World’s biggest mining company calls for Australia to scrap nuclear power ban
- Nuclear ‘must be part of the conversation’, Laura Tyler, chief technical officer at BHP Group said
- Australia has never had nuclear power and there’s been a prohibition on its use in place since the 1990s

BHP Group is calling for Australia to lift a long-standing ban on nuclear power as the country moves to decarbonise its electricity system.
Nuclear “must be part of the conversation” in Australia, Laura Tyler, chief technical officer at the world’s biggest miner, said in an interview on Wednesday.
“To make sure we have that safe, reliable energy mix, we need to be able to mix it up” with nuclear complementing wind, solar, batteries and other sources of electricity, she said. “Everything needs to be on the table”.
The bulk of BHP’s earnings come from its Australian iron ore and coal mines, but the company also produces uranium, the fuel for nuclear reactors, at its Olympic Dam site in South Australia.
After being shunned due to safety concerns, nuclear energy is enjoying a resurgence in global popularity due to a shortage of natural gas following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The need to decarbonise electricity grids and the development of smaller and cheaper reactors is also making it more attractive.