By NICK CALACOURAS /320 words/8 November 2009/Northern Territory News/Sunday Territorian/NORTHT/1English/Copyright 2009 News Ltd. All Rights Reserved
RESIDENTS in Sweden actually fought to have a nuclear waste dump in their town, according to an environmental scientist.
Darwin-based environmental scientist Pamela Jones recently returned from a tour of the two nuclear waste dumps in the Swedish towns of Forsmark and Osterhamn -- similar to the facility expected to be built in the Territory.
She said the people in these municipalities voted on the issue before it was built -- and 80 per cent were in favour of the facility.
``The closer to the facility, the higher the vote was in favour of it,'' she said. ``They wanted to be close to this facility.''
Ms Jones said there was a strong anti-nuclear sentiment in Sweden in the 1980s, but that changed over time.
``I think it was probably because they have lived with nuclear power and waste facilities for so long. Over time, their attitudes changed,'' she said.
``(But in Australia) we know nothing. We are told nothing and what we don't know, we fear. I would like to see the discussion.''
Ms Jones said the town's people also appreciated the boost to the economy provided by these facilities.
``It was a great job to have. It was good for the town to have these jobs,'' she said.
Australia needs to build a waste facility by 2015, when spent nuclear fuel rods are returned from France.
The Federal Government said it would chose a site for the facility but has been sitting on a report since February that looked into the viability of four sites in the NT.
Labor went to the last election opposing the construction of a nuclear waste dump in the NT.
But it is yet to fulfil the pledge to repeal the Commonwealth Radioactive Waste Management Act, that allows the Government to force on a nuclear dump.
NTN-20091108-1-006-086013

CRESP Newstories and Links related to risk-based cleanup of the nation’s nuclear weapons production facility waste sites and cost-effective, risk-based management of potential future nuclear sites and wastes. CRESP seeks to improve the scientific and technical basis for environmental management decisions by the Department of Energy (DOE) and by fostering public participation in that search.
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