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- Risk In Perspective: Hazard and Risk Are Critically Different Things
- On Farming, Animals, and the Environment
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Author Archives: Thoughtscapism
Risk In Perspective: Hazard and Risk Are Critically Different Things
This series is something neuroscientist Alison Bernstein and biologist Iida Ruishalme have been brewing over for a long time. Risk perception is such a big crux in science communication that it’s worth taking a moment to reflect on. We decided … Continue reading
Risk In Perspective
This series is something neuroscientist Alison Bernstein and biologist Iida Ruishalme have been brewing over for a long time. Risk perception is such a big crux in science communication that it’s worth taking a moment to reflect on. We decided … Continue reading
Posted in health, parenting, psychology, science communication, vaccines
Tagged hazard, risk
13 Comments
UNEP’s Narrow-minded Views on Innovation
World’s energy production needs all the innovation it can get, but UN-director Erik Solheim appears not to have gotten the memo. GUEST AUTHOR: This piece was written by journalist Øystein Heggdal, and it was originally published in the Norwegian newspaper Klassekampen on … Continue reading
Wolf Reintroduction Is Great, But Probably Not A Miraculous Landscape-Changer
Perhaps you’ve seen one of these videoclips: the scene opens up of wolves galloping in the snow, then landscapes of rivers and mountains opening up before you. Pictures of deer and elk, bears, bison, beavers, badgers, foxes, eagles, and so … Continue reading
At the Source: Where 13 % of Swiss Electricity is Created
A friendly nuclear engineer I met at the screening for the movie New Fire made the off-hand mention that he might be able to give a tour of his nuclear plant, Gösgen – an offer I held onto like a leech! … Continue reading
Off the Press: Nuclear Energy Is a Fast and Inexpensive Way to Improve the World
This piece was originally published in the Finnish newspaper Aamulehti on Friday 8th of November 2017. The article is based on an earlier English blog piece I wrote, which was quite a bit longer than the 4500 character limit at the paper, and … Continue reading
Nuclear Energy Is the Fastest and Lowest-Cost Clean Energy Solution
I’ve joked to my friends that if there is anything that proves how important I consider the clean energy topic to be, it’s me digging into electricity pricing. I have a natural aversion to economics – I’ve demoted that aversion … Continue reading
Posted in climate, energy, finance, nuclear, renewables, society
Tagged batteries, Finnish, IPCC
22 Comments
Give Nuclear a Seat at the Table
I first saw the giant inflated bubble-igloos at the COP23 area at night, illuminated from inside with a green and violet light, giving them a sort of futuristic bouncy castle -vibe. The circus-sized igloos were to be the location for … Continue reading
Conversations with an Anti-Nuclear Protester, Take Two
In the aftermath of the controversial US panel on energy at COP23, Lenka Kollar was the only panelist who stayed behind and gave interviews to several camera crews. These included one with a pitbullish German reporter, whose demands for exact … Continue reading
The Right Price for Saving the Planet Depends on the Energy Form
The controversial US energy panel at COP23 was over, and people began pouring out of the room at the climate conference in Bonn. While most panelists left, nuclear engineer Lenka Kollar from NuScale stayed and gave interviews to several camera … Continue reading