Ist ja alles so relaxt hier.
Warten auf die news.
Hi Erbse,
es geht ja wohl erstmal noch um den Beweis ob Green Fuel im Großen Stil
funktioniert.
Wenn dem so ist und niemand etwas besseres zur "sauberen" Kohleverflüssigung
entwickelt, kann Silverado aleine die Nachfrage nicht stillen.
Es wird Kooperationen geben müssen und wie diese im Einzelnen aussehen darf
sich jeder selber ausmalen.
Hier gibt es Phantasie bis der Arzt kommt.
Selbst wenn Green Fuel nicht funktioniert. Spekulationen darüber könnten genügen
um den heutigen Kurs zu vervielfachen. Bis es das endgültige Ergebnis darüber gibt vergehen noch viele Monde. Wer weiß was
bis dahin auf und mit unserer guten alten Mutter Erde geschieht.
Silverado ist seit dem Mississipi Deal eine unwiderstehliche Braut.
Das einzige Manko sehe ich durch eventuelle Manipulationen des Kurses und
bleibe deswegen auch ständig auf der Hut.
Obwohl ich durch diese Shorties letzte Woche noch mal gut nachkaufen konnte.
Wenn es diese Befürchtung nicht gäbe, wäre ich nicht jeden Tag hier.
Möge TornadoToni mit 0,16 recht behalten,
auf weiter grüne Zeiten
Gruß Gruenhorn
hier nochmal zur Erinnerung:
Silverado Breaks Ground For Green Fuel Project Posted on Tuesday, April 10 @ 15:00:00 CDT
MN1 Staff Writer
ACKERMAN, Miss. (April 10, 2007) – Silverado Green Fuel Inc. (OTCBB: SLGLF) officially broke ground on its Green Fuel Demonstration Project in the Red Hills Ecoplex yesterday, taking the first steps towards delivering safe energy alternatives to America.
According to Silverado press releases, the facility is designed to take advantage of the state’s enormous supply of low-rank coal reserves by converting them into green fuel – a new form of coal-based, environmentally friendly, low-cost alternative fuel. The facility, when finished, will create local jobs, place a large capital investment in the local economy, and showcase Mississippi as a leader in energy alternatives and clean coal technologies.
Although the project is still in the testing phase, Paul Kainth in Silverado’s Investor Relations department expected nothing but the best from the facility.
“Before we can spend 100, 120 million dollars on a commercial plant, we have to make sure it can be done –that’s what the demonstration was,” Kainth said. “This is basically a stepping stone to our commercial project.”
Kainth said that a number of entities are interested in the project – particularly the Depart of Defense, who has already signed on with Silverado to take all the output from the Mississippi plant for their own use. In addition, other states have shown some interest in the project.
“We’ve got three other states that also want to proceed with the commercial plant – they all want to jump on and be the second state,” Kainth said.
When it is finished, the $26 million project will be located 14 acres outside of Ackerman, Miss., in the Red Hills Ecoplex, a multi-tenant, ecological industrial park designed to minimize waste and pollution.
“This is a great company that we are partners with now,” Mississippi Congressman Roger Wicker said at the ceremony. “Silverado knows what they are doing when it comes to mines. They’ve been in business for the better part of four decades. We have a top-flight corporation signing on with the state of Mississippi today, and with cutting-edge technology. We’re going to be state-of-the-art here when it comes to developing the next phase of energy right here in our backyard.”
Congressman Wicker wasn’t the only one with praise for the ambitious project. Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour also saw the project as an important step forward in introducing America foreign oil alternatives.
“What we need in America to have energy security is more energy,” Governor Barbour said. “What Garry [Anselmo] and his company are going to do is take some of our coal reserves – which are the biggest in the world – and through a hydrothermal process convert it to synthetic gas, which is absolutely clean-burning. It is a phenomenon of technology that this company, Silverado, has pursued aggressively, and it is a great part of trying to show America how to become energy independent.”
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