc-news-sa/series/0/video/NU2506S327S00

See also related article on ABC News website Water is under pressure in the Great Artesian Basin – ABC News, published Sunday 23rd Nov.

3. You can read a more detailed article by David Noonan published in Friends of the Earth Australia’s national magazine Chain Reaction, #149, April 2025, p.36-37:

The SA government and BHP need to protect the Great Artesian Basin Mound Springs

 

Nuke Submarine ‘community consultation’

Australian Naval Infrastructure (ANI) is conducting a ‘community consultation’ about its plan to lodge a site licence application for the ‘Nuclear-Powered Submarine Construction Yard Project’. An application has to be lodged with the new Australian Naval Nuclear Power Safety Regulator before it can prepare a site for a Naval Nuclear Propulsion facility.

We wonder why they are in such a hurry to apply for a site licence when the Strategic Impact Assessment (SIA – Commonwealth process) and the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS – State government process) haven’t even been finalised. FoE Adelaide made submissions to both these processes (click to read our SIA submission & our EIS submission) in March 2025, but no public submissions and no follow-up report have been published. We also made a submission on the new nuclear powered submarine Regulations, which came into effect on 1 November 2025 without any response to the public comments received.

Click here (251123FoEAdelaideSubmission) to read our submission to ANI’s site licence ‘community consultation’.

And let us never forget that acquiring nuclear powered submarines is a bad idea in the first place.

FoE representatives critique AUKUS at Parliamentary hearing

On Thursday October 2, representatives of FoE Adelaide (Philip White) and FoE Australia (Jim Green) appeared at a public hearing into the agreement between Australia and the UK on nuclear powered submarines. The hearing was held by the Australian Parliament’s Joint Standing Committee on Treaties.

We were joined by David Sweeney of the Australian Conservation Foundation and Tim-Deere Jones, who wrote a report for FoE Australia on the UK nuclear submarine program. He tuned in from Wales — it was the middle of the night for him.

We pointed out some home truths about the nuclear powered submarines that the government proposes to acquire from the US and the UK. For example, nuclear-powered submarines entail serious safety and nuclear proliferation risks, the nuclear waste problem has not been solved, and these submarines will make Australians less safe, not more safe as proclaimed by the government. These are problems that will come back to bite us all eventually.

We demanded that the government conduct a broad-ranging public review into the whole AUKUS nuclear submarine project.

The full hearing can be viewed on the following link:

https://www.aph.gov.au/News_and_Events/Watch_Read_Listen/ParlView/video/3948797

Our session was up first, but some of the sessions which followed are well worth listening to as well.

Written submissions can be downloaded by clicking the ‘Submissions’ link on the following page:

https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/Joint/Treaties/AUKUSNuclearSubmarine

FoE Adelaide’s submission is submission number 6 and FoE Australia’s submission is number 5 (with Tim Deere-Jones’ report as an attachment).

Joint Appeal for Nuclear Abolition Day, 26 September 2025

Friends of the Earth Adelaide has endorsed the Joint Appeal for Nuclear Abolition Day, September 26.

The Appeal has been endorsed by over 300 civil society organisations from around the world, including from peace, disarmament, human rights, youth, women’s rights, sustainable development and climate/environmental protection fields – and by over 500 individuals, including legislators, former high-level officials (such as foreign ministers and UN officials), religious leaders, medical practitioners, academics/teachers, youth leaders, private sector (corporate) leaders and others.

The Joint Appeal will be presented to the High-Level Meeting on September 26 by Dr. Deepshikha Kumari Vijh, Executive Director of Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy and Coordination Team Member for the September 26 Working Group. You can watch the High-Level meeting on UN Web TV. The civil society presentations will come at the end of the session.

You are invited to participate in a social media action ‘Stop Nuclear Weapons: Peace is in our Hands‘.

Stagnant nuclear energy

Jim Green (national nuclear campaigner for Friends of the Earth Australia) has written an article for RenewEconomy introducing the latest edition of the World Nuclear Industry Status Report. He says the report “gives the lie to claims by the Coalition that Australia risks being ‘left behind’ and ‘stranded’ if we don’t jump on board”. He notes that “Nuclear power generation has been stagnant for 20 years.”

In 2024, the combined global capacity of solar and wind grew by over 100 times the net nuclear capacity additions.

The full article is available on the following link:

https://reneweconomy.com.au/global-report-confirms-and-details-nuclear-powers-stagnation-someone-needs-to-tell-the-coalition/

The World Nuclear Industry Status Report can be accessed from the following link:

https://www.worldnuclearreport.org/World-Nuclear-Industry-Status-Report-2025