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Here's the Latest Already Obsolete Next-Generation Battery

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Over the last 48 hours, dozens of articles have appeared covering the incredible achievements of a y

Over the last 48 hours, dozens of articles have appeared covering the incredible achievements of a young battery company based in California. The problem is that these achievements may already be a moot point... Over the last 48 hours, dozens of articles have appeared covering the incredible achievements of a young battery company based in California. The problem is that these achievements may already be a moot point... [Wealth Daily logo] Here's the Latest Already Obsolete Next-Generation Battery [Alex Koyfman Photo] By [Alex Koyfman]( Written May 05, 2022 Dear Reader, Over the last 48 hours, dozens of articles have appeared online covering the incredible achievements of an exciting new battery company based in Alameda, California. This firm, named Sila and co-founded by EV industry veteran Gene Berdichevsky, is currently in the process of converting a 600,000-square-foot industrial building in Moses Lake, Washington, into a state-of-the-art production facility for manufacturing a line of next-generation batteries featuring silicon-based anodes. These new batteries will boast higher energy density than graphite-based anode cells, allowing for up to a 20% weight reduction with a similar improvement in charge time and an improved service life. Early backers of this project include Daimler and BMW, which will also be the first carmakers to implement the new batteries into production model EVs. Though Mr. Berdichevsky has been cagey in providing details, total investment in the new facility will easily top $1 billion. This news constitutes not just a major step forward in battery performance, but also almost certainly an annoyance for Elon Musk, who is already very well acquainted with Sila's CEO. The Student Becomes the Teacher? Gene Berdichevsky, as it turns out, was once a Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) man himself — employee No. 7, to be exact — a one-man battery research and development department during the company's early days. Today, he's working on transforming the newly acquired Moses Lake operation into a production facility churning out enough cells per year to power between 100,000 and 500,000 electrical vehicles. In keeping with the demands of modern Pacific Northwestern culture, the new factory will be 100% carbon neutral, taking its power entirely from Washington state's hydroelectric power grid. On paper, it seems like a recipe for success, which will more than likely take the form of a massive IPO and a bright future as a public company operating in one of today's fastest-growing sectors. The problem for Sila, however, is that all of this may already be a moot point. Will Musk Buy This Company Next? The lithium crisis has gotten so insane that Elon Musk says Tesla may need to actually start its very own lithium mining operation. But this lithium shortage is only going to get worse. UBS says as soon as 2025, the surging demand for lithium will most likely outgrow the supply of ALL known lithium mining projects. The good news? One company stands to capitalize on this crisis in a big way. This genius team of scientists has developed a technology for creating an infinite supply of super-rich lithium right here in America... WITHOUT having to mine a single ounce. [Get the full story on what could be Musk’s next big buyout.]( While silicon-anode batteries do present certain benefits as far as energy density, the difference is only a marginal improvement over today's benchmark. It may not be enough to warrant a second, deeper examination from Musk as he attempts to consolidate Tesla's enormously long and convoluted production chain. But that doesn't mean Musk's problems are over when it comes to competition with the ubiquitous lithium-graphite batteries propelling every Tesla on the road today. There are breakthroughs on the horizon — major ones — that make all this Sila hoopla seem downright bland by comparison. Right now an Australian company is working with a completely new cathode material: graphene. [tcn godchip graphene] This space-age nanomaterial is like nothing else out there today. Two hundred times as strong as steel yet as light as standard copy paper, graphene won its researches a Nobel Prize in 2010. What it does for batteries is no less revolutionary. You’ll Kick Yourself if You Miss out on This... A few years ago, one of our top analysts, Christian DeHaemer, told me to buy Bitcoin. I didn’t do it. And I’m still kicking myself, because I could have made a 2,528% gain on his recommendation. Now he’s been tracking a major technology breakthrough that’s about to unleash a $350 billion wave of wealth. He predicts people who get in early have a shot at colossal gains. Don’t make the same mistake I did and miss out... [Click here to get the full story on this revolutionary tech right now.]( No More Half-Measures We're talking charge times of as little as a minute, service lives three times as long, and radically decreased failure rates. That's not hyperbole. Graphene batteries can improve charge times by as much as a factor of 60, which would, for the first time ever, allow for an EV that can go from 0% to 100% charged in less time than its internal combustion equivalent could be fueled at the pump. That advancement would transform the EV market entirely on its own, as charge delay has been and remains one of the primary deal-breakers for prospective first-time EV buyers. The company pioneering this world-changing technology isn't just focusing on EVs, however. Its first production batteries, which are already rolling off the production line and into the hands of prospective corporate clients for testing, will be coin-sized units designed to power our smallest and most common electrical devices. Eventually, this market will expand to include everything from the watch on your wrist to the semi-truck that delivered that watch to your local retailer. Like I said, this isn't just some theory. How Do You Produce Graphene at 1/1,000 the Cost? Here's How This Australian tech firm has patents on both the technology as well as a new and revolutionary method for producing graphene, and it's implementing both in a recently launched production facility located in the company's home base of Brisbane, Queensland. The production method involves using abundantly available natural gas as the key raw material. This not only cheapens production by orders of magnitude, but also removes troublesome commercial partners like Russia and China from the supply chain. And there is one final detail — perhaps most important one — to know... New Robot Has Tech Execs Scrambling You might not believe this is even real, but I assure you this video has been left unedited. Nearly every tech company in the world is scrambling to get its hands on this tech. And investors are set to profit handsomely. Get the details on [our Top 3 Stocks Picks here.]( Unlike Sila, which has kept its stock available to only a very short list of venture capital firms, this Australian tech firm has taken the next step and made its shares available on both U.S. and Canadian public markets. You can own shares today. All you need is the [ticker symbol]( and a brokerage account. Keep in mind, however, that with the Biden administration now committing more than $3 billion to research and development of advanced batteries, the entire sector could enter a period of chaos in the next few weeks or months. That $3 billion in spending could easily snowball into tens of billions in new contracts for advanced battery-makers across the world by the end of the decade. Right now I see few better battery pure plays available on the open market for the risk-tolerant speculator. It Gained 15% Last Week Alone... Where Will It Be Trading Next Week? Founded just six years ago, this company currently trades at a market capitalization of barely $250 million (USD), making it less than one-fourth the size of the total investment Sila made in its sole production facility. Nevertheless, the potential to capture a market worth trillions is very real. With benefits like the kind offered by graphene, there will literally be no competition. I urge any investors reading this to get the full story before making any decisions. To make this easier, I've compiled everything you need to know into a simple [video presentation]( (also available in [written format]( for those who prefer text). It will give you a crash course on the science and the market, as well as the company's realistic prospects. It's quite fascinating, and even if you decide not to invest, it's worth viewing. No registration necessary. Just [follow this link]( and sit back. Fortune favors the bold, [alex koyfman Signature] Alex Koyfman P.S. My colleague and pickleball partner Jason Williams recently tipped me off to a [one-of-a-kind opportunity]( in energy storage. Forget everything you think you know about large-scale distributed energy storage. This system uses a force of nature to store power, and it could be one of the most important innovations in the energy industry in the last quarter-century. This force of nature is not dependent on weather, time of day, the seasons, or any special element that needs to be mined and refined. The technology operates at 100% capacity all day every day, and works the same regardless of geography. Right now this tech is tackling the single biggest problem facing today's renewables industry. You see, renewable energy must be used or stored instantly. And there are no batteries big enough or strong enough to power the whole grid. Or at least there weren’t until now. This is like nothing you have every seen. [Get all the details]( about the company cornering this market and minting a new generation of millionaires today. Browse Our Archives [Secret Sanctions and the Path to Profit]( [How Rich Is Nancy Pelosi!?]( [Elon Musk’s Worst Nightmare]( [Why Musk Hasn't Bought This Graphene Battery-Maker... Yet]( [What Elon Musk and Bill Gates Are Buying Right Now]( --------------------------------------------------------------- This email was sent to {EMAIL}. It is not our intention to send email to anyone who doesn't want it. If you're not sure why you've received this e-letter, or no longer wish to receive it, you may [unsubscribe here]( and view our privacy policy and information on how to manage your subscription. To ensure that you receive future issues of Wealth Daily, please add newsletter@wealthdaily.com to your address book or whitelist within your spam settings. For customer service questions or issues, please contact us for assistance. Wealth Daily, Copyright © 2022, Angel Publishing LLC. All rights reserved. 3 E Read Street, Baltimore, MD 21202. Your privacy is important to us – we will never rent or sell your e-mail or personal information. Please read our [Privacy Policy](. Neither the publisher nor the editors are registered investment advisors. Subscribers should not view this publication as offering personalized legal or investment advice. Read our [Details and Disclosures.](

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