Researching a book I’m writing on the science and economics of green issues, I’ve come across one of those irritating quotes that seem to belong to more than one person.
A popular quote that the media use to show how misguided early fans of atomic energy were is that they thought it would be ‘too cheap to meter.’
A fair number of UK sources attribute this to one of the British pioneers, Walter Marshall. But I am yet to find a single reference as to the context in which this was said or written, if it ever was, by Marshall.
What seems to have a stronger attribution is that these words were said by the chairman of the US atomic energy commission, Lewis L. Strauss. However the context in which he said this is absolutely essential in understanding it.
Strauss was addressing the National Association of Science Writers in 1954. It was one of those hand-waving, vague visions of a utopian future. Yes, he did say that ‘our children will enjoy in their homes electrical energy too cheap to meter’ (though not specifically that it would be generated by nuclear fission) but also that there would be an end to disease, hugely extended human lifetimes and world peace. It was that kind of speech. You know the sort.
This is a prediction with about as much support at the time as Alvin Toffler in Future Shock saying that by now we would all be wearing paper clothes, or Clarke and Kubrick in 2001: A Space Odyssey showing Pan Am commercial flights to a space station, and life-size video telephone booths operated by Bell in 2001. It was woffly future-gazing, yet the media repeatedly pick it up as a real expectation that wasn’t present in either science or industry at the time.
This prediction isn’t a miss, it’s a myth.
(If anyone can give me a source for the quote from Walter Marshall, I would be grateful.)