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Uranium is on the edge of a once-in-a-generation supply shock, and prices could spike faster than in 2007. Ocean Wall CEO Nick Lawson and Director Ben Finegold tell Trey Reik why the market is set up for a parabolic move. From the “Putinization of uranium” (Russia's stranglehold on enrichment) to AI-hungry data centers that can only run on nuclear baseload, the squeeze is building fast. What we cover The 500 % surge in enrichment prices, and why oxide hasn't followed yet Hedge funds cornering supply (shades of 2006-07) How utilities are panic-buying enrichment first, uranium later Critical price thresholds: miners need $90-$120/lb to restart production Nick & Ben's highest-conviction tickers, from UEC to ASPI Isotopes Energy security, national defence, and the next tech wave all point to one metal: Uranium! Get Wealthion's and SCP Resource Finance's free report on Uranium and investment opportunities in the space, here: https://wealthion.com/uranium-investment-opportunities/ Chapters: 0:26 – Inside Ocean Wall 4:45 – From $150 to $18: What Crushed Uranium Last Time? 7:14 – The Last Uranium Mania: Lessons from the 2007 Spike 8:24 – Why Uranium Prices Stayed Frozen for a Decade 9:41 – The Uranium Awakening: What Changed After 2020 13:15 – Did Sprott Light the Fuse on the Uranium Rally? 16:02 – War, Sanctions & Supply Shocks: Was the Panic Real? 18:12 – The Putin Factor: How Geopolitics Weaponized Uranium 21:02 – Who's Driving Prices: Wall Street or Nuclear Utilities? 26:52 – Uranium 101: The Fuel Cycle Every Investor Must Know 31:40 – How to Invest in Uranium: Funds, Stocks, and More 37:14 – Mining Trouble Ahead? The Looming Supply Crunch 38:28 – Why Canadian Uranium Miners Could Be at Risk 39:47 – Are We Still Early? Timing the Uranium Opportunity 43:15 – Explosive Growth Ahead? The Case for a Price Surge 45:05 – Long-Term Bull Case: Why Uranium's Run Is Just Starting Volatility got you concerned? Get a free portfolio review with Wealthion's endorsed financial advisors at https://bit.ly/3SjpysG Hard Assets Alliance - The Best Way to Invest in Gold and Silver: https://www.hardassetsalliance.com/?aff=WTH Connect with us online: Website: https://www.wealthion.com X: https://www.x.com/wealthion Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wealthionofficial/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/wealthion/ #Wealthion #Wealth #Finance #Investing #Uranium #NuclearEnergy #EnergyCrisis #Commodities #CleanEnergy #Geopolitics #UraniumStocks #AI #Enrichment #SupplyChain #EnergySecurity ________________________________________________________________________ IMPORTANT NOTE: The information, opinions, and insights expressed by our guests do not necessarily reflect the views of Wealthion. They are intended to provide a diverse perspective on the economy, investing, and other relevant topics to enrich your understanding of these complex fields. While we value and appreciate the insights shared by our esteemed guests, they are to be viewed as personal opinions and not as investment advice or recommendations from Wealthion. These opinions should not replace your own due diligence or the advice of a professional financial advisor. We strongly encourage all of our audience members to seek out the guidance of a financial advisor who can provide advice based on your individual circumstances and financial goals. Wealthion has a distinguished network of advisors who are available to guide you on your financial journey. However, should you choose to seek guidance elsewhere, we respect and support your decision to do so. The world of finance and investment is intricate and diverse. It's our mission at Wealthion to provide you with a variety of insights and perspectives to help you navigate it more effectively. We thank you for your understanding and your trust. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Standards bodies don't just set technical specifications, they also drive greater understanding of topics like storage. This episode of Utilizing Tech, brought to you by Solidigm, features Dr. J Metz, Chair of SNIA and the Ultra Ethernet Consortium and technical director at AMD. Over decades of advancement, enterprise storage has evolved to be a central requirement of modern systems, especially where AI is concerned. And storage is a lot more than just capacity: It's about performance and power, connectivity and throughput, availability and reliability. Standards bodies like SNIA and UEC help raise awareness of these requirements while also setting standards to address them. Technological developments made in one area often have unexpected applications in others. This makes it even more important to foster open communication to enable ideas to spread.Host:J Metz is the Chair of both the Ultra Ethernet Consortium and SNIA, as well as a Technical Director at AMD. You can connect with J on LinkedIn or on X/Twitter. Learn more about The Ultra Ethernet Consortium on their website. Learn more about SNIA on their website. Learn more about AMD here.Hosts: Stephen Foskett, President of the Tech Field Day Business Unit and Organizer of the Tech Field Day Event SeriesJeniece Wnorowski, Head of Influencer Marketing at Solidigm Scott Shadley, Leadership Narrative Director and Evangelist at SolidigmFollow Tech Field Day on LinkedIn, on X/Twitter, on Bluesky, and on Mastodon. Visit the Tech Field Day website for more information on upcoming events. For more episodes of Utilizing Tech, head to the dedicated website and follow the show on X/Twitter, on Bluesky, and on Mastodon.
The Ultra Ethernet Consortium (UEC) is an industry body that aims to optimize Ethernet for AI and HPC use cases. On today’s Heavy Networking we get an overview of the UEC and an update on its efforts. We’re joined by J Metz and Rip Sohan, both heavily involved with the UEC. We discuss the consortium’s... Read more »
The Ultra Ethernet Consortium (UEC) is an industry body that aims to optimize Ethernet for AI and HPC use cases. On today’s Heavy Networking we get an overview of the UEC and an update on its efforts. We’re joined by J Metz and Rip Sohan, both heavily involved with the UEC. We discuss the consortium’s... Read more »
The Ultra Ethernet Consortium (UEC) is an industry body that aims to optimize Ethernet for AI and HPC use cases. On today’s Heavy Networking we get an overview of the UEC and an update on its efforts. We’re joined by J Metz and Rip Sohan, both heavily involved with the UEC. We discuss the consortium’s... Read more »
Louis sits down with pop-star and former member of Little Mix, Jade Thirlwall. Jade tells Louis about being ghosted by Harry Styles, clashing with the Gallaghers and coming to the public's attention on X-Factor. Warnings: Some strong language and discussions of sensitive themes, including mental health issues and eating disorders. For further information and support, visit https://resources.byspotify.com/ Links/Attachments: BEAT – UK Eating Disorder Charity https://www.beateatingdisorders.org.uk/get-information-and-support/get-help-for-myself/i-need-support-now/helplines/ TV Show: ‘The X Factor' (2004 – 2021) – ITV https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEY1ejsweY4DgMwOVJeEaBA Song: ‘Angel Of My Dreams' - JADE https://open.spotify.com/album/6Wf3fqCoGcOYah2lTcwyAA Music Video: ‘Angel Of My Dreams' - JADE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UEc-oy93lf8 TV Show: ‘Boybands Forever' (2024) – BBC (UK only) https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episodes/m0023h94/boybands-forever Song: ‘Black Magic' - Little Mix (2015) https://open.spotify.com/album/05MKaTFdEtg64AtPmN1nQ7 Song: ‘Power (feat. Stormzy)' - Little Mix (2017) https://open.spotify.com/album/2lSpirhgGBiKAyl38y8RJs Podcast: ‘Offstage: Inside The X Factor' (2024) – BBC https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/brand/m001vtth Album: ‘Glory Days', Little Mix (2016) https://open.spotify.com/album/2GJLzxAajkFeyDPVH7X4Cs Song: ‘Shout Out to My Ex'- Little Mix (2016) https://open.spotify.com/album/4TvPWe1vbrh0hozmCoSFRI ‘Little Mix wins British Group' – The BRIT Awards (2021) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HO-HcY_8iwE ‘LITTLE BELITTLE: Noel Gallagher slams Little Mix's Best Band Brit Award win saying they're ‘not in the same league as Oasis'' – The Sun https://www.thesun.co.uk/tvandshowbiz/15217658/noel-gallagher-little-mix-embarrassing-brits-win/ Song: ‘212' - Azealia Banks feat. Lazy Jay (2011) https://open.spotify.com/album/1haAnMI7BAQEAzrYjzpTvP Song: ‘911' - Lady Gaga (2020) https://open.spotify.com/track/6qI0MU175Dk2DeoUjlrOpy Jesy Nelson: ‘Odd One Out' (2019) – BBC (UK only) https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/p07lsr4d/jesy-nelson-odd-one-out Song: ‘Boyz feat. Nicki Minaj' - Jesy Nelson (2021) https://open.spotify.com/album/4ShgsMHEHPPLI6Dk16HNF1 TV Show: ‘Later… with Jools Holland' – BBC (UK only) https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00248kc East is East (1999) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zg-zwt-XMFE Credits: Producer: Millie Chu Assistant Producer: Emilia Gill Production Manager: Francesca Bassett Music: Miguel D'Oliveira Audio Mixer: Tom Guest Video Mixer: Scott Edwards Shownotes compiled by Immie Webb Executive Producer: Arron Fellows A Mindhouse Production for Spotify www.mindhouse.co.uk Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Scott Melbye, Executive Vice President of Uranium Energy Corp (NYSE American: UEC) and President of the Uranium Producers of America, joins me for a longer-format discussion on the fundamentals driving the expansion of nuclear power and more demand for uranium, as well as the Company fundamentals for Uranium Energy Corp as they are growing their US production profile and continuing to explore and develop their Canadian portfolio of projects. We start off in a multi-faceted conversation on the perfect storm of tailwinds gathering behind nuclear power with 20 countries, including the US, committing to tripling their nuclear power energy output by 2050, and more need for carbon-free baseload electricity to satisfy green energy transition policies and growing demand from AI datacenters. We then contrast that demand growth with geopolitical tensions taking French uranium supply offline in Niger, the US sanctions on Russian enriched uranium fuel, and retaliatory bans from Russia on exporting uranium fuel to the US, and Kazakhstan state producer Kazatomprom missing guidance, and maintaining more output to Chinese partners than to its JV with Cameco, moving more fuel to the East versus the West. This all highlights the importance of US domestic uranium producers, along with legitimate Canadian development projects, and the premiums those North American companies and projects are likely to keep garnering from investors. The conversation then transitions to Uranium Energy Corp as the largest and fastest growing uranium producer in the US, and Scott outlines their anticipated production growth from 1 million to 5-7 million pounds over the next 5 years domestically, and the potential to then ramp that up to about 12 million pounds of production once their Canadian Roughrider project is developed and put into production. Then there are even further development projects of merit within their Canadian pipeline of projects acquired from UEX 2 years back. Scott briefly breaks down the potential at a number of their US and Canadian projects, speaks to the pedigree and experience of their management team, the financial health of the Company, key strategic shareholders, their ETF inclusion, and analyst coverage. If you have any questions for Scott regarding Uranium Energy Corp, then please email those in to me at Shad@kereport.com, and we'll get them addressed by management or covered in future interviews. In full disclosure, Shad is a shareholder of UEC at the time of this recording. Click here to follow the latest news from Uranium Energy Corp
TG Watkins, Director of Stocks at Simpler Trading and Editor of the Profit Pilot website joins me to share his trading strategies and chart outlook for a wide range of commodity and resource stock ETFs. The following sectors and charts are discussed; Gold - GDX, GDXU, and GDXJ Silver - SIL and SLV Copper - COPX Uranium - URNM, UEC and CCJ Bitcoin Markets - S&P Click here to visit TG's site - Profit Pilot
Eddin Khoo is a journalist, historian, author and poet. But perhaps his biggest contribution to society is his tireless work in protecting Malaysia's traditional performing arts like the Wayang Kulit and Mak Yong, through his cultural organisation, Pusaka. He rightly points out that Malaysia is a cosmopolis of races, cultures and traditions with a history older than most countries in the region. But its importance has been systematically erased in the interests of political self-preservation. This is his story, in his own words. (Many thanks to the Asia School of Business for their collaboration with The Do More Podcast, in whose studio this conversation was recorded. The Asia School of Business is a partnership between MIT's Sloan School of Management and Bank Negara Malaysia). CONTENTS 00:00:00 - Intro 00:02:42 - Who's Eddin Khoo (In His Own Words) 00:06:42 - What We Need to Know About Our History 00:08:45 - Our Racial Barriers Are A Construct 00:11:25 - Why Is Malaysia's History Her Great Wound? 00:17:10 - What Eddin Has Learnt About Malaysia From the Microcosm That Is Kelantan 00:23:37 - Malaysians Are Very Lazy in their Caricature of Our Differences 00:26:17 - Why Did the Young Malays Vote In a So-Called ‘Green Wave'? 00:30:03 - How Does Eddin Know So Much About the Malay Psyche? 00:32:52 - The Kelantanese Young Crave Leadership But Its Leaders Cannot Offer It. WHY 00:36:42 - Politics Changes People. WHY 00:39:43 - What Should Malaysia's National Narrative Be? 00:44:51 - Malaysia Is Bastardised .. 00:48:29 - What's the TL:DR of Eddin's National Narrative for Malaysia 00:55:05 - Message(s) to the Sclerotic (Rigid) Leadership? 01:02:40 - What Political Messaging Will Have Power? 01:07:32 - Malaysia's Collective Will, Mutual Respect Has Been Subverted 01:09:38 - What Did You Learn From Chairing the UEC? 01:14:02 - Why Politicians Are Like Snakes: Many Different Heads 01:17:08 - Why Politicians Cannot and Will Resist Change 01:18:42 - How Do Kelantanese View Intellectual Self-Interrogation 01:20:26 - When Will Change Come? Will it Ever Come? 01:22:32 - Collective Change, Not Generational Change 01:25:54 - Can Socialism Work in Malaysia? 01:27:38 - Why History is Important 01:31:15 - How to Get More Young Malaysians Interested in History? 01:36:15 - There's a Lot of Soul-Searching, Self-Searching Going On Right Now 01:40:42 - Malaysia's Middle Class Are Indolent, Colonial Hogs In Defining Malaysia's Racial Makeup FOLLOW EDDIN HERE: URL: https://www.pusaka.org LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/eddin-khoo-1097b55b/ IG: https://www.instagram.com/senipusaka IG Personal: https://www.instagram.com/ek.isatsea Writings: https://www.optionstheedge.com/authors/eddin-kho MY ROAD TRIP TO KOTA BAHRU WITH EDDIN https://youtu.be/qHG37ex2PY8 --- Follow Chuang here: URL: http://www.domore.my/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hsu-chuang-khoo-ab199343/ FB: https://www.facebook.com/khoo.chuang/ IG: https://www.instagram.com/khoohsuchuang/ --- Follow DoMore here: WEBSITE: https://www.domore.my/ YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/c/DoMoreTakeChargeofYourLife ITUNES: https://apple.co/2lQ47mS GOOGLE PLAY: https://bit.ly/3b1l8iO SPOTIFY: https://tinyurl.com/y6zufvcp PODBEAN: https://domoreasia.podbean.com/ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/domore.asia
This week the SOL Citizens discuss the future of the economy and the UEC sinks players may encounter in the Star Citizen universe! Featuring: fastcart fc, GriffinGamingRPG, Kalrati Merchandise: Streamlabs Store: https://streamlabs.com/solcitizens/merch Design by Humans: https://www.designbyhumans.com/shop/SOLCitizens/ SOL CITIZENS are supporters and backers covering the development of Cloud Imperium Games upcoming games "STAR CITIZEN" and "SQUADRON 42". Patreon: patreon/solcitizens Twitch: twitch.tv/solcitizens Twitter: twitter.com/solcitizens
Voilà en gros le débat philosophique qui se pose et se joue derrière la question du projet de Super League, initié par le Barça, le Real ou la Juve, entre autres gros clubs européens. Une question à laquelle l'Union des Clubs Européens (UEC), toute nouvelle organisation fondée pour représenter les « petits » et « moyens » clubs, contrairement à l'Association Européenne des Clubs (ECA) qui réunit les « gros », veut pouvoir encore répondre « oui » pour les années futures. Et pour cela, elle compte notamment sur William Martucci, passé par les bancs de HEC et les bureaux de Canal, Eurosport ou Team Marketing, la branche commerciale de l'UEFA. C'est d'ailleurs cette expérience qui lui a donné envie de prendre un autre virage et d'œuvrer pour un football plus équitable. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
The Option Genius Podcast: Options Trading For Income and Growth
Hey there, if you're looking to invest in 2024, you've probably already heard of the AI boom and how those stocks have already taken off and gone into the stratosphere, you've already probably looked at the weight loss drugs like Eli Lilly and how that's already exploded and gone into the stratosphere. And you've probably even looked at, you know, the mega cap tech stocks and how they've already taken off and gone. So far so high? Well, there is one sector, it's an unloved sector, but it is on fire and it is going to do amazing in 2024. That's what I want to talk about today. So what is this sector? Well, it's not really a sector, it's more of a commodity, which commodity? Well, it's not the normal ones you normally think about. It's uranium. So if you look at uranium prices, uranium prices have doubled in the last year, and they're probably going to double even more, I don't know more than double, but they're gonna go up continuously, maybe even doubled this year that those are the expectations. Why? Because uranium is used in nuclear power plants. And more and more countries are getting away from coal power plants are shutting their coal ones down. And they're building nuclear plants. Only problem is there is a shortage of uranium. So uranium only comes in a few places. It doesn't come from everywhere, you can't mine it everywhere. It's only in a few countries and only in a few mines. And creating a new uranium mine takes millions of dollars and years of planning and research and development to actually get the uranium out of the ground. So right now there is a shortage of uranium. But the demand continues to explode. Pun intended, right. And so that is why your energy prices continue to go higher and higher and higher. Now, if you were companies starting to do a uranium mine, right now to take advantage of these higher prices is going to take you years before you get your money back. And before you even start mining. So the companies that are already there, they already have mines, they are making a killing. And they're making more and more money because their costs are staying relatively the same, but they're making more money when they sell their uranium because the prices continue to go up. Now you can go ahead and check to see a chart of uranium and see how it's going from the bottom left to the top right, and how it continues to grow. Now, if you look at some of the companies themselves, they're doing great as well. There are companies that do mining, they're also ETFs that can only focus on the uranium. Now normally, if you are looking at a miner versus the commodity, you will make more money on the miner than the commodity usually, because there's more Alpha there, there's it can grow faster. But the uranium utility or ETF are also going to be doing very well as well. You might even even get into the futures I haven't even checked to see if there are futures. But that might be an option to play as well. So why is uranium prices going up? Well, one of the reasons is because of the explosion in or not the explosion, but the demand for more nuclear power plants, right? For energy, because the world continues to need more and more energy and wind and solar are not getting the job done in terms of renewables, because of battery power problems. You can't store the energy, so they need a different source. Nuclear is one of the cleanest ones out there. I don't want to get into the politics of it, but it is very clean. And it's a very powerful source of energy. So we have a imbalance in supply and demand. Right. One of the largest mines of uranium is in the country of Kazakhstan. Now Kazakhstan puts a limit on how much uranium is allowed to be mined every year. And so, the main mind there, they announced a few months ago that they were only going to be able to produce about 90% of that limit, because of their own little internal problems. Recently, about a week or two ago, they announced that they're only going to be mining 80% of their prediction, and that chant that sent prices up even higher. And if you look at the price charts of some of these companies, you'll see, there was a big gap on that day. So these are companies and stocks that are not going to go up, you know, 500% in a year, like on the video, right, but they are slow and steady, and the train has not left the station, they've already gone up a lot, they've already more than doubled. But there's a lot more room to go. And that's why I think in 2024, uranium is going to be a very hot ticket. Now there are some ticker symbols that I want to give you. So you can take a look, put them up on your charts, see which ones you like, if you'd like them, great. If you don't, no worries, the first one is CCJ. Okay, this is probably the biggest company out there. It's a Canadian company. And it has mines all over the world. So this one, if you're looking for the biggest one, the more reliable one, I think this is the one that you can look at. Now, disclaimer, okay, I do not own any stock in any of these companies or ETFs. Neither does my hedge fund, okay. But we are trading CCJ, we're trading options on a we're selling naked puts on it as it goes up. So if we own it, we might own it. But I just want to give full disclaimer that yes, we are trading CCJ. Because this is a theme that I think is going to work for all of the whole year. And I'm sharing it with you to help you make some money off of it as well. And so, I think that CCJ is a good one another one is you are n m, okay, you are n m, the next one is DNN. The next one is LEU. The next one is UROY then you have an NXE, you have UEC you have UUUU this for us. And then the last one is URG. Now, do your own research. Look at these companies, see which ones you like if any, if you want, use your own judgment, talk to your financial advisor make an investment if you want. But I think this is a sector or a commodity that is going to do very well. As long as that supply demand balance stays out of balance. It could take two years, three years, four years for more uranium supply to come online. And as long as nothing happens to the demand of uranium, the price is going to continue to go up. So that's how it is. And even if these companies don't mind more, as long as price continues to increase of uranium, the stock price will go up as well. So it's not going to go as fast as you know, Eli Lilly did, but those stocks, the weight loss, the mega cap tech, and the AI boom, right? Those have run up so far so fast. It's kind of like I don't know if I want to get in here because they've gone up so far, there has to be a pullback, eventually there will be who knows when it's going to come. This train has left the station, but it's a slower moving trade, you could still make a lot of money. And it's investable, I believe, like now. So take that with a grain of salt trade with the odds in your favor. We'll see you around. Are you ready to get started with passive trading, and be a consistent and confident and profitable trader generating cash flow consistently from the stock market? Well, I have some great news for you. For a limited time we are offering my new book passive trading for free. All you got to do is go to passive trading.com/free book. And we will send you the book in the mail for free as long as you cover the postage and handling. So if you didn't cover that, we'll send you the book for free. We've already printed it, we got it for you. We're gonna send it out to you. It's free. All you got to do is just go to passive trading.com/free book and learn the basics of passive trading. Get the behind the scenes, get some examples, learn the strategies, and put this stuff to work in your life right now. Remember, go to passive trading.com/free book and get yours now while this offer is still available.
Dr J Metz, (@drjmetz, blog) has been on our podcast before mostly in his role as SNIA spokesperson and BoD Chair, but this time he's here discussing some of his latest work on the Ultra Ethernet Consortium (UEC) (LinkedIN: @ultraethernet, X: @ultraethernet) The UEC is a full stack re-think of what Ethernet could do for … Continue reading "163: GreyBeards talk Ultra Ethernet with Dr J Metz, Chair of UEC steering committee, Chair of SNIA BoD, & Tech. Dir. AMD"
The development of AI networking is moving forward and Ethernet is taking a prime role in how workloads will communicate. In this episode, Tom Hollingsworth is joined by Drew Conry-Murray and Jordan Martin as well as J Metz, the chair of the Ultra Ethernet Consortium, to discuss the progress being made by the UEC to develop Ethernet to meet the needs of AI. They discuss the roadmap for adoption of technologies as well as the drivers for the additions to the protocol and how people can get involved. © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: The Future of AI Needs Ethernet
The development of AI networking is moving forward and Ethernet is taking a prime role in how workloads will communicate. In this episode, Tom Hollingsworth is joined by Drew Conry-Murray and Jordan Martin as well as J Metz, the chair of the Ultra Ethernet Consortium, to discuss the progress being made by the UEC to develop Ethernet to meet the needs of AI. They discuss the roadmap for adoption of technologies as well as the drivers for the additions to the protocol and how people can get involved. © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: The Future of AI Needs Ethernet
TG Watkins, Director of Stocks at Simpler Trading and Editor of the Profit Pilot website joins us to share his trading strategy for a number of sectors in uptrends. We start with AI stocks, including NVDA, SMCI and AMD. We then discuss the potential rotation of money from the AI stocks and other magnificent 7 stocks into the transport and industrial sectors. Tickers mentioned here are TRAN, GGG, AZEK and NAIL. Next up we look at the Uranium price and UEC. We wrap up with a quick comment on the S&P. The chart TG discussed is posted below. No matter your outlook on markets TG does a great job of explaining exactly what he is looking at on the charts and how he is playing each ticker. Be sure to check out TG's trading method by clicking here.
This week, we look ahead to the arrival of Derby County to Sincil Bank, as well as take a look at the departures from LN5 this week. We talk Charley Kendall, Oisin Gallagher and Hayden Cann, as well as the welcome news that Alex Mitchell and Jack Burroughs will be staying with us until the end of the season!Charlie is joined by Chris from Rams Review as he takes a look at things from a County perspective, and we take a question from the Discord surrounding the UEC. What is it, what does it do, and just how the Imps have ended up joining it. Of course, there's the usual Stacey West ramblings as well!Get yourself subscribed on whichever podcast app you get us on, get subscribed to the YouTube channel, and we'll see you next time. Up the Imps!"This Podcast has been created and uploaded by Gary Hutchinson of the Stacey West Podcast. The views in this Podcast are not necessarily the views of talkSPORT.” Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Laporan berita padat dan ringkas dari Borneo bersama Nickysoon Nyambar #AWANIBorneo 17 Disember 2023 KPDN, UMS & UNIMAS cari mekanisme stabilkan harga barang di Sabah, Sarawak dan Labuan Sarawak iktiraf UEC, terus sokong sistem sekolah vernakular Cina Projek Lebuhraya Pan Borneo Sabah akan disiapkan segera. - Ahmad Maslan #AWANInews
Laporan berita padat dan ringkas dari Borneo bersama Nickysoon Nyambar #AWANIBorneo 17 Disember 2023 KPDN, UMS & UNIMAS cari mekanisme stabilkan harga barang di Sabah, Sarawak dan Labuan Sarawak iktiraf UEC, terus sokong sistem sekolah vernakular Cina Projek Lebuhraya Pan Borneo Sabah akan disiapkan segera. - Ahmad Maslan #AWANInews
In this special episode of WSU Premium, Amir Adnani, co-founder and CEO of Uranium Energy Corp. (UEC), joins me for a wide-ranging interview on the developing uranium bull market. We start by looking at uranium prices, which have surged nearly 50% in 2023 after a two-decade bear market. Amir breaks down the catalysts setting the stage for a bull market unlike any other in history—including the government's new push to triple nuclear power by 2050… and the Russia-Ukraine war. Amir also shares how UEC took advantage of the bear market… and how it plans to move forward—including ramping up production… the company's newly acquired Roughrider Project… and why it's in the perfect position to benefit as uranium prices soar over the next few years. In this episode Uranium is finally emerging from a brutal bear market [0:30] The U.S. just “tripled down” on nuclear power [5:40] Major global catalysts for the nuclear industry [7:25] Russia remains king in uranium… for now [13:40] UEC is poised to reap the rewards of the bull market [23:45] Uranium prices could easily double from current levels [39:00] Why this uranium bull market has a LONG runway [52:36] Today's interview with Amir is a preview of what you get as a WSU Premium member. Each week, Frank shares a no-B.S., unbiased breakdown of what's really moving these markets—stories you won't hear from the mainstream media. Plus, you'll get unique investing strategies, weekly investment ideas, and special interviews with industry insiders like Amir. Try WSU Premium for $1: WSUOffer.com Enjoyed this episode? Get Wall Street Unplugged delivered FREE to your inbox each week: www.curzioresearch.com/wall-street-unplugged/ Wall Street Unplugged podcast is available at: --iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/wall-street-unplugged-frank/ --Stitcher: www.stitcher.com/podcast/curzio-research/wall-street-unplugged-2 --Website: www.curzioresearch.com/category/podcast/wall-street-unplugged/ Twitter: twitter.com/frankcurzio Facebook:. www.facebook.com/CurzioResearch/ Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/frank-curzio-690561a7/ Website: www.curzioresearch.com
What a difference a few days makes. The mainstream media has turned from bearish to ultra-bullish—and stocks have surged—as the latest data shows inflation slowing. And, as I explained in last week's WSU Premium, several stocks could soar to new highs by year-end as money managers try to catch up to their benchmarks. But while markets will likely continue to rise, don't get too bullish yet… The economy is still facing major headwinds in 2024. I explain why this rally will be short-lived. Target (TGT) is rallying after earnings came in better than expected. Even after the recent surge, the stock is still cheap at current levels. I break down the company's latest results… and why we'll never see its shares trade below $100 again. Be on the lookout next week: I'll be sending you a special interview with Amir Adnani, president, CEO, and founder of Uranium Energy Corp. (UEC). You won't want to miss our wide-ranging discussion on the new bull market in uranium… and why it's likely to last for many years. In this episode The market's sudden shift to ultra-bullish [3:28] Don't miss next week's interview with Amir Adnani [9:45] Enjoy the rally—it won't last long [19:15] TGT just put in its "forever" low [35:55] Enjoyed this episode? Get Wall Street Unplugged delivered FREE to your inbox each week: Subscribe to the premium podcast at WSUOffer.com. Wall Street Unplugged podcast is available at: --iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/wall-street-unplugged-frank/ --Stitcher: www.stitcher.com/podcast/curzio-research/wall-street-unplugged-2 --Website: www.curzioresearch.com/category/podcast/wall-street-unplugged/ Twitter: twitter.com/frankcurzio Facebook:. www.facebook.com/CurzioResearch/ Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/frank-curzio-690561a7/ Website: www.curzioresearch.com
Watch this on YouTube! We start out as always with the S&P 500. Grinding sideways, looks like it will correct down. Gold and silver were flat for the week, but the miners outperformed. Wheaton Precious Metals and Gold Royalty Corp are coming up on buy zones. We look up Aston Bay, Endeavour Mining, Goliath & Barksdale Resources for the hive. Bond traders believe there is a 98% chance that the Fed continues the pause for their meeting next week. We go over the charts and fundamentals for Platinum and Palladium. Then we pull up the charts for Copper, Trigon Metals, and Lithium. Uranium continues to shoot higher. SPUT is trading at a premium now, hopefully some purchases to follow. URA, URNM, & URNJ are all getting really stretched to the upside. Deep Yellow broke a key trendline. UEC and GLO are getting stretched as well. Oil keeps climbing, collect your dividends. And Rick Rule recently gave us his 2 beta dividend plays for Natural Gas domestically. Learn about Uranium Here - Justin Huhn Silver Symposium in Las Vegas Rick Rule Portfolio Review Rule Investment Classroom Connect with us! Twitter Facebook Instagram Linkedin Water Filter System I use for Perfect Water Buffalo Rounds - Precious Metals Steve Style: https://www.stevebartonmoney.com/contact-2 Website: https://www.stevebartonmoney.com/ Email: stevebartonmoney@gmail.com DISCLAIMER: I am not a financial advisor. This is not financial advice. I only express my opinion based on my experience and your experience may be different. These videos are for educational and motivational purposes only. Investing of any kind involves risk. Do your own diligence. Every investment and bet comes with the risk that your capital could go to zero. WHAT I DO: Spread out your investments. Don't put it all on one thing. For every bet that you make, you should devote one hour of study per month to that investment. Keep the number of bets to what you can feasibly study. AFFILIATE DISCLOSURE: Some of the links on this channel are affiliate links, meaning, at NO additional cost to you, the show may earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase and/or subscribe. However, this does not impact our opinion. We recommend them because they are helpful and useful, not because we are looking for the small commission.
Some of the biggest names in the HPC and hyperconvergence space are banding together to standardize Ethernet. The new Ultra Ethernet Consortium counts AMD, Broadcom, Cisco, HPE, Intel, and others as founding members. Chairman J. Metz says the goal of the consortium is to tune Ethernet for workloads with specific performance requirements. The companies invovled are selling very high speed Ethernet focused on HPC and AI workloads. Notably absent in the list is NVIDIA. Live events are back, baby! It's event season, and hotels are filling up for in-person tech events. But the pandemic has changed everything, including event participation. What should we expect from returning favorites like re:Invent, in-flux standbys like VMware Explore, and smaller events like Flash Memory Summit? This and more on this week's Gestalt IT Rundown. Time Stamps: 0:00 - Welcome to the Rundown 0:49 - Stampede3 and Condor Galaxy-1 Show the Future of HPC and AI 7:05 - SEC Sets Four Day Deadline for Breach Disclosures 10:14 - Lightbend introduces Kalix 14:13 - Ultra Ethernet Consortium Founded 17:24 - Dell and Nvidia Team Up For On-Prem AI 21:51 - AWS Now Charging for Public IPv4 Addresses 24:46 - VAST Data Platform Announcement 29:30 - Who's Ready for Event Season? 44:44 - Thanks for watching Follow our Hosts on Social Media Tom Hollingsworth: https://www.twitter.com/NetworkingNerd Stephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett Follow Gestalt IT Website: https://www.GestaltIT.com/ Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltIT LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/Gestalt-IT Tags: #Rundown, #UEC, #VASTDataPlatform, #AI, #AWS, @VAST_Data, @Lightbend, @UltraEthernet, @AMD, @Broadcom, @Cisco, @HPE, @Intel, @IntelBusiness, @DellTech, @NVIDIA, @AWS, @DEFCON, @BlackHatEvents, #SFD10, #FMS2023, @FlashMem, #VMwareExplore, #TFDx, @VMwareExplore, #SDC23, #SFD26, @SNIA, #EFD2, #MWC23, #CFD18, #OCPSummit, #NFD33, @NEOSecSummit, #SC23, #DFD2, #AIFD4, #MFD10, @KubeCon_, @AWSEvents,
What's been happening?It has certainly been a busy week for the nuclear sector! There has been a host of positive news on the SMR front, the usual barrage of good policy news that we are growing accustomed to - and even some intrigue amongst uranium juniors.Brandon's stand-out SMR news (amongst a very full competitive field) was the Joint Development agreement between US utility Energy Northwest and X-Energy for up to 12 Xe-100 SMRs. This is an upgrade from the April 2021 announcement of 4 Xe-100 modules at Energy Northwest's Columbia NPP site. The first SMR is expected online by 2030. The IEA released its 2023 Electricity Market ReportWe have talked many times about the impact of power volatility on consumers. Now the IEA is bragging about it! Uranium Energy Corp (UEC) announced it has completed the steps required in their plan for a resumption of operations, enabling a faster restart at the Christensen Ranch in-situ recovery (ISR) Project in Wyoming.Unfortunately for Peninsula Energy, UEC's Christensen Ranch project need to free up that faster production from UEC's Irigaray processing plant, which had been a vital part of Peninsula's stage 1 restart of its Lance project. Peninsula announced a day later that it has delayed production at their Lance Projects in Wyoming because UEC has terminated their Resin processing agreement. Peninsula described the news as “disappointing” but is highlighting the silver lining – ie accelerating plans for in-house resin processing by going directly to stage 2 of the Lance restart.Winner of the week Poland, for getting on with the job of developing nuclear power to replace its coal fired power base. Poland & South Korea sign 6 MoUs related to nuclear power generation, including 2 MoUs signed between Doosan Enerbility and Polish companies on the construction of new nuclear power plants in Poland.Ministry of Climate and Environment has approved Polish copper and silver producer, KGHM Polska Miedź SA's plan to construct a power plant based on NuScale Power's small modular reactor (SMR).Polish state-owned development bank, BGK, announced it will lend €500 million to help finance the building of small nuclear reactors.Bungle of the weekNew York State's independent grid operator, ‘New York ISO' has officially identified a shortfall of electric generating capacity for New York City in 2025 of 446MW – more if the city has another heatwave. What a shame they turned off 2GW of emissions free nuclear power from the Indian Point nuclear power plant. Even the three new gas fired power plants built to generate 1.8GW to replace Indian Point won't be enoughQuestion of the weekWhat's the significance of the Paladin Energy announcement to retain 75% interest in Michelin JV in Labrador?Tweet of the weekhttps://twitter.com/JohnLeePettim13/status/1681312834091896832?s=20Moonshots & FizzersThis week ‘Great British Nuclear' (GBN) was launched, a new organisation backed by the UK government, to boost UK energy security, reduce dependence on volatile fossil fuel imports and deliver government priority to grow the economy. GBN kickstarted with a competition for game-changing small modular reactor (SMR) technology, which could result in billions of pounds of public and private sector investment in SMR projects. The aim is to have the first SMR up and running by 2030. By 2050 GBN wants to see nuclear providing a quarter of the UK's electricity.
The Money of Mine team couldn't help but dig into some fascinating stories today, with quite a few to choose from. We skim over Rio Tinto's (RIO.asx) quarterly highlights as it relates to copper, then onto the surprising announcement at Peninsula Energy (PEN.asx) with their UEC deal being terminated. Westgold (WGX.asx) selling their stake in Alto (AMX.asx) caught Matty's eye, so he researched his way through the history of the sandstone region, as well as the buyer of the stake Horizon (HRN.asx) and their major shareholder, listed investment manager Zeta Resources (ZER.asx). We picked up on some intriguing corporate activity at Rex Minerals (RXM.asx), who are looking to fund and develop the Hillside IOCG project in South Australia. Then, we shared a couple thoughts on the topic of Northern Star (NST.asx). The final business we explored was iron ore player Mount Gibson Iron (MGX.asx), who have the Koolan Island asset off the Kimberley coast. It hasn't always been plain sailing for MGX, but things seem to have turned a corner and their latest quarterly had some eye-catching numbers. All Money of Mine episodes are for informational purposes only and may contain forward-looking statements that may not eventuate. The co-hosts are not financial advisers and any views expressed are their opinion only. Please do your own research before making any investment decision or alternatively seek advice from a registered financial professional. Join our exclusive Facebook Group for the Money Miners and request access to the Hooteroo chat group. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter HOOTEROO HERALD Follow Money of Mine on YouTube Follow Money of Mine on Twitter Follow Money of Mine on LinkedIn Follow Money of Mine on Instagram (0:00) Video Preview(0:26) Introduction(1:14) Rio's Copper Story(2:35) Peninsula Energy & EUC Tear up Contract(10:11) Westgold sell Alto stake to Horizon(27:22) Rex Ready Themselves for Action(31:04) What to Look for in Northern Stars Quarterly(34:56) Mount Gibson Print Cash
In this special episode of the SportsPro Podcast we hear from Sergei Palkin, the chief executive of Ukrainian soccer powerhouse Shahktar Donetsk, about the challenge of leading change in the face of conflict as his club struggles for survival amid the Russian invasion of his homeland. Recorded at SportsPro Live 2023, Palkin is in conversation with Empower Sports' Pedro Pinto. Talking points: How the war changed everything for Shakhtar and the Ukrainian people (6:30) Why was important to return to football (9:23) Fifa, Annexe Seven and the cost of losing players (11:28) Representation in the ECA and UEC (16:35) Pivoting from being a recruitment strategy to a development strategy (18:18) What others can do to support Ukrainian clubs (20:58) The reality of operating a club in a warzone (24:51) Quick-fire questions (30:25)
“I tried to teach them [geologists Rick hired to work for his brokerage] how to turn rocks into money. And the best way to teach somebody how to turn rocks into money, is not by merely doing geology. But rather by understanding how the geology will increase the value of the company and as a consequence, hopefully its share price,” shared resource investing veteran Rick Rule. In this episode, Rick also shares many junior mining speculating insights and tips. 0:00 Introduction 0:50 Worst junior mining market in your career? 2:09 Equinox Gold Corp. struggles 4:27 When will investors believe developers can be successful again? 5:40 How many people worldwide actually care about daily junior mining stock speculation? 7:28 Promotional CEOs often receive a lower cost of capital 8:12 Do you agree with the UEC short report? 8:53 Rick experience going head-to-head with shorters 10:24 Battle Bank 14:02 Have you known successful, self-directed jr mining speculators that did not like geology? 15:54 Rick strategically hired geologists 18:13 Rule Symposium: turn rocks into money 22:07 Rick's invitation to rate your portfolio Rule Symposium: https://opptravel.zohobackstage.com/TheRuleSymposiumonNaturalResourceInvesting2023#/?affl=MiningStockEducation If you would like Rick to review your mining stock portfolio reach out to him at: https://ruleinvestmentmedia.com/ Rule Investment Media YT channel: https://www.youtube.com/@SprottMedia Sign up for our free newsletter and receive interview transcripts, stock profiles and investment ideas: http://eepurl.com/cHxJ39 The content found on MiningStockEducation.com is for informational purposes only and is not to be considered personal legal or investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities or any other product. It is based on opinions, SEC filings, current events, press releases and interviews but is not infallible. It may contain errors and MiningStockEducation.com offers no inferred or explicit warranty as to the accuracy of the information presented. If personal advice is needed, consult a qualified legal, tax or investment professional. Do not base any investment decision on the information contained on MiningStockEducation.com or our videos. We may hold equity positions in and/or be compensated by some of the companies featured on this site and therefore are biased and hold an obvious conflict of interest. MiningStockEducation.com may provide website addresses or links to websites and we disclaim any responsibility for the content of any such other websites. The information you find on MiningStockEducation.com is to be used at your own risk. By reading MiningStockEducation.com, you agree to hold MiningStockEducation.com, its owner, associates, sponsors, affiliates, and partners harmless and to completely release them from any and all liabilities due to any and all losses, damages, or injuries (financial or otherwise) that may be incurred.
Milwaukee's Urban Ecology Center started in a trailer. Now it offers dozens of programs and is connecting area kids and adults with careers helping the environment. We check back in with the UEC to learn how they're helping people find environmental jobs.
In Episode 32 of The Energy Question, David Blackmon interviews Amir Adnani, the CEO of Uranium Energy Corp. UEC is the largest, diversified, United States-focused uranium company. UEC is a pure-play uranium company and is advancing the next generation of low-cost, environmentally friendly In-Situ Recovery (ISR) mining uranium projects. The Company has two production ready ISR hub and spoke platforms in South Texas and Wyoming, anchored by fully licensed and operational processing capacity at the Hobson and Irigaray plants. UEC also has seven U.S. ISR uranium projects with all of their major permits in place.In this episode, David and Mr. Adnani talk about UEC's business endeavors, the opportunity for uranium production in Texas and other areas of the United States, and why a renaissance of nuclear energy will be necessary of the world is to meet its net-zero goals.Run of Show:00:00 - Intro01:08 - History of Amir Adnani's Company (history of uranium mining)07:41 - Talks about energy transition debate (nuclear energy, developments due to energy bills)15:01 - Talks about Fukushima Daiichi reactors17:29 - Zero carbon emission source or a heavy polluting source like coal20:52 - Jobs domestically in uranium exploration mining24:08 - OutroThe Energy Question Episode 32 - Amir Adnani - Urainum Energy CorpDavid Blackmon [00:00:10] Hello, welcome to the energy question with David Blackmon. I'm your host, David Blackman. My very special guest today is Amir Adnani, the founder and CEO of Uranium Energy, which is America's leading fastest growing uranium mining company in the United States. And I. Amir, thank you so much for your time today. I really appreciate it. Amir Adnani [00:00:31] Pleasure's all mine. Thanks for having me. David Blackmon [00:00:33] You bet. I'm an old oil and gas guy, but I'm also been a long time fan of nuclear energy. And I realized that I understand the need for more of it in the United States as a zero carbon energy source. David Blackmon [00:00:48] And so I'm really glad to talk to you because we haven't focused enough on the need and the future for this key energy source here on my podcast. But before we get into the Q&A, I want to give you a couple of minutes to talk about the history of your company, you know, where it started, where it's going in, and how you plan to get there. Amir Adnani [00:01:08] I'm an entrepreneur by background and have been involved and focused on energy-related and commodity-related businesses for the last 20 years. In 2004, 2005 timeframe, I looked at what was happening in nuclear energy and we were certainly experiencing the early innings of a nuclear renaissance. I looked at what was happening in the US and in the US. Back then we were importing 90% of our uranium requirements and I thought this doesn't make sense. Amir Adnani [00:01:37] And I really started to take a deeper look at the history of uranium mining in the US and was fascinated by the fact that not only was the civilian nuclear energy program to generate electricity, it started in the US,. Amir Adnani [00:01:50] But we had the largest fleet of nuclear reactors anywhere in the world and the history of uranium mining was written by US oil and gas companies in the sixties, seventies and eighties. Companies like Exxon, Chevron, Texaco, ConocoPhillips were the pioneers of uranium mining and particularly a very unique extraction of uranium called In-Situ recovery, which is much more familiar, similar to oil and gas recovery than actual mining. And these all disappeared. Amir Adnani [00:02:19] Why did these companies disappear? Why did the uranium mining industry disappear in the United States? Because when the Cold War ended, the US decided to sign a treaty with the Russian government to dismantle Soviet era warheads that the Russians had too many of. Amir Adnani [00:02:35] To take highly enriched uranium out of doors warheads blended down to low enriched uranium and sell it into the market. This became the equivalent of the world's largest uranium mine and destroyed the domestic industry in the US. The positive end of it is that it did, over the course of 20 years, helped dismantle and wait for this 23,000 Soviet era nuclear warheads. Amir Adnani [00:02:58] And so it did a lot in terms of security and the stockpiling the Soviet missiles, but it destroyed our industry. So fast forward to really the company's background in Genesis. I became quite fascinated by the productive history of uranium in South Texas. Amir Adnani [00:03:17] South Texas, according to the US Geological Survey, contains the largest potential deposits for uranium in the United States that are untapped and unexplored. Much of this potential happens alongside oil and gas basins like the Eagle Ford Shale and the Barnett Shale. Amir Adnani [00:03:33] These areas that have been very productive for oil and gas over geologic time have also helped uranium deposits get formed in the same regions. We set up shop originally in Austin, Texas, as a company Uranium Energy Corp, before moving our offices to Corpus Christi to be closer to our South Texas business that we were building brick by brick. We expanded from 25 odd business plan. Amir Adnani [00:03:56] We got into production in 2010 at our Hopson facility down in Karnes County. That's the four behind me right? There is a lot of supply, and that's the largest uranium recovery plant in Texas and one of the largest in the country today. Amir Adnani [00:04:10] And so our view was that longer term nuclear power played an integral role in providing electricity in the US. One in every five home in America is powered by nuclear energy. Over 50% of carbon free electricity generation in the country is nuclear. Amir Adnani [00:04:26] And so this made no sense that there wouldn't ultimately be a bigger domestic industry. So we focused we got into production in 2010, hired many people. We were one of the only new uranium mines in the world in 2010 in South Texas. Then we had the nuclear problems in Japan that happened in 2011 with their Fukushima Daiichi reactors. Amir Adnani [00:04:45] So we entered their market for nuclear energy and uranium that basically lasted about a decade. Unfortunately, during this bear market, we continue to rely as an industry in the US on Russia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan for our uranium needs. And so during this period, domestic uranium mining basically vanished. Amir Adnani [00:05:04] And so when I started in 05. When we were importing 90% of our required. Today we import 100% of our requirements. My company was able to survive the bear market and we took on a very counter-cyclical strategy and we thought, you know what, let's take advantage of the bear market to make acquisitions. Amir Adnani [00:05:21] Sort of the old saying, you know, you want to buy your Christmas decorations in January. So we got really worried. We were able to roll up assets and not only in Texas where we expanded into Wyoming, we expanded into Canada, we were able to really, again, go bargain hunting. Amir Adnani [00:05:36] And then Russia's invasion of Ukraine occurred, which, as terrible as it is, and as much as it's a humanitarian crisis, it has really brought attention to energy supply chains. And now I think there's a realization that, holy crap, we can depend on Russia. Okay. Well, I mean, a lot of people kind of knew that before Russia had to get that way. But now finally, the realization is there. Governments, utilities, everyone is trying as fast as possible to move away from Russian supplies. So we're a US based company. We're a Texas based company. Amir Adnani [00:06:11] Today we have operations not just in Texas, but, as I mentioned, Texas, Wyoming and Canada's Saskatchewan Province, which is home to some of the highest grade uranium deposits. We believe North American supplies and US supplies can provide energy security moving forward and energy security in a world that wants to decarbonize as fast as it's trying to electrify, but needs to do all of that while actually having access to the energy supply chain. David Blackmon [00:06:38] Yeah, I it's so interesting to hear you go through this history of development of the industry in South Texas. I grew up down there in Bellville, Texas, just 30 miles from we have a facility. Amir Adnani [00:06:50] We have a project in the county nearby. Yes. Yeah, we're very active there. Yeah. David Blackmon [00:06:55] Yeah. I had some cousins in Live Oak County who got very rich in the 1970s on uranium. It was either Dow or DuPont had a big plant just outside of Georgia, West Texas. Amir Adnani [00:07:06] You're right. So we have a few of our a few of our team members worked at that operation. And the US Steel. US Steel had that project in Louisville County as well. And it was a really successful project, the one you're referring to. But absolutely. David Blackmon [00:07:19] Yeah, Minerals and gold, the Ed County. And unfortunately we never got a lease there, but maybe sometime in the future. Amir Adnani [00:07:25] We're we're in Gold County as well. David Blackmon [00:07:28] Are you really? Oh, my gosh. I need to call your business development guy. Anyway, sorry I'm not trying to sell a lease here, so I. You know what? What is so perplexing to me in this whole energy transition debate is watching is the same people, the same groups, climate change lobby groups, do you know, advocate for wind and solar and zero carbon energy, Turn right around in their next breath. David Blackmon [00:07:54] Breath and slammed the nuclear energy. How do we ever get past that? Because it's becoming I think everyone is realizing as time goes on that the limits of the real utility of wind and solar is going to be fairly limited and we're going to have a renaissance in the nuclear industry. So how do we ever get past that? You know, that opposition that seems more emotionally based and fact based to me. Amir Adnani [00:08:22] I would say out of necessity, unfortunately. I mean, for good, the right answer would have been science and facts and information, because the science of nuclear energy is one that shows it is the safest form of an electricity generation. It has zero carbon emissions, it has baseload power. So that's 24 seven 365, and it has over a 95% capacity factor for those data points. For for the science of it all, you would want to enjoy nuclear energy. Amir Adnani [00:08:52] But let's take a look at Japan and what's driving interest in nuclear energy there. And that's a really important country to look at, because in Japan there was a problem with the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactors in 2011. It did create, excuse me about that. It did create fear. And that concern made the country shut down all of its nuclear reactors. Amir Adnani [00:09:14] In the last few months, we've seen some very profound developments due to energy bills. Every person's monthly energy bills going up 3 to 4 times, in some cases ten times. In some cases, people are paying more for their monthly energy bills and their mortgage or rent. Amir Adnani [00:09:31] There is now the largest public support seen in public opinion polls in Japan for nuclear energy since the Fukushima incident in 2011. And the government, as a result has pivoted and stated it wants to go back to nuclear energy and to restart their idled nuclear reactors, extend their lives and even build more. Amir Adnani [00:09:51] We've had the benefit of hydrocarbons in the United States and the shale revolution and all those developments over the last ten or 15 years that gave us so much more energy capacity in the US that we weren't hit as hard as Western European countries as Japan was as a result of Russia or, you know, the average person hasn't yet felt that in their energy bill. We felt it at the pump and we've seen that sort of go up and down. Amir Adnani [00:10:17] But I think when we start to feel it in our pocketbook is when we start to say, how do we get the cost of living down? How do we make sure that energy cost doesn't become the single biggest cost item to live? This is again, where nuclear really shines. This is where we are in fact, seeing today, for what it's worth. And I think it's worth a lot. Amir Adnani [00:10:35] The highest public opinion polls in favor of nuclear energy also in the United States. And that is why you're seeing bipartisan support for nuclear energy in Washington, where there's not bipartisan support for anything, as we both know. I mean, there's nothing that they agree on. And of all things, nuclear energy is enjoying bipartisan support. Do we have 100% of folks on board with nuclear energy? Of course not. But as we as as the facts and information and costs become better understood. Amir Adnani [00:11:03] The biggest fact about renewables is that the capacity factor is 25 to 30%. Yeah, well you can't you can rely on something that works only 25 to 30% of the time. People want to be able to charge their electric devices at any given point they run out of battery or run out of juice. You want you want to be able to charge an electric vehicle if you drive one. Amir Adnani [00:11:23] These things require electricity around the clock. So it's just so common sense of it is there now. Let's go a step further. There's some really cool stuff going on with nuclear energy. Really amazing because you. Nassau has announced a number of missions and at various sort of launches, whether it's to the International Space Station, whether it's to Mars, what Space X wants to do, what Elon Musk's. Amir Adnani [00:11:49] Space travel going forward and for the last number of decades has been powered by nuclear energy. People don't realize that. But some of the coolest things you can do out there and all these micro reactors that are able to provide the fuel needed to travel space. Amir Adnani [00:12:03] You look at the nuclear navy, the 108 submarines and aircraft carriers are all run on micro reactors that provide electricity. Bill Gates and a number of other Silicon Valley entrepreneurs are now getting behind small modular and advanced reactors, smaller reactors that you can build in areas where you don't have a big population. Amir Adnani [00:12:24] You don't have a large city, which is historically where reactors have been built. So there's now a proposed reactor to be built in Wyoming, where there used to be a coal fired power plant. So the jobs are retained, the infrastructure is there. Amir Adnani [00:12:36] These coal fired plants are already connected to the grid. And in most cases there's infrastructure that you can tap into. There was a very fascinating study by the Department of Energy talking about retrofitting coal fired power plant sites into small modular or nuclear reactor sites, depending on what the site size requirements were. Amir Adnani [00:12:55] So these are really cutting edge areas of technological development on energy that nuclear is involved with. And it helps us every day we build another nuclear reactor. Help makes us that much more energy independence and it adds towards national security because you control your own destiny with nuclear energy. Amir Adnani [00:13:14] And the biggest part of it is how little fuel is needed in a nuclear power plant compared to oil. Did you know, for example, that three barrels of uranium can produce the same amount of energy as 300,000 barrels of oil? So when you start to think about how powerful it can be, the power density of uranium. David Blackmon [00:13:32] Yeah, the energy density is. Amir Adnani [00:13:35] That is phenomenal. And that again, is, I think, the common sense of why, you know, anyone would be supportive of it. David Blackmon [00:13:42] So, you know, so much of the opposition, unfortunately, and I think really irrationally continues to be based on Fukushima, on Chernobyl, on even Three Mile Island 43 years ago, 44 years ago now. I mean, isn't you know, it's so important, I think for people to understand how much the technology has evolved. You know, all of those are older generation power plants and they had had flaws, obviously. And just like some so much of our other technology nuclear has advanced tremendously over the last 15, 20 years, hasn't it? Amir Adnani [00:14:21] If you go out there today and drive around in a vehicle that was built in the sixties or seventies, or if you go get on an airplane that was built in the sixties or seventies, naturally you might be less comfortable, less safe. Amir Adnani [00:14:33] I mean, everything has, to your point, advanced so much more on fourth generation technology and nuclear reactors today. Surely these are far safer and their ability to deal with issues and concerns and have learned from those episodes that you refer to with Chernobyl and Three Mile Island and Fukushima. Amir Adnani [00:14:54] But Fukushima being the most recent one, is a fascinating one to look at because no one died as a result of the shut down of the Fukushima Daiichi reactors. Thousands of people died because of an earthquake and tsunami and earthquake that wiped. Out. Just cleared that, cleared the area and everything was cleared except those nuclear reactors were left standing,. Amir Adnani [00:15:14] In a way speaks and is a testament to how solid the engineering is of these reactors that every infrastructure site you would have had in that region was wiped clean and these reactors were left standing. And while there was concern initially about making sure the cooling units that had gone offline would come back online fast enough to keep everything cooled, they got it under control and it was safe. Amir Adnani [00:15:36] And again, there is no evidence today. That shows there was any fatalities as a result of those reactors coolants malfunctioning before it got under control. That's a fact. And that is also a fact that is most evidence, again, I think in what the public opinion polls in Japan are saying to you today,. Amir Adnani [00:15:54] It's easy for people to sit here in North America debating this stuff. But people in Japan have been pulled recently and they've got a democratically elected government who looks at these polls and their conclusion is it's safe to go back to nuclear energy. Amir Adnani [00:16:07] And we far rather have access to power that is, that makes life possible rather than having our costs go up, our emissions go up, the environment and the air and the pollution and all those issues that go with the alternatives of not having the power or just not having power at all. Really a hot summer in Japan where they didn't have access to their AC units, they're going to have a cold winter and all this stuff seasonally starts to add up. David Blackmon [00:16:33] And so I'm sorry, go ahead. Amir Adnani [00:16:34] No, no, that's it. So I think this is I think it's instructive to look at Japan, because I think Japan in 11 years has given us a case study, a case study that is more recent than Chernobyl and Three Mile Island, because it involves, you know, the last decade where it again is just a per and data data point. We saw what happened there and that we see where we are now. And the end result is that there was there was no harm done by these nuclear reactors and now everyone wants them back. David Blackmon [00:16:59] Well, and the other thing about Japan, when you look at Japan as an object lesson in a test case, it's not the landscape in Japan is not favorable for either wind or solar, but a lot of wide open spaces for big solar and wind farms, not a lot of flat spaces with a lot of wind blowing for the wind. David Blackmon [00:17:16] And then the alternative, as the government made very clear here just a week ago, is the alternative to more nuclear is is more coal for Japan. And so they've got to keep the lights on somehow. What would you rather have a zero carbon emission source or a heavy polluting source like coal? It seems like a pretty obvious decision point, doesn't it? Amir Adnani [00:17:37] Again, I think the decision point that you laid out is exactly would not just the Japanese government, but the European governments, the US government, many governments and policymakers are arriving at the exact same point. Amir Adnani [00:17:49] And the one thing I would say is there isn't an energy focused, let's say, modeling person, these people that model different energy sources and then they provide a report to government people. There isn't a single one today who has been asked,. Amir Adnani [00:18:02] Hey, how do we try to be decarbonized? How do we reduce the carbon emissions and give us a plan that involves, you know, getting to net zero or whatever you want to call it, but some kind of decarbonization by 2035 or 2050, there isn't a single person that has looked at the data and modeled it and hasn't come up with the conclusion, including nuclear energy. Amir Adnani [00:18:23] That is the reason why, for the first time last summer, the European Union changed this taxonomy to include both nuclear and natural gas and natural gas should be. And that is why, again, we're seeing unprecedented support and interest in Washington on a bipartisan basis where they've allocated billions of dollars towards providing basically a financial incentive for these nuclear reactors to stay on because of all the financial attributes they bring, they bring grid stability, they provide national security, and it's 100% emission free. And on top of that, you're seeing unprecedented action by the government. Amir Adnani [00:18:56] Not since the 1950s and the Eisenhower administration did we have the US government step up and purchase uranium for what is now being called the Strategic Uranium Reserve, modeled after the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Amir Adnani [00:19:09] I'm very honored that our company was in fact one of the companies that was selected and was awarded by the Department of Energy, and they purchased uranium from us and this completed just a few weeks ago. But it was history in the making. Amir Adnani [00:19:21] It was history in the making that we have not seen action like this being taken by governments and policy makers in our 20 years as a company. We haven't seen this. And individuals that work at our company that have been in uranium for 40 years, they go back a long time before you have to find these types of issues. Amir Adnani [00:19:37] So this all speaks to something. This all speaks to the fact that, again, when you look at the hard, bare facts around what is the benefit of nuclear energy, what are the pros and cons of every power source? Amir Adnani [00:19:48] Every power source today has pros and cons. We don't, unfortunately, as a species, as a civilization, we don't have the perfect solution for our energy needs yet. Maybe we'll find it 100 years from now. But every form of power generation has its pros and cons. Hence you need an energy mix and then an energy mix. Amir Adnani [00:20:04] You want to make sure you have nuclear and. And how lucky are we in the US that 94 reactors are already built and operating, that we're leading the world in the science and technology behind small modular reactors, and that we have the expertise and we have the knowhow and we have more than anything the gold standard of safety regulation, which is the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Amir Adnani [00:20:28] All of this should really make people, I think, both feel safe but also proud. And I think if you're if you're in your twenties, if you're like kind of just coming out of college, what better area for for growth and development than to get involved with this small, you know, small modular reactors and the emerging nuclear industry in this country? Amir Adnani [00:20:45] It used to be that at its peak in the seventies and eighties, when the US was the world's number one uranium producer, we had almost 30,000 jobs domestically in uranium exploration mining. This is data by the Department of Energy today. Amir Adnani [00:20:59] There are collectively in the US, including me on this call 300 people involved in domestic uranium exploration mining. So that may seem like, oh my God, we're in trouble. Only 300. It used to be 30,000. Or you can look at it as glass half full and say it is 300 and it's got to go to 30,000 because this industry has to get bigger. And with that means tremendous job growth and economic growth and opportunity. That's the way we're looking at it. David Blackmon [00:21:22] And these are not these are not minimum wage jobs, these very high paid professional positions, correct? Absolutely. Amir Adnani [00:21:30] And the thing with mining is that once you build a mine, these are ten year, 15 year, 20 year commitment. So the jobs are also long lasting jobs. There's stable jobs. They they are as long and stable as the duration of the mine lives and assets. Amir Adnani [00:21:44] So unlike oil and gas, in fact, where it could be more sporadic, where you're moving from location to location to drill and break, once you have a uranium mine up and running, that location will remain active for a long time. So, again, it's just it's the job creation, the amount of their high paying jobs, but they're also long lasting jobs. David Blackmon [00:22:01] Well, thank you so much. You are an incredible spokesperson for your not just your company, but for your industry. And what a great advocate. I really appreciate your time. We're running up against it here. And any time we can do anything for you, you ever want to come back and talk to us again? Please just reach out and let me know. We'd love to do this again. Amir Adnani [00:22:21] It would be my honor and I really appreciate that. We I've been at this for 18 years now, and I really believe with everything in me about the merits of what we're doing and believed in when it was dark, it was quiet for ten years. David Blackmon [00:22:34] It wasn't easy, right? Amir Adnani [00:22:35] It was not easy. We believed in it. So you can appreciate it. You know, Now we feel this is easy to believe in now, but our resolve was tested during the very kind of dark depths of the bear market that the industry was in for a decade. That's a long time, obviously. Amir Adnani [00:22:51] But it goes to show you the level of commitment that we have and truly how we feel about the prospects of the industry and that ultimately it's providing something necessary and good and something that is going to be energy is life and to be the provider of that and to genuinely believe that you have the supply chain and the fuel that allows for life to move forward and to be progressive and to be continuous, I think is very important. Amir Adnani [00:23:16] And I think also, again, where we're very grounded in the convictions we have and really appreciate this opportunity to connect with you and tell our story and look forward to coming back and doing it again. David Blackmon [00:23:26] And that's our lesson for the show, folks. Energy security is national security. If we're going to have energy security, we're going to need more nuclear. That's the way it's going to be. And so so please talk to your local representatives, your folks and in government and tell them you're in favor of more nuclear energy in the United States. David Blackmon [00:23:46] It's important for our future and our kids futures and our grandkids futures with that. Thank you again, Adani. I really appreciate it and look forward to talking to you again in the future. Amir Adnani [00:23:56] Likewise. Thank you. Take care. Bye bye,Sponsorships are available or get your own corporate brand produced by Sandstone Media. David Blackmon LinkedInDB Energy Questions Energy Transition Absurdities SubstackThe Crude Truth with Rey TrevinoRey Trevino LinkedInEnergy Transition Weekly ConversationIrina Slav LinkedInArmando Cavanha LinkedIn ENB Top NewsENBEnergy DashboardENB PodcastENB Substack
Dr Brin Hodgskiss (NHS England), Debbie Floyd (NHS England) and Jacob Lant (Healthwatch England) discuss some key themes from the Patient Experience research findings that focus on service quality, what makes people happy vs unhappy with services and user-centred design, how systems can improve service design by focusing on the needs of users. Listeners can access the full Patient Experience in Urgent and Emergency care report on www.easternahsn.org/UEC . You can also listen to (Part 1) of this podcast series here https://soundcloud.com/nhsengland/the-uec-patient-experience-part-1
Welcome to Episode 115 of The Podcast About Division III Baseball. It's our second Mid-Atlantic preview pod, as we dig into the teams in Region 4. In order: CUNYAC (at 2:00) This isn't a relevant conference as long as they don't have an AQ but they are still playing baseball and that's cool MAC Freedom (at 5:35) Arcadia had one of the more surprising dominant seasons in recent D-III history and look poised to be a regional contender once again Misericordia finally got knocked off their MACF throne but look ready to re-claim it Stevens might be able to ride their always-excellent pitching staff back to the postseason but have a lot of offense to replace NJAC (at 18:00) William Paterson finally won the NJAC with one of the nation's best offenses despite extremely poor run prevention; they should be tremendously entertaining again in 2023 Rowan is as solid as it gets but may need to rely on some transfers on the mound to stay at the top of this loaded conference Montclair State can bang with the best of 'em but will need some pitching depth to step up to make noise in a regional Kean had a down year but still boasts some of the best pitching in a suddenly offense-friendly conference TCNJ leads the rest of the pack of several teams that could reasonably make noise in this annual gauntlet UEC (at 43:30) Penn State-Harrisburg has a loaded lineup coming back but a ridiculous amount of innings to replace that could make a title defense challenging Salute to Ryan McCarty but it's somewhat unclear what to expect from Abington moving forward UAA (at 53:55) NYU continues to baffle us but we can usually expect them to be solid even if the SOS is blah We conclude (at 57:10) with our player and pitcher of the year picks, and our teams to beat. Then we say goodbye. Follow us on Twitter @d3baseballpod (DMs are open if you want to reach us there) and @CespedesBBQ. Send us your best D-III stories or any other comments or questions to thed3baseballpodcast@gmail.com Subscribe + rate/review on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-podcast-about-division-iii-baseball/id1342691759 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5uk8q4iUrMUZRriKM1Akfx?si=b6820eb311f847f1 Support us on Patreon -- this will never be behind a paywall but we appreciate any support to help cover our podcasting hosting fees and all the hours we put into making these pods possible! https://patreon.com/user?u=87461961&utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=creatorshare_fan&utm_content=join_link
Amir Adnani—CEO, president, and co-founder of Uranium Energy Corp. (UEC)—joins me today to discuss the latest developments in the uranium space. We go over the biggest stories for nuclear power/uranium, including why it was such a popular topic at the World Economic Forum in Davos last week… how Japan is causing a paradigm shift in the uranium market… and how the Russia-Ukraine war will have a massive, long-term impact on the global supply of this valuable resource. Amir also shares some details about the world-class Canadian mine his company just bought—despite making a lower bid than competitors. Plus, he explains why uranium prices could double from current levels… and why the current supply/demand situation in the uranium market is unlike anything he's ever seen in his career. In this episode Japan's about-face on nuclear power creates a paradigm shift [4:45] Multiple tailwinds are driving the uranium bull market [9:10] Uranium supply isn't keeping up with demand [13:10] Why Russian sanctions could impact the market for years [16:00] How UEC got a bargain on a world-class asset [20:50] Why uranium prices could double from here [36:20] Enjoyed this episode? Get Wall Street Unplugged delivered FREE to your inbox every Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday: https://www.curzioresearch.com/wall-street-unplugged/ Wall Street Unplugged podcast is available at: --: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/wall-street-unplugged-frank/ -- : https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/curzio-research/wall-street-unplugged-2 -- : https://www.curzioresearch.com/category/podcast/wall-street-unplugged/ : https://twitter.com/frankcurzio :. https://www.facebook.com/CurzioResearch/ : https://www.linkedin.com/in/frank-curzio-690561a7/ :
To better understand the experiences of urgent care from the perspective of patients who have engaged with urgent care, the NHS transformation directorate has commissioned Eastern Academic Health Science Network (Eastern AHSN) consortium to conduct a mixed method research study. Part one of this two-part podcast series introduces the Patient Experience research and shares details on the mixed method approach used. Listeners will be the first to have a preview of the initial research results ahead of findings being published on https://www.easternahsn.org/UEC.
Amir Adnani—president, CEO, and co-founder of Uranium Energy Corp.—returns to the podcast to discuss the “no-brainer” fix to the world's energy problems: uranium. He shares how Russia is weaponizing energy (after all, sanctions are a two-way street)... the two megatrends behind the uranium bull market… and how the U.S. could end up the big winner here. In this episode Russia's impact on the uranium industry [3:25] The supply/demand imbalance is bullish for uranium [9:03] How the US could reap the rewards of the uranium bull market [16:20] Details of UEC's latest acquisition [21:00] How high uranium prices could go [33:30] Enjoyed this episode? Get Wall Street Unplugged delivered FREE to your inbox every Wednesday: https://www.curzioresearch.com/wall-street-unplugged/ Wall Street Unplugged podcast is available at: --: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/wall-street-unplugged-frank/ -- : https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/curzio-research/wall-street-unplugged-2 -- : https://www.curzioresearch.com/category/podcast/wall-street-unplugged/ : https://twitter.com/frankcurzio :. https://www.facebook.com/CurzioResearch/ : https://www.linkedin.com/in/frank-curzio-690561a7/ :
Dave Lukas, The Misfit Entrepreneur_Breakthrough Entrepreneurship
Hello Misfit Nation! Welcome to another edition of "Lessons for Hannah!" Many years ago, I introduced a new format that alongside our regular episodes called “Lessons for Hannah.” Hannah is my daughter and one of the main inspirations for the Misfit Entrepreneur. I wanted to have a place where she could go and learn from her daddy and his Misfit friends throughout her life….even after I am gone. If you haven't listened to the first episode of "Lessons for Hannah," I urge you to as it gives some more background and tells the amazing story of how Hannah came to be in our lives. Lessons for Hannah are short, very useful, and sometimes comical lessons, that I want to share with you and give to Hannah to help in your lives. Because I want Hannah to have these for her life, I'm going to speak as though I am talking directly to her. These episodes are a lot of fun and if you think there is a lesson that we should include in these episodes, please don't hesitate to send it over to us at support@misfitentrepreneur.com. We'd love to share it. Hannah, I want to share some lessons from Nature. As I write this, we are traveling through Alaska, and I am sitting in the café of the Grande Denali Hotel looking out over the amazing expanse of land and snow-covered mountains. It's a beautiful sunny day with a chill in the air. The temp is about 30 degrees, but the crisp mountain air feels wonderful. It truly a breathtaking sight that I hope you remember vividly for the rest of your life. As I sit here, I cannot help but think of the great lessons that nature teaches us. We have been in the state for about a week after my Ironman even in Juneau and have been traveling up north with another few days of excursions and taking in the beautiful country of Alaska. Along the way I have been taking note of things and wanted to share some of them with you. The first lesson is that nature, or really God, arranges things to operate in perfect harmony so that all life can function. It is amazing to see the salmon run to their eventual death, climbing rivers, waterfalls, etc. But, out of their death comes life in the new eggs that they lay. And even more important is how critical it is for them to go through this cycle for the eco-system to survive. While they live fairly short lives and ultimately die after spawning, they provide an indispensable food source for much of the wildlife that keeps the whole system going. Without them, many animals would die off. If you stop and think about it, everything in the universe has to work in perfect order for you to be sitting here right now. One little change in the course of history and you may not even exist. It truly is a spectacular, amazing, awe-inspiring orchestration that makes everything work at every level from the cells in our bodies to sun heating our planet and keeping us alive. Cherish every moment you have in this life. The second lesson is the nature does not discriminate. As I hit the 80th mile on my 112-mile bike in the Ironman, the rain had intensified to a miserable driving downpour (it rained the whole race, but this stretch was particularly bad), I won't lie, I cursed it a few times. But, in that moment, it occurred to me that all of us competing had to go through the same conditions and even more so, every living thing in nature has to live through those conditions every day and fight for survival. Nature doesn't treat any creature different from another – everyone is on the same boat. And some creatures are food for others, like the salmon making the eco-system go, and still others are like a beetle that we were told about actually kill off trees that then die and allow for the forest growth to continue and new trees to grow. As I noted earlier, everything works in a beautiful harmony. But, nature treats everyone and everything the same and that is a great lesson for life. You should do the same – treat everyone with the same love and respect and not discriminate against others for any reason. The third lesson is the nature is an entrepreneur and fosters entrepreneurship. I mentioned at the start of this lesson that I am sitting in café of the Grande Denali lodge that offers a breathtaking 360-degree view of the entire range. The hotel sits on the top of a plateau that is literally just big enough to fit the hotel. The edge of the hotel is on the edge of the cliff. Nature created the conditions to make this happen. It created the incredible mountain range and countryside that fills this area which drew humans to it for its beauty and everything the land offers. And at some point, someone took a look at the plateau the Grande now sits on from a thousand or so feet below and said, “That would be a great place to put a hotel for the best views in this area.” They then proceeded to make it a reality, cutting the curving winding road up the mountain, figuring out how to make the land work to accommodate a large lodge and hotel, and then everything needed to create the business and make it go. But it all started with nature creating the pull for people to explore and come here. Nature may be the ultimate entrepreneur for the reasons I have already stated, but also for the abundance of opportunity it creates. And the big lesson from nature is that there is opportunity all around you all the time. Once you learn to see it, it is abundant. Hannah, nature offers so many lessons, I could go on for hours, but if you can take the time to understand the few that I've shared and keep them forefront in your life – they will help you live well. If you cherish every day, respect the world around you, and see the abundance of opportunity that exists for you; you will enjoy a great life and help others to do the same. And if you ever need a reminder, just look at a few pictures of your trip through Alaska! I love you, Dad Best Quote: If you cherish every day, respect the world around you, and see the abundance of opportunity that exists for you; you will enjoy a great life and help others to do the same Misfit 3: Nature, or really God, arranges things to operate in perfect harmony so that all life can function. Nature does not discriminate. You should follow it's example. Treat everyone with the same love and respect and not discriminate against others for any reason. Nature is the ultimate entrepreneur and creates an abundance of opportunities all around us. Show Sponsors Simple Texting: Free for 14-day trial and 500 extra free credits! Text “MISFITS” to 833-2TRY-SMS (833-287-9767) Uranium Energy, ticker symbol UEC. Check out UEC as a pure energy investment play. www.UraniumEnergy.com
https://anchor.fm/dailystockpick/support I've had some long days working here in LA so I haven't had tons of time to look at stocks, but the ones I pointed out this week have been doing REALLY well. $AMTD $PLTR $EJH $SOFI $Uber $TSLA $F $Spg $Xom $Cvx $Dvn $Fang $Shop $Pypl - wow $SQ reports tomorrow Monday $DVN and $MOS and $SPG and $FANG Tuesday $Uber $amd and $cat Wednesday $MRNA and $MRO Thursday $cop $lng Friday $DKNG for me personally $Apph $UPRO $SPXU $SPXL $TQQQ $SQQQ $SARK Premarket ferilizers: $UAN, $MOS, $CF . Natural gas: $BOIL, $UNG. Lithium stocks: $PLL, $ALB and uranium stock: $UUUU or $UEC. $Etrn OPEC very small increase in production so oil is up… concerned about full European sanctions on Russia Dec 5th --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dailystockpick/support
Amir Adnani, founder, president, and CEO of Uranium Energy Corp. (UEC), is back on the podcast to discuss the bull market in commodities. Uranium prices are surging as the Russian-Ukraine war continues. Amir gives his take on the changing landscape for energy markets… why uranium is critical to our national security… and how UEC is positioned to benefit from higher uranium prices. [0:30] Speaking of which… Uranium prices are currently around $50 per pound… But Amir explains why we could quickly see this number reach $100 or higher… and the effects of higher uranium prices vs. higher oil prices on the economy. [15:05] U.S. utility companies are lobbying for sanction waivers to continue business with Russia… Amir is fired up and calls them out. [20:30] Turning to his company, Amir shares why UEC is in a position to become a global powerhouse in uranium production. [25:40] Finally, he breaks down why uranium is critical for industries like the military and space travel… and why we need to get back to our '70s roots when it comes to uranium production. [30:10] Enjoyed this episode? Get Wall Street Unplugged delivered FREE to your inbox every Wednesday: https://www.curzioresearch.com/wall-street-unplugged/ Wall Street Unplugged podcast is available at: --: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/wall-street-unplugged-frank/ -- : https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/curzio-research/wall-street-unplugged-2 -- : https://www.curzioresearch.com/category/podcast/wall-street-unplugged/ : https://twitter.com/frankcurzio :. https://www.facebook.com/CurzioResearch/ : https://www.linkedin.com/in/frank-curzio-690561a7/ : https://www.curzioresearch.com
Welcome to Episode 89 of The Podcast About Division III Baseball. It's our second Mid-Atlantic pod, as we dig into the teams in Region 4. In order: CUNYAC (at 1:45) We really aren't sure what to make of this conference at this point but it seems like they will still be playing baseball in 2022, so that's good MACF (at 5:30) Misericordia will look to continue their epic streak atop this conference with their super clean style of baseball and HBP superpower DeSales and Stevens will look to finally dethrone the Cougars NJAC (at 16:35) Rowan is losing a good amount of offense from last year's World Series team but might have the best pitching staff in the region William Paterson really jumped up into the upper echelon of this conference and are in good shape to stay there Kean was definitely disappointing in 2021 but have been too good recently to stay down for long Montclair State is a 3x national champion but hasn't been this good in a while TCNJ and Ramapo should all be much better than last year UEC (at 35:10) Penn State-Harrisburg lost an absolute legend in Bret Williams but still is loaded and ready to defend their conference title Ryan McCarty is chasing some D-III records for Penn State-Abington UAA (at 46:14) NYU...has nothing on their website so we don't know much other than they will be playing baseball and are in the UAA which means we will be paying close attention to them We conclude (at 49:05) with our player and pitcher of the year picks, and our teams to beat. Then we say goodbye. Follow us on Twitter @d3baseballpod (DMs are open if you want to reach us there) and @CespedesBBQ. Send us your best D-III stories or any other comments or questions to thed3baseballpodcast@gmail.com Subscribe + rate/review on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-podcast-about-division-iii-baseball/id1342691759
In part 2 of our The Last of Us series, the team journey from Pittsburgh to the UEC and unpick the many, many encounters along the way. We also have a dramatic update on Alan the pigeon. In part 3 we will be playing from the start of Winter through to the end of the game. In part 4 we will be playing through the Left Behind DLC and discussing our time with the multiplayer. Support us by subscribing on your podcast platform of choice and reviewing / rating where you can. Thank you for listening.
This episode completes our initial 4-part series on environmental education. Throughout this series, we have seen how programming at the Urban Ecology Center makes connections to environmental learning for children in school groups and for community members of all ages. We have seen the dynamic ways that the community informs that programming. In this episode, it is even more notable that we are only just beginning to share the diversity of the people the Center serves and how our efforts to learn from and meet the needs of our neighbors are ongoing. José interviews Martina Patterson, an educator in a partner organization called Nearby Nature. Together, they reflect on what it means to share their love of nature to inspire the passion of children for the environment through science and art. The partnership between the UEC and Nearby Nature has been in the works for several years, through the commitment of a local Sierra Club advocate, David Thomas, and this collaboration is set to grow as we move forward. This episode is hosted by Chris Young and José Basaldua with contributions from Ken Leinbach and features special guest Martina Patterson. Edited by Danny Pirtle. For more from the Urban Ecology Center, visit our website (www.urbanecologycenter.org) or follow us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram, @UrbanEcologyCenter.
The Rational View episode 46 is my first exploration of some of the Small Modular Reactor technologies being touted as the next big thing in green energy solutions. Terrestrial Energy is one of the companies racing to develop a small integral modular molten salt reactor to help in the fight against climate change. SMRs are ideal for powering remote and isolated communities, mines, and scientific bases that are currently powered by diesel generators. Operating at 47 percent thermal efficiency, an IMSR® power plant generates 195 megawatts of electricity with a thermal-spectrum, graphite-moderated, molten-fluoride-salt reactor system. It uses today's standard nuclear fuel – comprising standard-assay low-enriched uranium (less than 5 percent 235U) – critical for near-term commercial deployment. The IMSR® power plant design incorporates many aspects of molten salt reactor operation that were researched, demonstrated and proven by test reactors at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Canon Bryan is a financial professional with over 25 years of experience in various aspects of the finance industry. Mr. Bryan was a founding shareholder in Terrestrial Energy, where he serves as chief financial officer, developing advanced commercial power plants. He was also a founding shareholder in NioCorp Developments (NB: TSXV) and Uranium Energy Corp (UEC: NYSE). NioCorp, where he served as VP Corporate Development, is developing the largest niobium deposit in North America. UEC is a producer and developer of ISR uranium in the USA. Follow me at https://therationalview.podbean.com Join the discussion at https://www.facebook.com/groups/therationalview Twitter https://twitter.com/AlScottRational Inst https://instagram.com/the_rational_view #therationalview #podcast #evidencebased #netzeroneedsnuclear #atomicenergy #nuclearenergy #greenenergy #nuclearreactor #newnuclear
In this episode, we explore the culture of equity, dignity, and justice that we work to cultivate at the Urban Ecology Center. We begin by learning more about these three terms, and why we use them to describe this work. Then, in conversation with August Ball, we explore how to create this culture, specifically when considering the lens of race and racial identity. We finish by hearing the new anti-racism commitment statement from the staff at the UEC. This episode is hosted by Danny Pirtle and Glenna Holstein. Special thanks to our guests Carijean Buhk, August Ball, and the entire staff of the UEC. Check out the UEC's blog post about the new anti-racism commitment statement: https://urbanecologycenter.org/item/1430-equity-dignity-and-justice-at-uec.html For more from the Urban Ecology Center, visit our website (www.urbanecologycenter.org) or follow us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram, @UrbanEcologyCenter.
In this episode, we explore how the Urban Ecology Center has changed and adapted since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Connecting people in cities to nature and each other has remained our top priority at the UEC, but how do we do that work when we cannot gather together in person? To tell this story, we check in with three departments at the UEC to see how they've adapted their work: the land stewardship team who maintain our parks the marketing team who curate the UEC in My Backyard virtual lessons portal and the community programs team who continue to create meaningful programs for kids and families in our community This episode is hosted by Danny Pirtle with contributions from Gillian Spence and Ken Leinbach. Special thanks to our guests Caitlin Reinartz, Anna Aragon, Hayley Bartlein, Payton Biwer, and Kiara Atre. For more from the Urban Ecology Center, visit our website (www.urbanecologycenter.org) or follow us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram, @UrbanEcologyCenter.
This episode concludes our exploration of the three branches that comprise the Urban Ecology Center in Milwaukee. Menomonee Valley was the third branch of the UEC. This episode tells the history of the Menomonee Valley and explores the role of the Urban Ecology Center in this park that serves a diverse community of people, many of whom speak Spanish. This episode is hosted by Danny Pirtle with contributions from Elizabeth Gamillo, José Basaldua, and Ken Leinbach. Special thanks to our guests Corey Zetts, Miguel Santos, Alejandra Jimenez, Breanna Taylor, and Karina Soto. For more from the Urban Ecology Center, visit our website (www.urbanecologycenter.org) or follow us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram, @UrbanEcologyCenter.
This episode continues our exploration of the three branches that comprise the Urban Ecology Center in Milwaukee. Washington Park was the second branch of the UEC. This episode tells the storied history of Washington Park and explores the role of the UEC in this park that exists at a confluence point of many different Milwaukee communities. This episode is hosted by Danny Pirtle and Gillian Spence with contributions from Kelli Johnson and Ken Leinbach. Special thanks to our guests Judy and Mike Howden and Terry Evans. For more from the Urban Ecology Center, visit our website or follow us on Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter.
This episode begins our exploration of the three branches that comprise the Urban Ecology Center in Milwaukee. Riverside Park was the first branch of the UEC, located on Milwaukee's East Side. This episode tells the origin story of our Riverside Park branch and, by extension, the origin story of the UEC. We learn, from the folks that were there, what it was like to be a part of a community-led environmental organization, operating out of a double-wide trailer in the 1990's and reflect on how much has changed, and yet stayed the same, since then. This episode is hosted by Danny Pirtle and Chris Young. Special thanks to our guests Michael D'Amato, Anne Steinberg, Dennis Grzezinski, and Meghan Forseth. For more from the Urban Ecology Center, visit our website or follow us on Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter.
Welcome to the first episode of the Urban Ecology Podcast! In this episode, we introduce the Urban Ecology Center by speaking with four people whose lives have become interwoven with the UEC. Through these stories, we learn what the Urban Ecology Center does and why connecting people in cities to nature and each other is so important. This episode was hosted by Danny Pirtle, with contributions from Gillian Spence, Elizabeth Gamillo, Chris Young, and Ken Leinbach. Special thanks to our guests Pat Mueller, Analiese Rosales-Garcia, Carijean Buhk, and Van Johnson. For more from the Urban Ecology Center, visit our website or follow us on Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter.
Urban Ecology Center Executive Director, Ken Leinbach, discusses the journey of taking the UEC from a small trailer on Milwaukee's East Side to an internationally recognized organization with multiple centers.
Options Oddities 169: UEC, ALTR, BRKR Unusual Activity for April 24, 2015: Call buyer jump in to Uranium Energy Corp. (UEC) Calls trade in Altera Corp (ALTR) Call buyer jump in to Bruker Corp. (BRKR)