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Geoff Olynyk's avatar

One of the best op-eds you’ve printed since I became a subscriber. Really brilliant telling-it-like-it-is in a jargon-free way from beginning to end. This kind of essay is why I like this publication.

The Dark Green/Bright Green debate has been roiling in the energy/climate community (where I’ve been for my whole career) for decades but only recently entered mainstream political debate due to the carbon tax.

The terms themselves remain esoteric but basically Dark Green is: the only way to reduce carbon emissions is through constraining lifestyles or reducing population. And Bright Green (also sometimes called “decoupling” or “ecomodernism”) is the idea that carbon emissions can be reduced without constraining lifestyles, by pursuing new Green technologies that allow us a life of abundance without wrecking the climate.

One thing that’s been frustrating for me is how the mainstream debate has always assumed one of two falsehoods: either that climate change isn’t a serious problem, or that reducing carbon will be cost-free and won’t require any lifestyle constraints in the short term.

Pierre P right now is out there pointing out the costs of the tax (as is this essay) while ignoring that if we don’t get carbon emissions down, things are gonna get real bad for a stable world. We may not broil to death in Canada but a destabilized nuclear Pakistan can still sting us.

And too much of the renewables/green-tech industry/Guilbeault faction has pretended that this will all be easy and cost-free, we’ll just ride bikes and clean, efficient transit and live in comfortable apartments! Which — well, I don’t need to repeat the great essay here to prove how naive that is.

The problem is that both things are true: we need to address carbon, and doing so in the absence of low-carbon abundant energy (via lifestyle constraints) will be incredibly painful and probably politically impossible. Certainly global cooperation appears to be failing. That’s the vice we’re in. The only way out is abundant, low-cost, zero carbon energy. Which is the reason I’m in the nuclear industry… and why I see fission and fusion as inevitable.

This reply is already too long so I’ll just close by saying thanks again for publishing this article. You guys should interview Chris Keefer on On The Line, who deeply understands this debate and the role of nuclear in getting us out of the dilemma we’re in.

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Campo's avatar

I really enjoyed Clarke's writing style. More pieces from him, please!

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