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Why a simple tweet about nuclear energy has spectacularly backfired for Anthony Albanese

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has faced strong backlash after attempting to thwart an attempt to build nuclear reactors in Australia.

Mr Albanese previously called out opposition leader Peter Dutton’s nuclear plan on the social media platform X Tweeton Wednesday.

The Prime Minister shared photos of eight ‘beautiful’ locations across the country and asked social media users what the sites had in common.

‘They run the risk of a nuclear reactor being damaged in their backyard Peter Duton‘, Mr Albanese wrote.

“Australians have waited 673 days for details of Peter Dutton’s nuclear plan. He still won’t say which towns and villages he will threaten.’

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has faced fierce backlash after trying to thwart an opposition push for nuclear power

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has faced fierce backlash after trying to thwart an opposition push for nuclear power

Albanese called out opposition leader Peter Dutton's nuclear plan on platform X, formerly Twitter, on Wednesday

Albanese called out opposition leader Peter Dutton’s nuclear plan on platform X, formerly Twitter, on Wednesday

Mr Dutton has unveiled plans to build large-scale nuclear reactors across the country, a policy backed by Nuclear for Climate Australia.

He has argued that nuclear power has the potential to lower electricity prices and achieve zero carbon emissions.

Nuclear power plants use the fission process – the splitting of atoms – to heat water from a dam to create steam, which drives a turbine that generates electricity.

Opponents of nuclear power argue that it is too risky to locate a nuclear power plant near a population center due to the risk of a nuclear meltdown.

Social media users have criticized Mr Albanese for his post, with many claiming Labour’s wind turbine and solar panel farms are causing just as much damage to the landscape.

‘But filling thousands of hectares of solar panel farms is fine? WHAT A HYPOCRITE YOU ARE, ALBO,” someone wrote.

“Everywhere in Australia is beautiful, including where you dump those damn windmills,” a second person commented.

A third added: ‘Funny, I’d rather have a nuclear reactor than the thousands of miles it would take to give your government the green light to make way for solar and wind turbines in those pristine and protected areas.’

Others mocked the locations Albanese labeled as “endangered” in his post, including South Australia’s Barossa Valley, Queensland’s Whitsundays and NSW’s Hunter Valley.

‘Ah yes, the Hunter Valley. Where the coal mines literally make the place look like a wasteland,” one person wrote.

A second responded with a laughing emoji: “A nuclear reactor in the Whitsundays?”

Another added: ‘Where is the proposed location, right on the tourist beach?’

Social media users have criticized Mr Albanese for his post, with many claiming Labor's wind turbine and solar panel farms are causing just as much damage to the landscape (pictured, wind turbines south of Goulburn in NSW's Southern Tablelands)

Social media users have criticized Mr Albanese for his post, with many claiming Labor’s wind turbine and solar panel farms are causing just as much damage to the landscape (pictured, wind turbines south of Goulburn in NSW’s Southern Tablelands)

Some Australians argued that solar panel farms and wind turbines had destroyed thousands of kilometers of pristine farmland

Some Australians argued that solar panel farms and wind turbines had destroyed thousands of kilometers of pristine farmland

One user said Australians had waited even longer for Albanese to make good on his promise to cut electricity costs.

‘What do these beautiful places have in common? They are at risk of being cleared for solar panels and wind turbines,” they wrote.

“As this administration has done to farmland across the country. Killing eagles and reducing farmland.

“Australians waited 745 days for you to deliver on his promise to cut electricity costs by $275. Instead, prices have risen by more than 25 percent.”

Labor and the Greens are firmly opposed to the creation of a nuclear energy industry in Australia and favor renewable energy sources to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen has previously admitted that to meet the government’s net zero target, Australia would need to install 40 large wind turbines per month and 22,000 solar panels per day.

According to the Clean Energy Council, there are currently 81 renewable energy projects under construction or due to begin construction across Australia in January.

The projects include wind, solar, hydro and bioenergy, which aim to deliver more than $21.9 billion in capital investments.

Mr Dutton unveiled a plan to build large-scale nuclear reactors across the country.  He argued that nuclear energy has the potential to reduce electricity prices and achieve zero carbon emissions

Mr Dutton unveiled a plan to build large-scale nuclear reactors across the country. He argued that nuclear energy has the potential to reduce electricity prices and achieve zero carbon emissions

Mr Dutton unveiled a plan to build large-scale nuclear reactors across the country earlier this year and flagged the idea of ​​potentially converting five disused coal-fired power stations into nuclear reactors.

He claimed Australia cannot rely entirely on wind and solar energy to meet its target of net zero carbon dioxide emissions by 2050.

Mr Dutton added that the existence of electricity transmission lines from coal-fired power stations meant nuclear energy could be delivered affordably – unlike Labour’s $20 billion Rewiring the Nation plan.

Nuclear for Climate Australia has been endorsed by Coalition MPs and its founder has also advised the Opposition on nuclear energy policy.

The group’s 13 recommended potential reactor sites include seven existing coal-fired power stations: Callide, Stanwell, Tarong, Gladstone, Millmeran, Kogan Creek and Collinsville, along with the gas-fired Swanbank in the suburb of Ipswich.

Nuclear for Climate has also proposed Ross River in northern Queensland, the existing site of a solar farm near Townsville, which is also close to the sea.

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