There can't be many people who'd like to see a nuclear conflict but, with expenditures like this, it's increasingly likely that we'll see one:
In 2025, the nine nuclear-armed states spent just under $119 billion, or $3,768 per second, on their nuclear arsenals. [T]he combined spending of the nuclear armed states – China, France, India, Israel, North Korea, Pakistan, Russia, UK and US increased 19% from the previous year....Premeditated: 2025 global nuclear weapons spending, International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), June 2026
In 2025, at least 25 companies working on nuclear weapons development and maintenance held significant contracts for their work. These companies earned at least $38 billion in the year for nuclear weapons related activities and hold at least $394 billion in outstanding contracts. In 2025, new contracts worth around $2.5 billion were awarded to these companies. The companies identified in this report paid lobbyists in France and the United States more than $138 million to represent their interests last year. 2025 Nuclear Weapons Spending Reaches $119 billion, ICAN, June 2026
These sums represent a massive failure on the part of our species. A big part of the problem is that there's no obvious way in which ordinary people - the part of humanity that hopes nuclear weapons will never be used - can channel our wishes into opposing their continued development and deployment. There are bodies, such as ICAN, dedicated to campaigning for the abolition of nuclear weapons, but their resources are pitiful in comparison to the sums wielded by the companies working to develop them. The financial rewards to those companies, and the incentives to acquire them, vastly outweigh organised opposition to t heir deployment and use. Incentives are crucial and we need to offer meaningful and effective incentives for people to do everything they can to deter the acquisition and use of nuclear weapons.
What I propose is that we offer incentives for people to explore more ways of reducing the likelihood of nuclear conflict as efficiently as possible. I suggest that we put in place a system that encourages and rewards people for researching, refining and implementing the most promising activities that would ensure sustained nuclear peace.
Nuclear Peace Bonds would be an ideal application of the Social Policy Bond concept, which is a way of rewarding the more efficient achievement social and environmental outcomes. In this instance, the targeted outcome could be nuclear peace sustained for thirty years. 'Nuclear peace' could be defined as something like 'the detonation of a nuclear device that directly kills more than 50 people' (with added provisos about any electromagnetic pulse effects). The bonds would reward those who achieve such a sustained period of nuclear peace, whoever they are and however they do so: only the outcome would be stipulated. For a short piece on how Nuclear Peace Bonds would work, please click here. For essays about applying the bonds to conflict in general, click here.
As well as pursuing activities the exact nature of which we cannot anticipate, investors in Nuclear Peace Bonds could do things that cannot be done by existing organisations, constrained as they are by precedent, and their perceived need to maintain their existence and so satisfy the bodies that fund them. So, for example, in today's world, nobody would have any incentive to bribe people close to decision makers in politics or the military to advocate nuclear disarmament. Likewise, an existing body is unlikely to try to get religious extremists to tone down their rhetoric, even if it believed that were the most efficient way of reducing the probability of nuclear conflict. The risk and consequences of exposure and backlash are too great for current institutions to bear. Holders of Nuclear Peace Bonds, however, would not be deterred from whatever actions they think most effective: funds to redeem their bonds could be held in escrow. Once nuclear peace had been achieved and sustained, their reward would be guaranteed. Nuclear Peace Bonds could run in parallel with existing efforts. Indeed, it's likely to channel more resources into those existing bodies whose activities are most promising. It would also encourage new approaches, the precise nature of which we cannot and need not know in advance.
A Nuclear Peace Bond regime would reward those who achieve peace, whoever they are and however they do so. It’s an admittedly novel approach, but the relevant question is 'what is the alternative?'. The Doomsday Clock is currently at 85 seconds to midnight....