
HenryTo
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I am also optimistic on hydrogen, but in the meantime, nuclear power is most probably the most promising "alternative energy" source - at least in terms of generating electricity anyway (which is now mostly fueled by coal and natural gas in the US). France is a good example of how prevalent and safe nuclear energy can be. Their newer power plants generate only 10% of the waste compared to the initial plants they had been building nearly 30 years ago.
Nuclear energy can also displace oil in our transportation fleet if most of our car fleet become hybrids or vehicles that only run on electricity - but that will require us to start building nuclear power plants right now (but then, the Chinese isn't wasting anytime and neither should we).
Note that the price of uranium hasn't had a SINGLE DOWN DAY since 2003. |

ben b
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Basically Nuclear fuel is the real alternative.
However, the fuels market, so segmented into bulk providers, resellers, etc is so volatile at the moment, and undergoing re structure, its probably better to look at a dynamic reseller, than the next wonder fuel.
The next big thing in fuel, will be batteries, a very big consumer market, off the track of your thoughts, but a big market, never the less. This will change to micro fuel cells, efficiently using micro amounts of liquid, in a microsopic combustion engine, like a little lawnmower engine (the only by product,exhaust, being water) to run previous stored energy applications, ie, replace batteries.
You will be refuelling your laptop, mobile phone, etc, with lighter fuel, or a hybrid liquid fuel, soon!
If you want to invest money, email my link....because people are always telling me, "your good at what you do" and why dont i do this and that with it, but try getting a business up and unning when everyone wants a cut to finance it. (seriously ive got a trade, and talent, and looking for capital, on a shared basis, involving my own work, not an idea or marketing, other people do the the work millionare's scheme.) |