WHY ARE THE BIGGEST OIL PRODUCERS INVESTING IN RENEWABLE ENERGY !!

STRAIGHT FROM THE SOURCE

As strange as it may sound... the Middle East's biggest oil powerhouses are right now pumping nearly all of their fat oil profits like mad in renewable energy.

That's right: The countries that control the world's largest oil reserves are investing billions of dollars in renewable energy.

* In July, a company owned by the government of Abu Dhabi bought an ownership stake in Tesla, a U.S.-based manufacturer of electric cars.

* This summer, Saudi Arabia's oil minister, Ali Ibrahim Al Naimi, announced that his country is planning to make solar energy an important pillar of the national energy mix... and in September, he introduced Saudi Arabia's new research hub designed to "leverage the diversified and rich natural resources of this country to find sustainable and innovative solutions."

* The United Arab Emirates — the world's third-largest oil exporter — lobbied hard to become home to the 150-nation International Renewable Energy Agency and won the bid this past June.

But here's the blockbuster...

It's no secret — the United States is hopelessly addicted to oil...just like a junkie in constant need of a heroin fix.

And while our leaders have talked about ending our addiction once and for all, the truth is there is no rehab facility on the planet that can cure us of our need for foreign sources of energy.

Take a look at just how bad this addiction has grown over the years:

 

Americans consume 400 million gallons of gasoline each day...

I don't have to tell you just how dangerous this addiction has grown.

It has not only cost us over one trillion dollars... it's also cost us our national security.

Like it or not, we're completely powerless. And I'm not the only one who feels this way...

"We are at the mercy of the suppliers of oil. We are spending hundreds of billions of dollars a year importing oil and, so, we are heading toward a train wreck." — U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu

In addition to the investment in Tesla, Abu Dhabi has also invested $22 billion to build the world's first entirely renewably powered city: Masdar.

Masdar City will host 50,000 people by 2016 who will live and work without cars or fossil fuels.

And Abu Dhabi's leaders aren't kidding around — not only have they set forth on an aggressive timeline and earmarked $22 billion for investment... they've even enlisted the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a partner in this project.

The goal for the project is clear: they're building a city that uses water and fuel with the smallest footprint possible.

There will be NO automobile traffic in Masdar; only public transportation will be permitted... and the city's perimeter wall will help keep out extreme desert winds and high temperatures, allowing for cool temperatures to prevail throughout the city.

Seriously...

The world's first carbon-neutral city is going to sprout up in the middle of the desert? Literally right on top of billions of dollars worth of oil?

You have to ask yourself : Why would a major oil producer — one that controls 8% of the world's oil reserves — spend billions of dollars to launch such an aggressive renewable energy initiative?

The answer is simple...

The very people who, because of their outstanding luck with geography, are literally sitting on billions of dollars worth of oil are now racing to invest in clean technologies with very good reason...

They can clearly see that the supply of the precious "drug" they control is running dangerously low. So by getting a jump on renewables, they'll be sure to sell every last drop — at exorbitant prices — to addicts like the United States.

Make no mistake: The people who have controlled the oil in the Middle East for the past four decades have made an obscene amount of money.

They've had a direct pipeline into the U.S. Government's bank account — and they'd like to keep it that way.

These people are far from stupid.

They see the end of the line for the "drug deal" they've been running — and they want to be in position so that when it ends...

The United States will still be dependent on them for the majority of its energy needs.

It's like a drug dealer whose supply line for one drug has been cut. If he can't supply his junkies with heroin... the dealer will find another way for the junkie to get high.

After all, you wouldn't want to lose a customer. Especially when that customer has been worth over $1.3 trillion.

The Global Energy Landscape is
on the Verge of a Historic Change

Many — including some of the world's wealthiest individuals and nations — could get wiped out as events unfold in the months ahead.

Still others will make unfathomable fortunes.

Let me tell you what it's all about... and show you how to cash in with one blockbuster investment that could change your life.

M. King Hubbert was dead-on in his prediction (all the way back in 1956), that U.S. oil production would peak between 1965 and 1971.

And he is also being proven correct in his forecast for a sharp decline in global oil production:

It was only last November when the International Agency (IEA) released a report that including staggering depletion figures for the world's top 800 oil fields.

"The world's energy system is at a crossroads. Current global trends in energy supply and consumption are patently unsustainable… What is needed is nothing short of an energy revolution."
— International Energy Association World Energy Outlook, November 2008

The IEA concluded that in order to make up for this depletion — and keep up with increasing demand forecasts — the world will need to add a whopping 64 million barrels per day (mbpd) of new capacity between 2007 and 2030.

That's the equivalent of adding six new Saudi Arabias or adding a new Kuwait — every single year.

It's just not going to happen.

The world's longest-running "drug deal" is coming to an end — and it's all because the suppliers are running out of the drug.

Sure... they might try and argue with the figures publicly. And the OPEC nations have waged a fierce public relations battle to try and convince the world that there's nothing to the idea of Peak Oil.

"IEA report on oil gets angry Opec reaction" — The Times (UK), Nov. 13, 2008

But you and I both know that actions speak louder than words.

So no matter what the boys at OPEC might be saying... it's what they're doing that's important.

And what they're doing at this very minute is racing to build Masdar City on time — and take the lead in the renewable energy market — all the while squeezing every last dime of profits out of the oil they're still sitting on.

The world's largest oil producers have never before invested billions of dollars in new renewable energy projects.

The amount of green building that's taking place as part of the Masdar project alone is off the charts.