Not way back, I met a lady from Belarus. She advised me concerning the horrible aftermath of the Chernobyl nuclear accident in April 1986. As a baby, she’d needed to evacuate her residence, which was contaminated by radioactivity, and completely relocate. She mentioned that many individuals she knew, many youngsters, had gotten most cancers and died after the catastrophe.

I immediately went chilly. I had simply revealed a ebook during which I cited assessments concluding that the dying toll from the accident was surprisingly low. In keeping with the World Well being Group, within the 20 years after the accident, fewer than 50 folks had died due to radiation publicity, nearly all of them rescue employees. (I did word that some estimates had been increased.)

The discrepancy between these completely different claims posed a well-known dilemma. As a journalist protecting nuclear energy and the controversy over its function within the struggle in opposition to local weather change — and as a Californian carefully following the San Onofre and Diablo Canyon nuclear plant controversies — I’ve been continuously within the place of making an attempt to evaluate danger. I’ve been navigating between the Scylla of overestimating danger and the Charybdis of underestimating it.

If we underestimate the hazards of nuclear energy, we danger contaminating the surroundings and jeopardizing public well being. If we exaggerate them, we might miss out on an essential device for weaning ourselves off fossil fuels. If I had been sanguine concerning the risks of nuclear, the anti-nuclear aspect would think about me a chump, even perhaps an business shill. If I emphasised the risks, the pro-nuclear aspect would think about me alarmist, accuse me of fearmongering. Extra consequential than what activists may say, in fact, was the potential of deceptive readers about these high-stakes points.

My dilemma additionally intersected with one other query. When ought to we consider the authorities, and when ought to we mistrust them? Within the case of nuclear energy, this query has an enchanting historical past. The anti-nuclear motion of the ’70s grew out of a deep suspicion of authority and establishments. Nuclear energy was promoted by a “nuclear priesthood” of scientists and authorities bureaucrats, who got here throughout as opaque and condescending. Protesters carried indicators with messages corresponding to “Hell no, we won’t glow” and “Better active today than radioactive tomorrow.” To be anti-nuclear went together with the “question authority” left-wing ethos of the period.

At present, a lot has modified. Lately, scientists have been telling us that we have to decarbonize our vitality system, and in left-leaning circles, scientists and specialists have develop into the great guys once more (in no small half as a result of many MAGA voices have develop into loudly anti-science). Establishments such because the Worldwide Power Company and the Intergovernmental Panel on Local weather Change have mentioned that nuclear energy can play a key function in that decarbonized system. The official estimates of deaths from nuclear accidents are fairly low, and in the meantime the struggling aggravated by local weather change is ever extra obvious. For these causes, many environmentalists and progressives, together with me, have grown extra supportive of nuclear energy.

But I’m at all times uncomfortably conscious of the extent to which I’m taking the specialists’ phrase for his or her conclusions. If we by no means query authorities, we’re credulous sheep; if we by no means belief them, we develop into unhinged conspiracy theorists.

Though these quandaries are notably salient for a journalist protecting nuclear energy, they’re primarily common in our fashionable world. When deciding whether or not to put on a masks or vaccinate our youngsters, or what to make of the specter of local weather change, or how frightened to be about “forever chemicals” in our cookware, we’re all perpetually making an attempt to gauge dangers. Unable to be specialists in each discipline, we should resolve whom to belief.

Not too long ago, issues have develop into much more advanced. As President Trump eviscerates federal businesses and cuts funding from the Nationwide Institutes of Well being and universities, it raises new issues about how well-equipped these establishments will likely be to offer dependable info — each due to their diminished capability and since we more and more should marvel to what extent their work is influenced by a concern of additional funding cuts.

I’ve discovered just a few classes to assist navigate the dilemmas all of us face. Don’t think about dangers in isolation; put them in context. Take each skilled assessments and anecdotal proof with a grain of salt. Resist allying your self with any specific tribe or group. Be trustworthy, with your self and others, about your personal biases and predispositions.

Even in at the moment’s chaotic and degraded info ecosystem, we are able to discover individuals who share our values who know far more a few given topic than we do. Hearken to those that share your issues and who constantly tackle them utilizing strong information and reasoning.

But we should additionally acknowledge that our data won’t ever be excellent. Our understanding of the world is ever evolving, as is the world itself. I got here to simply accept that occupying the place between chump and alarmist is just a part of the fashionable situation. And I’ll hold making an attempt to not veer too far in both route.

Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow, a journalist based mostly in Orange County, is the writer of “Atomic Dreams: The New Nuclear Evangelists and the Fight for the Future of Energy.”