Difference between revisions of "Green Chip Stocks"

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==Introduction==
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The renewable energy investment website [[Green Chip Stocks]] is blunt with regard to the financial rewards available in the water sector and the reasons why these rewards are available.
  
Green Chip Stocks is blunt regards the financial rewards availiable in the water sector, and indeed the reasons why these rewards are available.
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Editor of the Green Chip Review, Nick Hodge, writes:
 
 
Editor of the review, Nick Hodge writes,
 
 
 
"I've been telling you for some time that serious water problems were looming, so evidence of major shortages now should be no surprise — where they happen and how to profit might be".
 
  
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:I've been telling you for some time that serious water problems were looming, so evidence of major shortages now should be no surprise — where they happen and how to profit might be [sic.].
  
 
He continues...
 
He continues...
  
"Consider my words back in August 2007: We are at the crux of disaster — a crisis so big that it already affects well over one billion people and will soon affect everyone on earth. The calamity we face is a serious lack of fresh water. In that article, subtitled "A Steady Stream of Water Profits," I used then-recent water headlines to illustrate my point:  
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:Consider my words back in August 2007: We are at the crux of disaster — a crisis so big that it already affects well over one billion people and will soon affect everyone on earth. The calamity we face is a serious lack of fresh water. In that article, subtitled "A Steady Stream of Water Profits," I used then-recent water headlines to illustrate my point:  
 
 
Las Vegas Growth Depends on Dwindling Water Supply. Seawater Could Help Solve Florida Water Woes Iraq Calls for Water Treaty to Avert Crisis El Paso's 15-year Wait for Desalination Plant Is Over
 
 
 
  
It's been a full 18 months since then. . .
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:*Las Vegas Growth Depends on Dwindling Water Supply
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:*Seawater Could Help Solve Florida Water Woes
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:*Iraq Calls for Water Treaty to Avert Crisis
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:*El Paso's 15-year Wait for Desalination Plant Is Over
  
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:It's been a full 18 months since then ...
  
As Vegas is still dependent on water for growth. Florida (and a large part of the Southeast) is still facing drought conditions. There are abundant water problems in the Middle East. And desalination is increasingly being looked to as a major solution. Now, take a look at water headlines from the past few weeks:
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:Las Vegas is still dependent on water for growth. Florida (and a large part of the Southeast) is still facing drought conditions. There are abundant water problems in the Middle East. And desalination is increasingly being looked to as a major solution. Now, take a look at water headlines from the past few weeks: California's drought raises rural-urban tensions over water. Florida Drought Watch: Water levels dropping. Palestinians face dire water shortage: World Bank. A Rising Tide for New Desalinated Water Technologies. You should see a striking resemblance in the contents of the news, even though much time has passed. And that's my point: coverage of the water issue is cyclical, but the problem is constant ...
  
California's drought raises rural-urban tensions over water. Florida Drought Watch: Water levels dropping. Palestinians face dire water shortage: World Bank. A Rising Tide for New Desalinated Water Technologies. You should see a striking resemblance in the contents of the news, even though much time has passed. And that's my point: coverage of the water issue is cyclical, but the problem is constant. . .
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:So are the profits you can make.<ref>Nick Hodge, "[http://www.greenchipstocks.com/articles/water-investments-stocks/387 The Holy Grail of Water Investments]", Green Chip Review, 21 April 2009, accessed 18 June 2009</ref>
  
'''So are the profits you can make"'''. </ref> [[Nick Hodge]] Green Chip Review 'The Holy Grail of Water Investments' 21 April 2009, </ref>
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==External sources==
 
 
==External Sources==
 
  
 
[http://www.greenchipstocks.com/archives/water Green Chip Stocks Water articles Archive]  
 
[http://www.greenchipstocks.com/archives/water Green Chip Stocks Water articles Archive]  
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 10:15, 20 June 2009

The renewable energy investment website Green Chip Stocks is blunt with regard to the financial rewards available in the water sector and the reasons why these rewards are available.

Editor of the Green Chip Review, Nick Hodge, writes:

I've been telling you for some time that serious water problems were looming, so evidence of major shortages now should be no surprise — where they happen and how to profit might be [sic.].

He continues...

Consider my words back in August 2007: We are at the crux of disaster — a crisis so big that it already affects well over one billion people and will soon affect everyone on earth. The calamity we face is a serious lack of fresh water. In that article, subtitled "A Steady Stream of Water Profits," I used then-recent water headlines to illustrate my point:
  • Las Vegas Growth Depends on Dwindling Water Supply
  • Seawater Could Help Solve Florida Water Woes
  • Iraq Calls for Water Treaty to Avert Crisis
  • El Paso's 15-year Wait for Desalination Plant Is Over
It's been a full 18 months since then ...
Las Vegas is still dependent on water for growth. Florida (and a large part of the Southeast) is still facing drought conditions. There are abundant water problems in the Middle East. And desalination is increasingly being looked to as a major solution. Now, take a look at water headlines from the past few weeks: California's drought raises rural-urban tensions over water. Florida Drought Watch: Water levels dropping. Palestinians face dire water shortage: World Bank. A Rising Tide for New Desalinated Water Technologies. You should see a striking resemblance in the contents of the news, even though much time has passed. And that's my point: coverage of the water issue is cyclical, but the problem is constant ...
So are the profits you can make.[1]

External sources

Green Chip Stocks Water articles Archive

References

  1. Nick Hodge, "The Holy Grail of Water Investments", Green Chip Review, 21 April 2009, accessed 18 June 2009