The new way of thinking about risk means an increased acknowledgement and incorporation of principles that give weight to uncertainties, for example the cautionary principle, the precautionary principle, robustness, resilience, etc., compared to approaches based on more mechanical procedures, such as expected utility theory, and probability founded risk acceptance criteria. The cautionary principle states that in the case of risk (interpreted broadly, as in the present paper), caution should be shown, meaning that measures should be implemented to reduce the risk. The precautionary principle is a special case of the cautionary principle and applies when there are scientific uncertainties about the consequences [10]. All these principles acknowledge that, in many cases in real life, risk cannot be measured in an objective way and that the risk management needs to reflect this, giving sufficient weight to solutions, arrangements and measures that provide protection and consequence reductions when undesirable events, the unforeseen and black swan events occur. Different names and research traditions exist for these principles (e.g. [10], [17], [21], [30] and [42]), but they are very similar.