As nuclear power continues to advance, we're going to need to figure out where to store all that extra energy for when we'll need it. Jason Williams has a good idea of where to start. As nuclear power continues to advance, we're going to need to figure out where to store all that extra energy for when we'll need it. Jason Williams has a good idea of where to start. Â Â
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 Jason Williams / Dec 19, 2022 Where Are We Going to Put All This Power? If you pay any attention to the news, or if you read [my article last Friday](, you already know that humanity took a massive leap forward last week. Physicists in the U.S. created net energy through a fusion reaction (fusion being the reaction that powers the sun and stars). Itâs the first time in history thatâs happened. Up to this point, itâs always required more energy to cause the reaction to occur than the reaction itself produced. Thatâs not sustainable. But net energy production, even one measly watt, is. And itâs going to lead to the future of humanity as a species. Itâs going to usher us into a completely new era as we are able to harness the full energy capacity of our entire planet. Weâre Gonna Need a Bigger Boat Battery But itâs going to come with a lot of complications⦠The biggest of those being where weâre going to put all that energy. You see, nuclear reactions produce immense amounts of energy. But once you get them going, theyâre difficult to dial up or down. Even with todayâs nuclear technology, we keep the reactors running all the time and store the power they generate for when weâll actually need it. Thatâs why youâll see reservoirs or flywheels or massive batteries next to any nuclear power plant. Fusion reactors arenât going to be any different in that aspect. Itâll be an intensive process to get them up and running and just as intensive a process to dial them back down. Market About to Flip! (Rare Triple-Buy Alert) Be sure to check this out if you want to make a killing off the coming market rebound: These [three little-known companies]( are crushing the competition with significant market share. They are profitable... They are growing revenue... And best of all, they are trading at dirt-cheap valuations likely to never be seen again (much like Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon in early 2009). Iâm sharing all the information on these stocks (and how to time them) in a brief, [free presentation]( today. You can access it immediately, but only for a limited time. By the time we pull this off the internet, it will be too late. So weâll likely keep them running and just store the energy like we already do. But with fusion reactions able to produce SO much more energy than what weâre used to storing (think 400 million times more than oil or natural gas)⦠Weâre going to need to store all that power. And that presents another complication⦠The Only Thing Theyâre Not Making More Of In the past (and the present), the way the world has stored power is through whatâs called pumped hydro. Itâs a form of hydropower where, instead of damming up a river and flooding a valley, we carve out two reservoirs (one higher than the other by at least 100 meters) and pump water between them. When we have more power than we need, we pump the water from the lower chamber to the upper one. And when we need more power than we have, we release the water and allow it to generate energy as it flows through turbines. Thatâs great⦠if you have a 100-meter height difference to work with. But what if youâre at sea level? Or what if youâre in a place where water is too valuable to just sit around in reservoirs? What if you live in the desert? Or what if you live in a place where itâs below freezing? Water doesnât flow when itâs a solid. What are we going to do to store power in those places? Theyâre not making any more land, which means weâre not likely to get any extra mountains popping up. And we canât just tell people not to live in those places (if we could, weâd have done it already). But we could use a system that takes advantage of the exact same principles as pumped hydro yet does away with the need for all that hydro and comes with its own height change⦠[QUIZ] 46 BILLION Barrels of Oil?! A massive $5.9 trillion oil boom is about to take place. Three tiny companies just acquired the rights to mine an untapped patch holding 46 billion barrels of oil in a mystery location... And it even has the potential to reach $9 trillion in value if prices reach $200 per barrel! So which country do you think will lead this upcoming oil surge? - Venezuela
- Saudi Arabia
- Canada
- Russia Think you know the answer? [See if youâre right!]( Get Used to Seeing These And we as a species, are in luck! Because there is [such a system](⦠and itâs already being hooked up to power grids around the world. Between them, California and Texas are in the process of setting up several of these facilities to keep their grids from going dark next time thereâs a heat wave or freak ice storm. The Swiss already have one adding steady, on-demand, grid-level power. And the Saudis, who live in a place where water isnât so easy to come by, are going to use it to keep their lights on and air conditioners running during the hottest Middle East summers. It can be scaled up or down to fit the needs of a tiny town in the Swiss Alps: [swiss vault] Or it can be scaled up to meet the needs of millions of households like the ones the Saudis will use: [saudi vault] It can store the energy of a handful of windmills in rolling foothills: [windmills vault] Or it can store the energy generated by hundreds of thousands of solar panels in the desert: [saudi solar field] It can store the energy indefinitely, unlike batteries, without exploding... again, unlike batteries. And itâs not going to rupture and cause a devastating flood like the one that destroyed this hydro facility in 2021: [india flood] Itâs the perfect solution to store the excessive amount of energy fusion reactors will generate. And you can [learn all about it and how to get invested early right here](. To your wealth, [jason-williams-signature-transparent] Jason Williams [[follow basic] @TheReal_JayDubs]( [[follow basic]Angel Research on Youtube]( After graduating Cum Laude in finance and economics, Jason designed and analyzed complex projects for the U.S. Army. He made the jump to the private sector as an investment banking analyst at Morgan Stanley, where he eventually led his own team responsible for billions of dollars in daily trading. Jason left Wall Street to found his own investment office and now shares the strategies he used and the network he built with you. Jason is the founder of [Main Street Ventures](, a pre-IPO investment newsletter; the founder of [Future Giants](, a nano cap investing service; the editor of [Alpha Profit Machine](, an algorithmic trading service designed specifically for retail investors; and authors [The Wealth Advisory]( income stock newsletter. He is also the managing editor of [Wealth Daily](. To learn more about Jason, [click here](. [Feedback? get in touch](mailto:/newsletter@wealthdaily.com?subject=Wealth%20Daily%20feedback) [Read this email online]( [Manage Newsletters]( [Share on Twitter]( You signed up for our newsletter with the email {EMAIL}.
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