Fall in love with the thrill of accepting the better argument – in contrast to 
mere social pressure – and you'll help pave the path to that better world. Not 
through grand solutions, but through better trade offs.



The thrill of changing your mind
https://world.hey.com/dhh/the-thrill-of-changing-your-mind-88ff9063
(via Instapaper)

I've changed my mind on a lot of topics over the last few years, and it's 
frankly been exhilarating. Especially if the topic had been one left 
unquestioned for a long time. To me, it feels similar to the rush of solving a 
hard problem. When the pieces suddenly fit into place, and an elegant solution 
emerges, you can't help but smile.

Take nuclear power. I vividly remember the stickers from the 80s opposing it. 
Even looking them today, it brings warm and fuzzy memories. Together with that 
era's activism, like the Greenpeace Rainbow Warrior. And fundraising as a kid 
for the Brazilian rain forest.

Further more, it seemed like a settled question: The future of energy is wind 
and solar! Of course it is. Renewables with no downsides, right? Wrong. Michael 
Shellenberger's exposition of energy sources in Apocalypse Never was as 
argumentatively piercing as it was intellectually compelling. It goes something 
like this:

Wind and solar are unreliable sources of energy. The sun doesn't always shine, 
the wind doesn't always blow. But electrical grids need dependable sources of 
power to perform reliably and cheaply.
Batteries can't solve the problem at scale. The sheer footprint needed to 
bridge the gap in production from renewables is enormous and unrealistic with 
present-day technology.
When wind and solar fails to deliver the power needed, you need on-demand 
backup sources. Most of these sources today are extra dirty emitters like coal 
power plants.
Thus, if you over-invest in wind and solar, you may end up with a power grid 
that's simultaneously expensive, unreliable, dirty, and without sovereignty. 
The case study is Germany, which is now at the mercy of Russian natural gas, 
after spending billions over the years chasing wind and solar.
Besides, wind in particular is not without its own ecological drawbacks. Wind 
parks can wreck havoc on the migration paths of certain bird species. They take 
up a lot of space. (And they're a blight for the people who have to live right 
next to them.) Solar has a serious waste problem. Panels recycle poorly, are 
full of toxic materials, and often end up in 3rd world landfills.

That doesn't mean wind and solar can't be or shouldn't be part of the answer 
for dealing with climate change. But it does mean that betting on them 
exclusively is a bad idea. And that their use is not without its own problems.

Enter nuclear power. An energy source that also emits no earth-heating gasses, 
provides an abundance of predictable power, and has done so for decades. 
Countries like France already get 70% of their power from nuclear. The nuclear 
waste generated can be stored on-site, and the waste needed for a single 
person's lifetime energy consumption can fit in a coke can.

But what about Chernobyl? Three Mile Island? Fukushima? Shellenberger examines 
all these well-known accidents in detail, and compellingly concludes that the 
total number of deaths associated is but a pittance compared to all these other 
energy sources we're using on the daily. Their impact has largely been drawn 
from the spectacle of disaster. And as a result been massively overstated (even 
if the consequences are very real).

It's that contrast I found particularly compelling. That when we weigh the 
trade offs objectively, nuclear emerges as shining star. Not because there are 
no risks, but because they are far less than the alternatives. Like comparing 
flying and driving. Flying is much safer, but when a plane goes down, it's 
world news, and it freaks some people out. Meanwhile, 35,000 died in car 
accidents in the US last year. Few people fret about that.

It seems that Shellenberger isn't the only one coming to this conclusion. That 
nuclear power appears to be one of our very best chances at countering climate 
change, and the historical opposition from environmentalists now looks like a 
catastrophic error in hindsight. The EU just announced that nuclear can be 
counted as a green energy source going forward, which means its expanded use 
can be used to fulfill the international pledges for transitioning off 
green-house gas emitting energy sources. Nice.

But this goes further than just nuclear. To make progress on a range of topics, 
we have to be able to change our minds. To revisit our assumptions when the 
data changes or when a new way of looking at it emerges. This is true whether 
we talk about energy, vaccines, economics, or politics in general. Fall in love 
with the thrill of accepting the better argument – in contrast to mere social 
pressure – and you'll help pave the path to that better world. Not through 
grand solutions, but through better trade offs.

 


Sent from my iPhone

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