Power Grid Innovations, Risks, and Opportunities – Mike Mauceli, Neil Chatterjee

When it comes to grid innovations, what technologies and exciting opportunities are out there? What will it take to balance environmental political goals with engineering and reliability goals? In this episode, Neil Chatterjee joins Mike in discovering how misguided public policy oftentimes puts the electric grid at risk, how innovative technology may strengthen the grid, and what is necessary from policy makers and engineering experts to achieve these goals.

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Please read carefully.

This is not financial advice. You may be asking, “What does that mean?”

Let me explain…

Do not just do what I, my team, or my guest say. That would be stupid and irresponsible. Take the education, then use your own brain and make your own decisions.

YOU must take responsibility for your future and your success. That is why you are here. Neither I, nor my team, nor my guests, know your risk levels, prior education, emotional maturity, or how much money you can afford to lose.

We are only telling you what we believe to be smart moves. But you must decide for yourself. There are NEVER guarantees.

Also, understand that we are REAL teachers. We practice what we preach. With that in mind, we often invest in the very projects that may be mentioned on this show. While it is never our intent, we could possibly profit from others investing in our recommendations.

Take the education we provide but then determine your own actions. If it does not make sense to you, get more education before you invest. We will continue to provide education and there will always be more opportunities.

Cameron Long

Cameron Long

Cameron is a seasoned CFO and CPA with 31 years in finance. He created the AI Trader's Playbook to help everyday investors use AI to find high-confidence trades — in minutes, not hours.

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6 Comments

  1. Bailing before the ten minute mark. This guy sounded like a typical politician… lots of talk w/out saying much. Hope for those who stayed till the end that it got better

    1. It’s easy. He’s saying that people expect to have electricity but socialism is bad and people don’t want to spend the time to make sure their elected officials work for them instead of the corporations who give them huge campaign contributions, so private electric companies whose sole aim is to enrich their shareholders instead of providing the consumers with a reliable service is the reason why you are getting screwed.

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