Additionally I believe the main use of palladium is in the manufacturing of 
catalytic converters which would become obsolete in a LENR powered world. Not 
sure if the person writing this article took that into account prior to 
recommending investing in palladium or not. 

Regards,
Joe

mix...@bigpond.com wrote:

>In reply to  Kevin O'Malley's message of Sun, 2 Mar 2014 22:18:56 -0800:
>Hi,
>[snip]
>>Nickel/Palladium Nickel and Palladium come to mind when thinking of long
>>term cold fusion investments. Unfortunately, nickel is the most abundant
>>material in the earths crust, a change in the demand of nickel would not
>>affect the price drastically.
>
>This is completely wrong. 
>
>Crustal elemental abundances are (according to the figures I have):
>
>Oxygen         466000 ppm
>Silicon                267700 ppm
>Aluminium       84100 ppm
>Iron            70700 ppm
>Calcium                 52900 ppm
>.
>.
>.
>Nickel            105 ppm
>
>I suspect that this article is confusing the planetary abundance with the
>crustal abundance. The former includes the Ni/Fe core of the planet, however
>this is not accessible.
>
>Regards,
>
>Robin van Spaandonk
>
>http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html
>

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