Friday, September 20, 2024

Discover The ‘Limitless Energy’ Breakthrough Backed By Titans

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Thanks to a recent scientific breakthrough, the ostensibly utopian world of limitless energy could soon become a reality

Editor’s note: This article was previously published in July 2024. It has since been updated to include the most relevant information available.

For a moment, imagine a world of limitless energy – where there’s so much energy produced that everyone, everywhere, can power their homes, apartments, and offices at all hours of the day, with just pennies. 

These days, it’s tough to imagine a world like that. Last winter, for example, the average U.S. heating bill exceeded $1,000. 

But thanks to a potentially world-changing scientific breakthrough, the ostensibly utopian world of limitless energy could soon become a reality.  

Prescient investors stand to make fortunes in this limitless energy breakthrough.

That’s why both Microsoft (MSFT) – the world’s second most valuable company – and ChatGPT’s creator Sam Altman are both betting big on this very breakthrough right now. 

In fact, Microsoft recently announced a huge deal to start buying a ton of this limitless energy as soon as 2028.  

Interested? You should be… 

We’re talking about arguably the biggest scientific breakthrough of our lifetimes, and maybe the biggest investment opportunity of our lifetimes, too. 

Believe it or not, it all has to do with nuclear power

The Power of the Sun

Nuclear power has a bad reputation – and I get it. 

It has been used to create bombs that have destroyed whole cities. And when the world tried to capture that energy in a nuclear power plant, some of those plants had catastrophic explosions. Not once. Not twice. But time and time again.  

The nuclear power of the past deserves its bad rap. 

But not all nuclear power is created equal. 

Specifically, there are two types: nuclear fusion and nuclear fission

Everything the world has done to-date with nuclear power has been in the realm of nuclear fission. This involves splitting apart atoms, then capturing and using the energy produced as a result. 

This process can be risky for two reasons. 

First, when you split atoms, you create chain reactions that must be very carefully controlled. Otherwise, they could cause meltdowns and explosions. Second, fission produces radioactive waste, which needs to be carefully stored so as to avoid contaminating the surrounding environment. 

Clearly, nuclear fission is dangerous stuff. 

But nuclear fusion is not. 

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