Belz...
Fiend God
I doubt insurance companies do cost/benefit analysis based on bad press and movies. I'm pretty sure they have researchers find facts and studies to weigh the factors.
I'm sure you're right on the latter, but those companies are run by people, and they're not immune to public hysteria.
You make plenty of assumptions that are not in evidence. Solar, wind, geothermal are all good alternatives that could very well make up parts of an energy infrastructure along with batteries and a small contribution from fossil fuels.
How are they "good" alternatives? It's absolutely not "in evidence" that batteries can supply half the world in electricity during the night, especially during very hot or cold days, or during weeks where one barely sees the sun through the clouds. It's fantasy. You need a type of power generation that does _not_ rely on the weather.
Coal is dirty, dangerous, contributes to greenhouse effects, and actually puts out a lot of waste that is not only toxic forever, but also radioactive.
I'll take a gander.
In case you find that "harm" or "deaths" is not a proper way to compare these technologies, I'd like you to tell me what standard you'd use for the comparison. If the point of not wanting nuclear because it's risky, then harm absolutely is the only yardstick I can think of.
ETA:
I notice none of these studies include data about solar, wind or geothermal sources
What? Look again. Wiki has the same numbers, and they absolutely include solar and wind.
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