Can you be an environmentalist without embracing nuclear energy?

Can you be an environmentalist without embracing nuclear energy?

Thirty-nine years after the meltdown at Three Mile Island and almost five years post-Fukushima, nuclear power seems to be emerging from its long funk as a promising alternative to the carbon economy. Innovative new designs are changing the landscape of nuclear power and have the potential to redefine affordable, emission-free, and carbon-free clean energy. So why is it still a hotly contested issue?

The need for “urgent and concrete action” to cut greenhouse-gas emissions is fresh in our minds post-Paris climate-change conference, and there will never be a better time to employ new and old sustainable solutions to the threat of climate change.

Will proliferation of nuclear energy be among the solutions the world seeks, or will our long memory of the fallout from first- and second-generation reactors prevent us from embracing the promise of clean energy that new models provide?

Join Future Tense on Monday, Feb. 22, at 12:15 p.m., for lunch and conversation in Washington, D.C., to consider whether you can truly be an environmentalist without embracing nuclear energy.

Participants will include, Steve LeVine, Washington Correspondent, Quartz; Future Tense Fellow, New America and Adjunct Professor, Center for Security Studies, Georgetown University; Aaron VanDevender, Chief Scientist and Principal, Founders Fund; Jennifer Richter, Assistant Professor, School for the Future of Innovation in Society and School of Social Transformation, Arizona State University; Robert Hill, Technical Director, Nuclear Energy R&D, Argonne National Laboratory; and Joseph Romm, Founding Editor, ClimateProgress.org, Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress, and Author, Climate Change: What Everyone Needs to Know

Future Tense is a partnership of Arizona State UniversityNew America and Slate.

Roxanne Ladd
Office of University Affairs
202-446-0381
roxanne.ladd@asu.edu
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New America, 740 15th St. NW, Suite 900, Washington, DC