In 2011, former Federal minister
Alexander Downer addressed UCL students to discuss the nuclear industry. Prior to his presentation he told the media of his support for the establishment of a
nuclear waste dump in South Australia, and described a possible future scenario in which a nuclear power plant could power a seawater
desalination plant in order to provide water for BHP Billiton's
Olympic Dam mine. In 2012, Stefaan Simons was appointed the inaugural Director of the International Energy Policy Institute, and the BHP Billiton Chair of Energy Policy. Simons has acknowledged that asking "whether Australia could, and should, develop a
nuclear power service industry based on
uranium enrichment and fuel rod manufacture for the global market" is a key theme of the Institute's work. In a 2013 article entitled
Is it time for nuclear energy for Australia? Simons proposed that goals of securing energy supply, maintaining economic growth and mitigating impacts of climate change could all be advanced by including nuclear in a "low-emission energy mix" for Australia. On UCL's role in the process he wrote: University College London’s International Energy Policy Institute (IEPI), based at its Australia campus in Adelaide, undertakes economic, regulatory and policy research on how Australia could develop a nuclear energy industry and manage its externalities, including decommissioning and waste." In late 2013, UCL staff and students contributed to conference papers investigating the subject of nuclear submarine development in Australia. Papers entitled
What would it take for Australia to develop a nuclear-powered submarine capability? and
From subs to Mines: What would it take for Australia to develop a nuclear-powered submarine capability? were presented in
Brisbane, Australia and at the
AIChE Annual Meeting in
San Francisco, USA respectively. The subject was further explored in 2014 with the presentation of a conference paper entitled
Selecting Nuclear-Powered Submarines in Australia: Nuclear Waste Consideration at a Waste Management conference (WM2014) in
Phoenix, Arizona. In 2014, former Federal resources and energy minister
Martin Ferguson was appointed as chairman of the UCL Australia board. Ferguson is an advocate for
nuclear power in Australia. UCL Australia's Chief Executive
David Travers said of Ferguson's appointment: UCL doesn't want to be large in Australia, but we do want to be influential and welcome Martin to the team to help us achieve these goals. Also in 2014, James "Jim" Voss, a senior nuclear engineer and Fellow of the UK Nuclear Institute was appointed Honorary Reader at UCL Australia's International Energy Policy Institute. He had previously served in the Executive Office of the President of the United States under two Presidents and advised senior government officials in other countries. He is also a former Managing Director of
Pangea Resources, the proponent of a proposal to establish a nuclear waste dump in Australia in the late 1990s. Research conducted at UCL in 2014 included several studies investigating the prospect of expanding nuclear industrial activity in Australia and South Australia. These included work by staff Dr Michel Berthelemy and Dr Tim Stone on
Nuclear fuel cycle strategies and work by UCL students investigating
nuclear fuel leasing opportunities. Student research subjects included
The legal merits of an Australian Nuclear Fuel Leasing scheme by Owen Sharpe
, and The World’s first integrated nuclear fuel leasing in South Australia? A proposed business model and its economic appraisal by Iwan Setiyono Ko. After graduating, Sharpe was recruited to South Australia's
Department of the Premier and Cabinet as a Senior Policy Officer. In March 2014, briefings on nuclear fuel leasing were given by UCL staff to
Parsons Brinkerhoff,
Deloitte and
Babcock. In May a further briefing on the subject was given by Martin Ferguson at a confidential event. On 4 December 2014, Stefaan Simons and Tim Stone presented a conference paper entitled
The international management of spent nuclear fuel at the Nuclear Industries Association Annual Meeting in London, United Kingdom. UCL Australia established a Nuclear Working Group "to share scientific knowledge in relation to the main issues identified by the Royal Commission; to assist and facilitate the process leading up to informed community decisions". Group members include: Magnus Nyden (Head), Christian Ekberg,
Paola Lettieri, Jonathan Mirrlees-Black, Michael Pollitt,
Tim Stone,
Pam Sykes,
Geraldine Thomas,
Jim Voss and Max Zanin. ==See also==