Harding, Jim, 1941-2019-09-252019-09-252010-11-012008http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/175854"More than thirty years ago, my now-deceased colleague David Comey was asked to make a presentation before the annual meeting of the Atomic Industrial Forum, then the major trade association backing expansion of nuclear power worldwide.He was asked to deliver that speech because he had built credibility with the press and with key decision makers by being scrupulously careful with his facts and analyses. The industry understood that its reputation—particularly with the media—was poor, and they wanted to understand how David did it. In Comey’s view, there was an easy explanation—the nuclear industry regularly exaggerated and misled. In the intervening years, not much has changed. The industry still seems to prefer the sound of a splashy argument to a defensible case. Popular articles in the press, some opinion leaders and politicians, and even some environmentalists have bought the notion of a nuclear renaissance." (p. 1)engWith permission of the license/copyright holdernuclear energyclimate ethicsEnvironmental ethicsResources ethicsMyths of the nuclear renaisanceArticle