Make no mistake: Small modular reactors (SMRs) are the future of nuclear energy, and there’s only one company that currently produces the fuel necessary to power them. That’s the company you...
"Tri-Fuel 238" is the most disruptive technology the global energy industry has witnessed since we switched from wood to coal in the mid-1800s. And make no mistake — the profit potential here is...
The Chinese resort island of Hainan is at the center of a massive green fuel scandal that has left its eco-obsessed European customers in a frenzy.
Analyst Jeff Siegel knows there’s money to be made in solar and wind, but those investment opportunities pale in comparison to the one thing solar and wind need to survive going forward — and...
This new breakthrough in energy storage allows for the final obstacle of renewable energy integration to be overcome — intermittency. Couple that with a global push to transition away from fossil...
This sub-$5 stock will soon be out of reach for the average investor. The industry it belongs to has been waiting anxiously for this exact moment...
The folks behind the groundbreaking"Newton Battery" are about to get stinking rich as the world transitions away from fossil fuels to renewable energy...
There’s a new breed of nuclear reactor that’s now being developed for a rapid expansion of nuclear power across the U.S., and this reactor can be built and operated at a fraction of the cost of...
Tri-Fuel 238 is 40,835 times more powerful than natural gas, 67,389 times more potent than gasoline, and coal, solar, and wind can’t even come close. When people talk about the future of energy,...
One type of fuel is the backbone of the world’s transportation system, and ground shipping could screech to a halt if the fuel shortage situation doesn't change.
Which came first? You can’t have one without first having the other. It’s not just a riddle — this concept has real implications in the real world...
Yes, you read that correctly. Wyoming is pulling a complete 180 in terms of energy policy. According to lawmakers in Wyoming, 14 states and D.C. have got it all wrong