Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Goldman is still positive on the solar industry amid the sell-off — Here are the firm’s top picks
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/23/solar-stocks-goldman-gives-names-to-buy-within-clean-energy.html
Oil and Renewable Upside? This Energy Stock Has It All
After 50 years of drilling the North Sea, Equinor is shifting its focus toward renewable energy. https://www.fool.com/investing/2021/03/27/oil-and-renewable-upside-this-energy-stock-has-it/
Dallas-based Wind Tex Energy, a privately held independent wind power development company founded in 2002 by Steven K. DeWolf, specializes in U.S. domestic wind powered generating projects. It has developed four Texas Projects currently in operation, together comprising more than 6 percent of the total current Texas wind energy output.
$GESI HUGE NEWS!!!!!!! 60/40 REVENUE SPLIT IN FAVOR OF GESI IN THIS EQUITY DEAL!!!!!!!!!!! ONLY $3M MARKET CAP NOW A $50M MARKET CAP!!!!!!! http://m.yahoo.com/w/legobpengine/finance/news/green-energy-solution-industries-announces-154500595.html?.intl=us&.lang=en-us
$GESI/IFTF
Why isn't Gordon telling us about the GESI build out? IMO...Any smart businessman isn't going to release too many details about plans too far ahead. Being in business over 22 years I know that plans are always being modified. It's better to keep them to yourself and release the details when they are in concrete than keep modifying them to the public. He has the plan and we'll hear it when he is ready.
BLDW... United States Patent and Trademark Office Issues Building Turbines, Inc. an Additional New Patent on Its Rooftop Wind Turbine.
In a follow-up to their 01/03/2012 press release, Building Turbines, Inc. (PINKSHEETS: BLDW), a designer and manufacturer of patented commercial rooftop wind turbine systems, issued a statement today that The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) issued a New Patent -- #8,257,020 -- in response to their United States Patent Application #20090167025.
On September 4, 2012, the USPTO issued a New Patent -- #8,257,020 -- to Building Turbines, Inc. for ALL claims within Building Turbines second patent application; #20090167025. The New Patent expands on several important elements from the company's first patent, and will the enhance efficiency, safety, life span, and cost reductions in manufacturing, which are all key considerations for the planned broad scale deployment of wind turbine systems on commercial rooftops; such as office and retail buildings and condominiums.
Building Turbines continues working closely with the Austin Green Energy Group (AGEG), The University of Texas (UT) Engineering Schools, along with other Texas Universities in Research and Development studies to optimize the efficiency of the mechanical and aerodynamic features of their turbine design, while focusing on reducing production and installation costs. In the last joint R&D study with UT four scale models were wind tested. The results proved that power output could be greatly enhanced with slight design modifications to the original turbine design, in accordance to the latest patent.
"The goal of the Austin Green Energy Group was to increase power output by at least 30%; the goal of reducing costs by 40% as well may be accomplished in the current AGEG and University collaborative R&D studies," said Bernie Johnson, AGEG President & CEO. "Those results will be released in the near future."
"This is great news for Building Turbines, our investors, and our shareholders," said John F. Graham Sr., CEO, Building Turbines, Inc. "We couldn't be more pleased that the Patent Office has allowed all 17 claims from the patent application, and we are especially pleased with the work from our research teams and legal counsel."
Mark L. Berrier, Patent Attorney and Intellectual Property Counsel for Building Turbines added, "There is a great deal of prior art in the renewable energy field, particularly relating to wind energy. I am gratified that we were able to work with Building Turbines to obtain a patent on their technology in this highly competitive field."
The company has additional patents pending, and expects positive results for those as well.
About Building Turbines, Inc.
Based in Austin, Texas, Building Turbines, Inc. is a renewable energy company focused primarily on designing, manufacturing and deploying revolutionary rooftop mounted horizontal-axis wind turbines.
The foregoing press announcement contains forward-looking statements that can be identified by such terminology such as "believes," "expects," "potential," "plans," "suggests," "may," "should," "could," "intends," or similar expressions. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such statements. In particular, management's expectations could be affected by, among other things, uncertainties relating to our success in completing acquisitions, financing our operations, entering into strategic partnerships, engaging management and other matters disclosed by us in our public filings from time to time. Forward-looking statements speak only as to the date they are made. The Company does not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect circumstances or events that occur after the date the forward-looking statements are made.
For more information:
Website: www.buildingturbines.com
E-mail: Email Contact
Investor Relations:
Dave Zembek
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=54375601&symbol=BLDW
Next milestone...first draw for GESI
-Secured $45 million investment.
-Money to build a plant secured.
-Free railroad ties to produce electricity.
-Contractors lined up and ready to start building.
-Customers that need electricity lined up.
Can anyone tell me why you would NOT want to get into this stock?
Read all the news for yourself:
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=squote&symbol=GESI
This looks to be a long term investment with GREAT potential!!
Buy Linn Energy: 7% Dividend Yield, Hedged Production Of Oil And Natural Gas.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/812161-buy-linn-energy-7-dividend-yield-hedged-production-of-oil-and-natural-gas
GESI- 5 years in the making and news keeps getting better
Free railroad ties to produce electricity.
$45 Million funding secured
Contractors ready to build.
Customers ready to buy.
I can NOT think of ANY reason this is not a winner!!
Latest News:
Green Energy Solution Industries, Inc. announced today the Company has received the formal irrevocable funding commitment from the lender of the financing for its renewable energy plant in Alberta, Canada.
All the news:
http://www.gesienergy.com/trading_info.html
An exciting alternative energy company with great potential, I believe you should take a look at GESI - Green Energy Solution Industries.
The company has a plan to build a plant to convert 200" tons of rail ties (feedstock) per day using gasification. GESI has formed an agreement with Canadian Pacific (CP) to obtain this feedstock at no cost. Also, the company just finalized an equity funding agreement for $45 million:
GESI Completes Escrow Milestone for Plant Funding by Private Escrow Capital Raise
"Green Energy Solution Industries, Inc. (PINKSHEETS: GESI) announced today the Company has received the formal irrevocable funding commitment from the lender of the financing for its renewable energy plant in Alberta, Canada."
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=53848124
I feel that this equity funding deal is an attractive detail for investors because it means that funding will not depend on dilution.
"Through the partnership with InREFCo, GESI announced that they have entered into an agreement for the source and source of funding of the plant which will be an equity percentage funding of the project. The funding will not in any way depend upon shares of the public company. MacKay stated that the terms of ownership would be heavily in favor of a majority ownership by GESI for the project."
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=53457782
Soon we will learn the amount of the first draw and timeline for the plant buildout. A conservative estimate for the amount of the first draw will be approx $10-$15 million. This could easily put a valuation for GESI in the $0.05-$0.10 range, based on the updated share structure.
Share Structure
Market Value1 $2,887,595 a/o Aug 17, 2012
Shares Outstanding 192,506,353 a/o Jun 30, 2012
Float 96,652,498 a/o Jun 30, 2012
Authorized Shares 490,000,000 a/o Mar 31, 2012
http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/GESI/company-info
I'd imagine that there will be 3 to 4 draws in the $10-$15 million range to complete the plant construction. Once the plant is complete, the company will be fully operational and will begin earning revenue. With the completeion of the plant ($45 million) coupled with revenue, it's exciting to see the potential valuation of GESI.
Complete names of the funding source, exact percentages and final details of the first draws...stay tuned ... $45M Funding
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=53457782
A picture is worth a thousand words.
http://www.gesienergy.com
GESI board ~ http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=4361
Latest GESI interview ~
$GESI To release the next PR: CEO Gordon Mckay says the next PR pertaining to the $45 Million dollar funding is expected any day now.
http://www.stocktraderstalk.com/stt-radio-ceo-interview-gordon-mackay-gesi-7122012-0
He also states that:
The equity partner gets paid back through profits.
Percentages will be in the favor of the investor.
This means to me that GESI will be in the black from day 1.
CSAT -Satcon® 0.3521 + 0.052 (+17.33%)
Satcon® is a leading provider of utility scale power solutions for the renewable energy market. Building on its history as a developer of sophisticated and precise power management and control equipment, Satcon develops innovative products that address the enormous demand for reliable, affordable and clean solutions for large commercial and utility scale applications. Satcon's inverters are grid-tied and line interactive, enabling them to convert direct current (DC) power from solar arrays to alternating current (AC) power that is compatible with the utility voltage for export to the grid.
Satcon manufactures utility-grade solar PV inverters ranging from 30kW to 1MW. The company also sells a line of fuel cell inverters for systems ranging from 25kW to 2.4MW.
52-Week High - (31 - Mar -11) 5.51
52-Week Low - ( 02 - Apr -12) .31
Mesa Power Group to Partner With Wind Tex Energy on Stephens Bor-Lynn Wind Project South of Lubbock
DALLAS, April 4, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Mesa Power Group LLC, a Texas-based renewable energy development company, is partnering with Wind Tex Energy, LP, on the Stephens Bor-Lynn Wind Project (SBL), about 50 miles south of Lubbock.
The SBL project, located in Borden and Lynn counties, is planned to begin commercial operations in 2013. It will produce 377 megawatts of electricity when operating at full capacity. Mesa Power will be deploying 233 GE 1.6-megawatt wind turbines.
"Mesa Power is excited about this wind project opportunity in Texas, and about partnering with Wind Tex Energy," says Mesa Power executive Mark Ward. "We believe it is an excellent addition to the wind projects we've been developing since 2007."
In 2007, T. Boone Pickens created the privately held Mesa Power Group to develop and finance renewable energy power projects. Dallas-based Mesa Power is involved with wind, waste-to-energy, and natural gas projects. It is currently developing wind projects in Minnesota, Canada and Texas that total more than 1,000 megawatts of power.
Dallas-based Wind Tex Energy, a privately held independent wind power development company founded in 2002 by Steven K. DeWolf, specializes in U.S. domestic wind powered generating projects. It has developed four Texas Projects currently in operation, together comprising more than 6 percent of the total current Texas wind energy output.
"We are honored to be partners with Mr. Pickens and his team at Mesa," DeWolf says. "We look forward to soon making the project a reality, which will benefit the folks in Lynn and Borden counties."
Plans are to complete development and obtain financing for the project in the second half of 2012, company officials say.
SBL has executed an interconnection agreement with Wind Energy Transmission Texas, a joint venture between two worldwide leaders in electric transmission development, and will interconnect to a Competitive Renewable Energy Zone line that will be completed in early 2013. This interconnection agreement is the first interconnection agreement executed that has a wind resource connecting to an Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) CREZ line. WETT is building and operating high-voltage transmission lines in West Texas as part of a statewide program to deliver clean, renewable energy throughout the state.
Contact:Jay Rosser214-265-4165jay@bpcap.net
SOURCE Mesa Power Group LLC
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/mesa-power-group-to-partner-with-wind-tex-energy-on-stephens-bor-lynn-wind-project-south-of-lubbock-2012-04-04
Copyright (C) 2012 PR Newswire. All rights reserved
SolarReserve’s Most Ambitious Solar Power Plant With Storage Approved by County
CEO Kevin Smith says his solar power tower and molten salt storage system is “less expensive, more efficient, and technically superior.”
Herman K. Trabish: April 2, 2012
With approval of the Environmental Impact Review on its 200-megawatt, two-tower Saguache Solar Energy Project, SolarReserve hopes to soon get started on a new pair of solar power tower/molten salt storage facilities.
“This is the major environmental permit,” SolarReserve CEO Kevin Smith said. “The bigger issue, in order to start construction, is we need to secure an offtaker.”
SolarReserve’s flagship 110-megawatt Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Plant in Nevada has a power purchase agreement (PPA) with Nevada Power and is under construction and scheduled to come on-line at the end of 2013.
In the wake of 2011’s dramatic drop in photovoltaic (PV) prices, institutional interest in solar thermal utility-scale solar power plant projects has declined. “We used to say that PV is intermittent, solar thermal without storage is intermittent, but solar thermal is cheaper,” Smith recalled, but “PV prices have come down dramatically, so unless you have storage with solar thermal, they might as well buy PV.”
Smith, however, is confident of a PPA for Saguache, named for the Colorado county where it will be built.
“My development philosophy has been to find good projects and permit them out front and then market them,” he said. “We did the same thing in Nevada and we were almost fully permitted in California when we signed our power contract,” he said of the PPA with PG&E for SolarReserve’s 150-megawatt Rice project.
SolarReserve’s PPA with Nevada Power pays 13.5 cents per kilowatt-hour and escalates one percent per year. That nearly matches, Smith said, Nevada’s thirteen-cent average retail electricity price.
“Keep in mind that this is project one and handcrafted,” Smith said. “Our goal is to bring the price down and we’re making headway.”
The varying nameplate capacities of these projects demonstrate how storage technology makes capacity more flexible and more valuable.
“On an annual basis,” Smith said, both the Nevada and California projects will “generate 500,000 megawatt-hours.” But, he explained, “the question is, how does the utility want us to deliver it? Do they want us to deliver 150 megawatts for ten or twelve hours a day? Or do they want us to send them 100 megawatts for fourteen or sixteen hours a day?”
The storage tank and steam turbine sizes, he said, dictate “whether we squeeze 150 megawatts out onto the transmission system for a shorter amount of time or stretch it out a bit. We could do a 75-megawatt project that runs twenty-four hours a day. Same 500,000 megawatt-hours.”
Crescent Dunes, Smith noted, “because of [the nature of] Las Vegas, is expected to run to eleven or twelve o’clock at night. But there’s not a lot of load in Las Vegas in the morning. They don’t want us to start generating electricity until twelve or one in the afternoon.”
In SolarReserve’s system, heliostats surrounding the tower direct the sun to a heat exchanger at the tower’s top. That 1,000-degree-Fahrenheit heat is transferred to a molten salt fluid flowing. After flowing through the fluid, the heat can then either flow to a water boiler to create steam to drive a turbine that generates electricity or to a storage tank, where it can be stored until there is a need for electricity.
“We’re collecting the energy directly into the storage fluid,” Smith said. Competitors have more limited storage capabilities because they “utilize water to run up the tower.”
According to Smith, BrightSource Energy, SolarReserve’s prominent U.S. solar power tower competitor, “is looking to extend the day a little bit by adding a couple of hours of storage.”
BrightSource Energy spokesperson Keely Wachs agreed there is a difference in the two companies’ storage technologies but said the BrightSource method, which uses water heated in the tower to heat molten salts for storage, also has substantial storage capabilities. Noting that BrightSource is presently in an SEC-mandated quiet period in anticipation of its upcoming initial public offering, Wachs said the company would be able to detail its technology at length afterwards.
SolarReserve’s Smith insisted his company’s storage method is “less expensive, more efficient, more technically challenging, and technically superior.” It is, he said, “the world’s leading solution for solar energy storage.”
Concerns about chemicals in the molten salts, which are part of what goes into common fertilizer, are misplaced, Smith said. “Permitting in California is about as difficult as you will see anywhere,” he explained, adding that the process “made it clear there were no dangers associated with using molten salts.”
Each of Saguache’s two 100-megawatt tower facilities is expected to create more than 450 direct jobs at the peak of the 30-month construction and 45 to 50 permanent jobs. The project’s annual budget will be an estimated $10 million and is expected to generate more than $30 million in local revenues.
Like its competitors, SolarReserve has incorporated the newest dry cooling methods into its facilities to reduce water consumption. The Saguache project will be built on private agricultural land, which, according to SolarReserve, currently draws 8,800 acre-feet (2.9 billion gallons) of water from the aquifer. Each of the two power tower facilities, according to the company, will use only 150 acre-feet of water per year.
The disadvantage to dry cooling, studies have shown, is that it is more costly than traditional wet cooling methods. But since most solar thermal companies are being forced by water conservation concerns to turn to it, only builders of PV projects, which can offer no significant storage, gain a competitive advantage.
Source: http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/SolarReserves-Most-Ambitious-Solar-Power-Plant-with-Storage-Approved-by-Co/
Los Angeles Set To Launch a Feed-in Tariff Program
By Ucilia Wang
4 de abril de 2012
A feed-in tariff may never become a federal mandate, but it's enjoying a wider support among some local — particularly municipal — utilities these days. To wit: Los Angeles City Council on Tuesday approved a feed-in tariff program that will enable the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power to buy renewable electricity from projects up to 3 MW.
The vote makes it possible for a utility to execute standard contracts with renewable energy generation owners without first seeking the city council’s approval. The mayor will need to sign off on the ordinance by April 13 before it takes effect.
The program will start with a 10-MW pilot phase and reach 75 MW by 2016, and it could expand to 150 MW depending on how much interest the program draws and the city’s budget. The utility will spend the next several months working on rate setting, which will be based on bids submitted by applicants. The power it gets through the program will count toward its goal of getting 33 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2020.
The FIT isn’t the first renewable energy incentive program in Los Angeles, which offers rebates for solar electric system installations at homes and businesses. The rebate program, re-launched last September, has been so popular that the city has given out all of the budgeted allocation for non-residential systems for the current fiscal year, which ends on June 30.
Feed-in tariffs are responsible for igniting a solar energy boom in European countries such as Germany and Italy, as well as Canada’s Ontario province. China started its own last year and Japan, scarred by the nuclear disaster from last year, is set to start a feed-in tariff program this July.
The Japanese government is still working on setting the rates with which to pay renewable energy project owners, and under the current proposal solar projects could get equity returns as high as 44 percent, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Wind projects could earn 51 percent. As a result, Japan then could add 20 GW of wind and solar power production capacities by 2014.
Palo Alto, a city in Silicon Valley, adopted a feed-in tariff program for solar earlier this year. That program is smaller — there is an installation cap of 4 MW for its first year.
The Los Angeles utility still have to figure out the rates, but those rates can’t be more than $300 per megawatt-hour, or $0.30 per kilowatt-hour, the city said. The utility has done its own analysis and found that the average price should hit $0.18 per kilowatt-hour, according to a report by the city administrator.
The utility estimates that the first 10MW, which it considers a demonstration program, will cost an esimated $58 million through the middle of 2033. The demonstration program will only include solar electric systems between 30 KW and 999 KW. The current program guidelines call for bids to be submitted by applicants, and applications with the lowest prices will be ranked higher.
Price-setting is a tricky part of crafting a feed-in tariff program. Setting rates too high could result in unexpected high demand that exceeds the budget. An installation cap helps, though some renewable energy proponents believe it could restrict growth unnecessarily. Competitive bidding helps to keep the contract prices low, but it also could lead to bids that are simply too low to be profitable.
In some countries with feed-in tariffs, such as Germany and Italy, the rates could fall significantly because of budget shortfalls or politicking, and that sometimes creates a boom-bust cycle that many manufacturers and project developers would rather avoid.
Source: http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/04/los-angeles-set-to-launch-a-feed-in-tariff-program
Top biofuel & ethanol companies:
| Top fuel cell and hydrogen fuel companies:
| Top Major Solar Inverter Manufacturers: 1) SMA Solar 2) Power-One 3) Kaco New Energy 4) Fronius International 5) Satcon 6) Schieder Electric 7) General Electric 8 ) Sputnik Engineering 9) Advanced Energy Top tidal energy companies:
| |||||
Top photovoltaic & solar companies:
| Top wind power and wind energy companies:
| Top biomass companies:
|
Volume | |
Day Range: | |
Bid Price | |
Ask Price | |
Last Trade Time: |