Mr JOYCE (New England) (13:53): I'm going to do something that's rather unusual today. I'm going to rail in support of reducing carbon emissions and in absolute support of the union movement. I especially want to commend the Australian Workers Union. Have we got any members of the Australian Workers Union here? An opposition member: Yes! Mr JOYCE: Good stuff. I'm commending the Australian Workers' Union because they, like the USA, France, China, Russia, South Korea, Canada, Ukraine, Germany, the UK, Sweden, Spain, Belgium, India, Japan, the Czech Republic, Finland, Switzerland, Brazil, Bulgaria, Hungary, South Africa, Slovakia, Mexico, Romania, Pakistan, Iran, Argentina, Slovenia, the Netherlands and Armenia, support nuclear energy. Tomorrow, at the inquiry we are having, the AWU are coming as a witness. We know now that they are coming to re-endorse the position they gave in South Australia in support of nuclear energy. This should not be a divisive issue; this should be something that links both sides of the House—that we show we have the intuition and the nous to not only dig uranium out of the ground but use it ourselves to supply an abundance of electricity, to get even more people into jobs and to create a carbon-free alternative to coal.