nuclear
Commented by Nico Popp on April 6th, 2023 | 09:44 CEST
Energy turnaround for your portfolio: RWE, GoviEx Uranium, Nordex
Clean energy is a dream for humanity. Property owners can fulfil the dream of clean energy by installing photovoltaic systems. But what about when large industrial companies, such as BASF, need electricity? While renewable energy has to be stored temporarily, nuclear power plants deliver reliably. The technology, which is frowned upon in Germany, is currently experiencing a revival worldwide. We explain which forms of energy also have a future for investors.
ReadCommented by Stefan Feulner on March 23rd, 2023 | 07:54 CET
RWE, Myriad Uranium, Cameco - The best environment ever
The geopolitical events of 2022 have heightened concerns about the security of supply and, combined with the ongoing focus on climate change, have created transformative tailwinds for the nuclear power industry. While Germany's last three nuclear reactors face shutdown, major industrialized nations are relying on zero-carbon nuclear power. As a result, the uranium price should be poised for a brilliant comeback after a bear market that has lasted for years.
ReadCommented by Stefan Feulner on March 10th, 2023 | 10:20 CET
Cameco, GoviEx Uranium, Fission Uranium - Elemental energy source
With the exception of Germany, the world's largest industrialized nations are focusing on expanding nuclear energy to achieve the climate targets they have set. However, due to the Ukraine conflict and possible sanctions against Russia, growing demand has been met with limited supply. The US alone obtains almost half of the uranium it needs from state-owned companies in Russia or Kazakhstan. But rising demand is meeting a supply that is too tight. The primary beneficiaries here are Western companies in production or close to it.
ReadCommented by André Will-Laudien on March 8th, 2023 | 16:18 CET
Please turn on the power! Myriad Uranium, RWE, E.ON, Uniper, ThyssenKrupp - Renewable energy plus nuclear power is the green future!
Unfortunately, the green policy from Berlin and Brussels has not been thought through to the end. Because if mobility is to be converted entirely to electricity, it will require significantly more energy than is available today. Land consumption in Germany has increased dramatically as a result of alternative energy generation from wind and solar power. In the medium term, therefore, a further push for these energy sources will lead to a declining standard of living and less nature. Nuclear energy is a discontinued model - apparently only in Germany. It is a good thing that our neighbours France and the Czech Republic are happy to let us connect to their grids. However, this has its price and means the same risk profile for Germany as if the reactors were located here. Which stocks fit into the European energy landscape?
ReadCommented by Nico Popp on March 2nd, 2023 | 19:55 CET
Short-term 100% opportunity - Uranium is picking up: Global Atomic, Myriad Uranium, Rio Tinto
Nuclear power as a discontinued model? Only ideologists with exclusively German glasses believe that! As of January 2023, new nuclear reactors are planned worldwide: In China, a whopping 47. In Russia 25, in India 12, the USA 3, Egypt 2 and so on. Even Japan, shaken by the Fukushima disaster, wants to connect a new nuclear power plant to the grid and believes in the safety of modern technology. We shed light on the uranium market and present a company with around 100% share price potential from a standing start.
Read