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The need to improve energy efficiencies and reduce the emission of greenhouse gases is eminent, as the demand for energy increases. Over the past decade, various new energy solutions have emerged, based on smaller, decentralized technology, and have become a supplement to traditional forms of energy supply.
The “green energy” era we have entered can be compared in scale to the rise of the telecommunications industry in the early 1980s and has been referred to as the "mother of all markets." Energy is probably the most tactical and political product in the world.
Tax incentives are continually designed to make society more energy self-sufficient. This is enhanced by high returns and long-term residual income associated with energy ventures.
Crude oil has reached new, all-time highs, which shows the potential for the energy market. Energy drives the world economy and by its very nature, it is volatile. Although price swings are always present, liquidity is high and positions can be opened and closed quickly to limit losses.
The most important issue facing the oil and natural gas industry is the issue of depletion, and in fact, this is giving way to an increase in technology and new energies in which to invest. |