About Chemistry, Environment, Waste Management and Green Life Inspirations

03 August 2010

Nuclear Waste: Solved

By Nick Hodge | Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010
Glass has been on the minds of many lately.
For a while yesterday, “Gorilla Glass” was the most popular search trend on Google, after Corning (NYSE: GLW) began touting the shelved 1962 invention.
Until now, there's been no market for the super-strong glass that's hard to break, dent, or scratch, and that's three times stronger than chemically strengthened soda-lime glass when half as thick.
Analysts say the product is about to undergo a multi-billion dollar bonanza as electronics companies buy tons of it to make frameless TVs thinner than a dime.
And that's not even the most exciting glass story hitting the wire...
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The $54 Billion Cleantech Surprise... No News Outlet Covered
You won't see the full story reported on CNBC, MSNBC, or even FoxNews.
But tucked away in the southwestern corner of Idaho, a $35 million power company prepares to announce the greatest advancement in the history of nuclear power... and with it, instantly receive billions of dollars in federal funding.
By the time their news hits the press, however, early investors could easily pocket as much $32,000.
Click here for the full story.

Secretive startup turns nuclear waste into glass
Bill Gates has said we need “energy miracles.” And he's poured millions into developing a nuclear reactor that can run on depleted uranium for up to 100 years without fueling.
As Gates works on the reactor side, another company is taking on the waste.
Kurion, widely described as a secretive startup, has developed a way to store nuclear waste in glass or ceramics through a process called vitrification.
The technology could bring the United States into the 21st century regarding nuclear waste. (We've been doing it the same way — with the same worries — for over half a century.)
And the company has street cred: CEO John Raymont spent 25 years at a nuclear waste management company that was acquired by EnergySolutions (NYSE: ES) in 2007, and VP of technology is Gaetan Bonhomme, formerly of glass behemoth Saint-Gobain.
The advisory board counts both Patrick Moore — founder of Greenpeace — and former Governor Christine Todd Whitman as members.
In a very real and profitable way, nuclear energy is entering a new era. If Obama's $58 billion in loan guarantees to build new plants didn't give it away, the presence of names like Gates, Whitman, and Moore should.
And while you can't get a piece of Gates' venture, TerraPower, or Kurion just yet, I've found an equally exciting opportunity that everyone can get a piece of — but that's being suppressed by major news outlets.
Nuclear's next big name
Only a few companies are unequivocally associated with nuclear power: Areva and Westinghouse, to name two.
The next company that'll reach this status trades for just $0.65, and only a handful of well-informed investors are paying attention to it.
But the three things I'm about to tell you will soon give it a very high profile; a Bloom-Energy-on-60-Minutes type profile.
First, it's signed on with a well-known nuclear company to manufacture and distribute portable nuclear reactors. They can be taken almost anywhere on a flatbed truck to create large amounts of power in remote or grid isolated locations.
Second, it's signed an exclusive deal with a Chinese nuclear corporation to sell nuclear desalination reactors on a global scale, and has already received interest from dozens of countries.
Third, the company will soon be listed on a major U.S. exchange, like the NASDAQ or NYSE.
But the biggest catalyst of all — the one that could send this stock from penny oblivion to a household name — is the one that no news source is fully reporting.
And that's why I've penned a full investor briefing on the company.
I want you to learn about changes coming to the nuclear industry. I want you to learn about what the media isn't telling the public.
But most importantly, I want you to learn more about this company before the story is blown wide open.
Call it like you see it,
Nick Hodge
Nick

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