Research project idea: Neartermist cost-effectiveness analysis of nuclear risk reduction

By MichaelA🔸 @ 2023-04-15T14:46 (+12)

This post is part of a series of rough posts on nuclear risk research ideas. I strongly recommend that, before you read this post, you read the series’ summary & introduction post for context, caveats, and to see the list of other ideas. One caveat that’s especially worth flagging here is that I drafted this in late 2021 and haven’t updated it much since. I’m grateful to Will Aldred for help with this series.

One reason I'm publishing this now is to serve as one menu of research project ideas for upcoming summer research fellowships.

Some tentative bottom-line views about this project idea

ImportanceTractabilityNeglectednessOutsourceability
Medium/LowMedium/HighMedium/LowLow

What is this idea? How could it be tackled?

Most interest in nuclear risk reduction from members of the EA community is premised on longtermism. But one could also argue for prioritising nuclear risk reduction for its near-term effects alone, meaning something like effects on the current and/or next one or two generations. In fact, those near-term effects seem to me to be the main motivator for work on nuclear risk by people outside the EA community.

But perhaps those non-EAs are overestimating the risk, underestimating the difficulty of reducing the risk, overlooking other interventions with strong neartermist cost-effectiveness (such as donating to charities recommended by GiveWell or Animal Charity Evaluators), or in some other way deviating from effective and broadly utilitarian prioritisation? This could be investigated by conducting a cost-effectiveness analysis of nuclear risk reduction that focuses solely on near-term effects.

In conducting this project, one would have to consider:

This project could overlap with “Impact assessment of various organizations, programmes, movements, etc.”.

Why might this research be useful?

There are several possible paths to impact for this project. First, it could cause members of the EA community to correctly update towards prioritising nuclear risk more (with their careers, funding, etc.). This could occur if this project suggests the (human-centric) neartermist case for nuclear risk reduction is surprisingly strong or if it simply provides a more convincing demonstration that the case is at least plausible (which I actually already believe). This could affect the behaviour either of people who lean neartermist or people who lean longtermist but not strongly.

Second, this project could cause members of the EA community to correctly update towards prioritising nuclear risk less, if it turns out the neartermist case is surprisingly weak.

Third and fourth, this project could cause people who aren’t members of the EA community to correctly update towards prioritising nuclear risk more or less (depending on what the project reveals).

However, I think there are several barriers to these paths to impact. In particular:

What sort of person might be a good fit for this?

I expect any good generalist researcher could conduct a useful version of this project. I expect someone to be a stronger fit the more they already know about various things relevant to nuclear risk (since this project would involve something like end-to-end modelling, even if quite roughly done) and the more experience they have with modelling, forecasting, literature reviews, and expert elicitation.

Some relevant previous work