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The Largest Electricity Exporter
on Earth

By Tom Dyson

May 21, 2008

Yesterday I visited the world's largest hydroelectric power plant. The name of this plant is Itaipu. It sits on the border between Brazil and Paraguay, on one of the largest rivers in Latin America, the Rio Parana.

A few months ago, I visited the largest coal-fired power plant in America, Plant Scherer. When Scherer operates at full capacity, it produces 3.5 gigawatts of power. A nuclear reactor produces around one gigawatt of power

Itaipu produces 14 gigawatts of power. In other words, it's four times the size of America's largest coal power plant... and 14 times the size of most nukes. Itaipu provides 93% of Paraguay's power and 25% of Brazil's power.

I can't explain in words what a beast this dam is. It stretches four miles across and 65 stories high. The iron and steel used to build it would give you 380 Eiffel Towers. It's one of the seven modern wonders of the world, alongside the Panama Canal and the Golden Gate Bridge.

According to their joint agreement, Paraguay gets 50% of the electricity from the dam. Brazil gets 50%. But Paraguay is a small country. It has a population of 6 million people... versus 200 million in Brazil. So Paraguay only keeps 5% of Itaipu's power and sells the rest back to Brazil.

This makes Paraguay the largest exporter of hydroelectric power in the world.

Here's the thing: Paraguay sells its electricity to Brazil at $3 per megawatt-hour. Right now, Brazil can sell the same unit of electricity to its private utilities at $150 per megawatt-hour. There is an electricity crisis in Latin America right now, especially in Chile, and electricity prices are very high. It's immediately obvious Brazil is not paying Paraguay the right price for its power. And Paraguay is losing billions of dollars.

Corrupt politicians set this low price in 1973... under a 50-year contract. The Brazilians bribed the Paraguayan government to sell them power at a rate that's far too low. Now, there are calls to change this rate, but who knows if that'll happen...

The thing is, Paraguay doesn't have to sell its power to Brazil. It could consume the power itself. I think it would be a great business to set up an aluminum or zinc smelter here. These businesses are electricity-intensive. The problem is, Paraguay is a poor country and has absolutely no industry. It's all agriculture here.

According to the people at Itaipu, the energy the dam creates every day is the equivalent to 433,000 barrels of oil. That's about half of what Canada's Athabasca oil sands produce each day. Except it's renewable, it's clean, and it takes no energy to produce.

This cheap electricity is one of the reasons I like Paraguay as an investment. But it's hard to get your money into the country...

Paraguay has no stock market... only a small bond market. So to invest in Paraguay, you'll have to go there yourself and buy assets from the locals. That's a good thing. It means everything is cheap.

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In Paraguay, for example, you can buy companies for book value... that pay 45% dividends, according to one broker I met. You can buy real estate with 10% rental yields. And cattle farms with 18.5% cash yields.
 
More to come from Paraguay in my next column...
 
Good investing,

Tom

P.S. The Three Gorges Dam in China will be the largest hydroelectric dam in the world by volume. It will operate at full capacity by 2011. China hopes it'll produce 18 gigawatts. That's bigger than Itaipu.

Our tour guide wasn't convinced Three Gorges would be able to produce that much power. "The Yangtze isn't as powerful as the Parana," he said. "We'll see..."

P.P.S. There is talk of a hydro plant twice the size of Three Gorges in Africa, on the Congo River. But it'll never happen. For a start, only 10% of Africans have access to the grid... What will they do with all that power? And secondly, it will require cooperation from seven different central African countries... and hundreds of billions of dollars in loans.

Editor's note: Tom Dyson is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Tom Dyson.

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CLEAN ENERGY STOCKS ARE DUE FOR A BIG RALLY

The PowerShares Clean Energy ETF (PBW) debuted in April 2005.

With more than $1.5 billion in assets, PBW is one of most popular, diversified ways to invest in solar, biomass, wind, and geothermal energy. Common sense tells us when the holy trinity of fossil fuels – crude oil, coal, and natural gas – rise in price, companies that provide cleaner substitutes should also rise in price.

Today's chart tracks the ratio between the price of crude oil and the price of the Clean Energy ETF. When the ratio hits around 3 or below, clean energy stocks are popular and soaring. When the ratio moves past 5, clean energy shares are out of favor and lagging the gains made in crude oil.

PBW's only been around for three years, and this indicator is pretty rough... But with oil approaching $130 a barrel and clean energy stocks out of favor, expect a rally from the "treehugger-approved" companies of the world.

Oil (EOD)/PS Wilderhill

The macro environment for gold is still supportive based on negative real interest rates. The one-year Treasury bill is offering just 2 percent, while the official inflation rate is around 4 percent.

Negative interest rates make gold look more attractive compared with other safe investment alternatives, such as T-bills and certificates of deposit.

We believe the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates below the rate of nominal economic growth in order to support a fragile economy in an election year.

Negative real rates between mid-2001 and spring 2005 powered gold’s biggest bull run in decades, with prices rising from $255 to $455 per ounce.

– Frank Holmes, CEO
U.S. Global Investors

Crude oil rose above $129 a barrel in New York for the first time after billionaire hedge-fund manager Boone Pickens said that oil will reach $150 a barrel this year.

Supplies aren't keeping up with demand, Pickens said, echoing comments last week from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. A strengthening of the euro against the dollar added to the gains.

Crude oil for June delivery rose $1.77, or 1.4 percent, to $128.82 a barrel at 9:59 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Futures reached $129.46, the highest since trading began in 1983. Prices are 98 percent higher than a year ago.
– Bloomberg

Texas billionaire T. Boone Pickens's Mesa Power LLP placed the biggest-ever single-site order for wind turbines with General Electric Co., the latest sign of growing momentum behind clean-energy initiatives despite lingering uncertainty over government support.

Mesa will purchase 667 GE 1.5 megawatt wind turbines, as part of the $2 billion first phase of the biggest wind farm in the U.S.
– Wall Street Journal

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The Last Secret Left in the Mining Industry
May 15, 2008

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