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Indian studies in Bahrain

Indian studies in Bahrain - We Provide 10th and 12th NIOS and National Institute of open schooling (NIOS) in Indira Gandhi National Open University in Bahrain. Have any question? 17822157<br>

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Indian studies in Bahrain

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  1. National Institute of open schooling (NIOS) in Bahrain Indian studies in Bahrain - We Provide 10th and 12th NIOS and National Institute of open schooling (NIOS) in Indira Gandhi National Open University in Bahrain. Have any question? 17822157 While a growing number of countries have announced their civilian nuclear energy ambitions over the past twelve months, no other country is likely to have more of a psychological impact on the nuclear energy picture than Saudi Arabia. We believe the Kingdom's natural gas and water problems will lead them to nuclear, sooner rather than later, probably as early as this year. Indian studies in Bahrain After our interview with Kevin Bambrough, which resulted in the widely read article, 'Explosion in Nuclear Energy Demand Coming," we began more deeply researching Bambrough's conclusion. He believes the overwhelming growth in nuclear energy will continue to drive the uranium bull market much higher than is suspected. He believes the uranium renaissance has gone beyond the envelope of just a mining inventory shortage. We researched this further during the course of our investigation into uranium and geopolitics. We were surprised by what we discovered, and continue to be stunned by how accurate Mr. Bambrough's forecast is likely to play out. We included the special sub-section, which follows, in our soon-to-be-published, A Practical Investor's Guide to Uranium Stocks. Below is a sneak preview. National Institute of open schooling (NIOS) in Bahrain & An April 2006 UPI news item confirmed what many have long believed. It won't be long before Saudi Arabia launches a nuclear project. Kuwaiti researcher Abdullah al-Nufaisi told seminar attendees in Qatar that Saudi Arabia is preparing a nuclear program. He said the government was being urged to launch a nuclear project by Saudi scientists, but had not yet received the blessing by the royal family. Social, not energy, issues could help the Saudi royals embark on a large-scale nuclear program. Of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia's 24 million subjects, more than 40 percent are under 18 years of age. While still manageable, the country's infrastructure is not prepared to deal with its explosive population growth. The two biggest problems facing Saudi Arabia are potential water and electricity shortages. True, its super oilfields may also have peaked in production and might move into tertiary recovery, but that is unknown. An Islamic revolution, similar to what Iran suffered in the 1970s is probably foremost in the King's mind. Civil unrest might come about should his subjects suffer from insufficient electricity and inadequate water supplies. One need only look at the widespread electricity shortages Syria experienced in the 1980s and early 1990s. As reported in the October 14, 2004 issue of Arab Oil and Gas, the Saudis lag well behind Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates in per capita energy consumption. The rate of natural gas consumption, which produces Saudi's electricity, increased less than Egypt and Syria. Total energy consumption dropped by 3.5 percent in 1999 and 2000.

  2. 10th and 12th NIOS in Bahrain the internationally heralded "Gas Initiative" of 1998 was the Kingdom's attempt to lure major western oil companies back into the country to help develop its natural gas reserves. After major oil companies spent $100 million in due diligence to evaluate the Saudi natural gas reserves, the initiative quietly dropped off the world's radar screen. A Shell Oil executive, whose company is exploring for gas in the country's Empty Quarter, told Bloomberg Daily Energy News that this was a high-risk venture with a low probability of finding sizeable reserves. In Matthew Simmons' Twilight of the Desert, he repeated what he was told by an anonymous senior oil executive, "The reservoirs are crummy." While lacking proven uranium deposits, the country's Tabuk region has low-grade amounts of uranium and thorium. However, Saudi Arabia has significant phosphate deposits, which some believe could be exploited. The country's two largest deposits reportedly measure about 750 million metric tons, averaging between 19 and 21 percent P2O5. Mined by the Saudi Arabian Mining Company and the Saudi Basic Industrial Corporation, fertilizer plants at the Al Jubail Industrial City produce about 4.5 metric tons of P2O5 annually. While extraction of uranium from phosphates can be an expensive proposition, the phosphates could provide a ready supply of uranium for the country's nuclear desalination plants. Then, it would be a matter of uranium enrichment, of which both the Russians and the French would be scrambling to provide the Kingdom. Please Visit for more information: http://kenshoglobal.com/annamalai-university.php

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