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Anton van der Merwe's avatar

Fantastic piece. Thank you.

One point I would like to add is that we do harm when our response to risks is excessive.

My favourite example is fear of radioactivity from nuclear power plants and their waste. Our regulatory regime treats a life lost to exposure to radioactivity from nuclear energy and its waste as being 100 to 10,000 times more valuable than a life lost to air pollution from burning fossil fuels and biofuels. Because of this we made nuclear power so expensive and unpopular in the 1980's that we stopped building new reactors, and instead built fossil fuel (mainly coal) powered reactors. This has resulted in many millions of avoidable deaths every year and has dramatically accelerated climate change. Despite the fact that nuclear energy, including the older reactors built under the previous regulatory regimes, have turned out to be the safest form of reliable energy, those regulations have never been made more rational. We could decarbonise much faster and have much cheaper electricity if we make regulations more reasonable. Fear stops us.

We are now treating anthropogenic climate change as being such a serious risk that we are seriously considering policies which will kill millions of people, by increasing energy poverty and slowing economic growth in low and middle income countries. This is nuts as the current projections indicate a minimal if any increase in mortality from warming. While more will die from extreme heat, fewer will die from extreme cold - which currently kills far more people than extreme heat, especially in low and middle income countries. In the past 20 years warming in the UK has resulted in 500,000 fewer deaths!

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Fabian Spieker's avatar

I wouldn't even call it a subculture. It's as if hopelessness has infiltrated all our minds. Hopelessness is our worst enemy. If an enemy can make you believe you have already lost, then this becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

The theme of hopelessness, of resistance being futile (unless equipped with superpowers) is a very common theme in popular culture. We are being played.

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