“We’ve got a plan, and that plan is a focus on gas and renewables.”
Saffioti then spruiked her government’s investment in big batteries in Kwinana and Collie.
Stokes, 48, told the breakfast it was time for “sensible debate” around the use of nuclear as an emissions-free baseload power source and suggested cynicism could be “easily” countered with incentives for those living near nuclear infrastructure.
“To deal with the NIMBYism — that’s easy. You can find ways to incentivise people to want to live around a nuclear environment where they have benefits, free energy, free power, or whatever the mechanism; you might be able to entice people who want to kind of be around that and remove the traditional concerns,” he said.
The nuclear debate flared up the same day a grievance by Labor’s Collie-Preston MP Jodie Hanns against the Coalition’s nuclear plan was heard in parliament.
WA Energy Minister Reece Whitby savaged the Coalition plan in his response.
“I think Peter Dutton is engaged in the most cynical political exercise in a generation,” he said.
“There are people who want to believe there is a simple fix to the challenge of the energy transition and climate change, and some even doubt the need to act at all.
“But Peter Dutton is only trying to score a political point and disrupt the transition to renewable energy, not to deliver a solution.
“It is incredibly selfish and reckless, and it threatens Western Australia’s and Australia’s future economic prosperity.”