is...doing my DD Jay Landals, suggesting others do the same
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Enjoy Today's Cheap Gas $3+ Coming Soon
Enjoy Today's Cheap Gas Because It's Soon Headed Over $3 a Gallon
Posted Feb 23, 2010 10:20am EST by Henry Blodget in Investing, Commodities, Recession
Related: dia, spy, xom, cvx, vlo, bp, tot
Today's relatively "cheap" gas won't last, says Stephen Schork, editor of the The Schork Report. This summer, gas will likely be back over $3 a gallon again.
Why?
Because refiners, the folks who make crude oil into gasoline, are getting killed. Speculators have driven the price of crude oil up well beyond where it should be on a fundamental basis, says Schork. Meanwhile, prices at the pump are much lower than they should be given that oil is now more than $80 a barrel.
The result is that the folks in the middle, the refiners, are getting squeezed. And they're responding by cutting capacity.
If the economy continues to recover, says Schork, demand for gasoline and crude oil will gradually increase. This, combined with refiners cutting back on capacity, will eventually drive gas prices higher.
And what will $3+ gas do to the economy?
The Maginot line for demand-destruction, Schork says, is $3.30 a gallon. If gas hits that level, you'll see Americans start to consume less of it, and the high price will begin to act as a brake on the economy.
http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/enjoy-today's-cheap-gas-because-it's-soon-headed-over-3-a-gallon-428345.html?tickers=dia,spy,xom,cvx,vlo,bp,tot&sec=topStories&pos=9&asset=&ccode=
Is the 3rd party Lone Star College though?
In my view, their affiliation with the NAA and granting the land to BEHL for the PBR doesn't really equate to independent verification. I'm sure Lone Star will publish the results but where?
In addition, a third party that does this type of thing as their means of gainful employment will most likely have publications that print their submissions/studies.
I'd like to know where I can read those and who else will be seeing the articles.
One of the main ones I want answered and have sent:
Lone Star College is supposedly doing the verification of the PBR results. When is construction expected to begin, cultivation of the seed crop, and harvest expected? Will they be publishing these results and through whom? Considering that Lone Star is affiliated with the NAA and Mr. Fisher is President of the West Coast chapter, will any one else be looking at the results from the Lone Star run?
Here you go:
BioCentric Energy would like to solicit all questions from shareholders in advance of the Shareholders meeting so that we may efficiently address all questions and topics. Please submit your questions no later than Monday, February 22nd via e-mail to: marketing@biocentricenergy.com
I'd make the font super size so there would be no chance of you missing where to send your questions and complaints but iHub does not have that feature.
Fueling the Future with Fish Tank Residue
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/02/100219141905.htm
Fueling the Future With Fish Tank Residue: Scientist Discusses Use of Algae as Biofuel
ScienceDaily (Feb. 19, 2010) — As Americans demand new and cleaner ways to meet the country's energy needs, researchers are turning to algae as a promising new fuel source. The approach has the potential to significantly reduce the nation's reliance on imported oil while contributing to rural economic development and lowering greenhouse emissions.
Experts project that algae-based biofuels could displace large volumes of diesel and jet transportation fuels. One of the field's leading experts, Sandia researcher Ron Pate, presented an overview of the current state of research and development and associated opportunities and challenges for algal biofuels during the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in San Diego on Feb. 19.
Pate, who is a principal member of technical staff at Sandia, has been in Washington, D.C., since November 2009, serving as a technical consultant to the emerging algae biofuels program within the Biomass Office of the Department of Energy's Office of Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency (EERE).
The DOE program evolved out of an initiative started in 2008 to develop a National Algae Biofuels Technology Roadmap; researchers from Sandia, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and other national laboratories, universities and industry are teaming up with DOE to overcome some of the field's biggest challenges.
"We've been heavily involved in supporting the Office of Biomass Program for the past year and a half on the Algae Biofuels Roadmap and a couple of specific projects that are algae biofuel-related," Pate said.
Among those projects are two international collaborations: one with industrial partners in Israel and the U.S., and another with the National Research Council Canada.
"Using algae as a feedstock source for biofuels has a lot of potential benefits, but there are also some tremendous challenges. We've been working very hard to determine what the needs are, the current state of the technology and the areas that really need some focused investment and work," Pate said.
Through recent American Reinvestment and Recovery Act (stimulus package) and other program investments in Integrated Biorefinery and Algae Consortia projects beginning in FY2010, DOE/EERE is providing about $180 million in near-term funding specifically focused on algae biofuels research and development.
Pate's presentation, "The Promise and Challenges for Algae Biofuels: Overview of Approaches and Issues for Sustainable Production Scale-up," will cover many of the current issues surrounding algae research and development. Algae is emerging as an attractive resource because it reproduces quickly, uses large quantities of carbon dioxide and can thrive in non-freshwater, including brackish and marine water, thus avoiding competition with traditional agriculture's freshwater needs. In addition, algae can produce biomass and oils, and is attractive as feedstock for renewable fuels, with potentially greater productivity and significantly less land use requirements than with other commodity crop feedstocks such as corn, soy and canola.
In recent assessments that build on earlier work done under the DOE-funded Aquatic Species Program during the late-1970s through the early 1990s, Pate and others have been taking a new look at the nation's potential for algae biofuels production capacity development and resource requirements. The U.S. has ample sunlight, lower value land and non-freshwater resources in the lower latitude coastal and inland states, including the Southwest region of New Mexico, Arizona and California, to potentially produce large volumes of biofuel feedstock, if high productivies can be reliably achieved.
With algal oil productivities that could potentially reach annual average levels in the range of 3,000 to 5,000 gallons per acre, the land footprint required for large volumes of renewable fuel production would be minimal when compared with other conventional oil crops, such as soy and canola, that produce between 50 and 120 gallons per acre per year.
"With algae, we're talking about annual average productivities that could reach several thousand gallons per acre per year -- with practical values that analysis has shown might be able to reach more than 6500 gallons per acre -- so if you do the math, you can see the reasoning behind this research," Pate said.
Ron Pate's talk "Resources, Methods, and Approaches for Algae Production," took place on Friday, Feb. 19, as part of the "Algae for Food, Feed, Fiber, Freshwater, and Fuel" panel, which will be held 1:30-4:30 p.m. in Room 9 at the San Diego Convention Center.
"Algae can produce oils, which are nature's most effective energy storage medium. We already have the technologies coming online to be able to take that and affordably convert it into really useful fuels that are essentially drop-in equivalent to today's petroleum-based ground and aviation transport fuels. And there is a lot of promise to create quite a bit of oil from algae, but nobody has really done that affordably on a large, routine scale yet so that you can rely on it day in and day out."
Making the leap from the current preliminary analytical stage to full-scale production is challenged by a number of technical hurdles and unknowns. In the last decade, Pate and his colleagues have analyzed factors that are critical to the success of algal biofuels. Sunlight, carbon dioxide, usable, flat land and water are the key ingredients to algae growth, so the researchers looked for areas of the country where those factors were abundant and provided an optimal environment for growth.
The team determined that Southwestern states offer the most sun and large areas of available land, but are lacking in carbon dioxide and water. Although algae can thrive in the region's brackish groundwater, uncertainties remain about how much water is actually available. The team also had to address concerns that biofuel production will encroach on the nation's valuable land, water and fertilizer resources currently used for traditional agriculture.
To generate potential solutions, Pate and his colleagues contributed to a three-day workshop hosted by DOE's Office of Biomass Program in December 2008 in Washington, D.C., to discuss the future of algal fuels research and industry. The event was attended by 200 technical experts and stakeholders from government and state agencies from around the nation, who provided valuable comments and insights.
Pate was part of the DOE-sponsored team that drafted a report based on comments received both at the workshop and from public, and the report, which will outline the nation's strategy in algal biofuel research, is expected to be published in the next few months and will help drive the nation's algal biofuels efforts.
Despite the challenges, Pate is confident that algae has a strong chance of becoming a viable source of transportation fuel in the long-term future. "People who are more realistic think this will take at least 10 years for research and investments to get it to the point where it has commercial viability," Pate said. "I think the jury's still out, but we'll likely see an impact in the next decade."
The 6 million omega 3 is a finalized deal.
He's talking about other products.
Read Gofertrdr's post.
BEHL is currently interviewing for a new Prez of BioCentric Algae.
Coincidence the Flock of Faithful have returned along with the Industrious Leader and are pining for a new person to run BEHL?
Sour grapes, indeed.
You can PM an administrator to change your alias.
Greetings, people of BEHL board:
I NEED YOU TO AGREE WITH ME ON MY OPINION REGARDING ALL THINGS BEHL.
Shelve your own DD.
Just agree with me. Once. And all will be well.
TINY ALGAE CAKES FOR SOME, DENNIS FISHER'S HEAD FOR OTHERS!
I've gone to dinner and drinks on them before...LOL.
Nothing really. Just wanting that PBR to be done.
It's all dominoes after that.
It's great to buy on a down day because someone typically breaks out the brush and paints the next day or two.
Just watch out on the volume if you try. Some sells linger for weeks.
Not empty. They PR'd a LOI about 5 months ago.
I don't see where prsch is asking people about it on the board though. She may have spent too much time DDing BEHL and overlooked it.
I choose to take the good with the bad. I am well aware of, and have voiced my opinion to DF, on items that have been of value to me. But I temper that with some realistic expexctations.
I don't hold one company I invest in to a different standard than others. For example, I would hold my other green investments to their LOI PRs just as I have held BEHL and I would also be posting the same comments on those boards as I would the BEHL board, questioning as to why there is no update on the LOIs or filings.
http://gfeglobal.com/Products/bioreactor.html
VAR program underway.
I have to admit it, I love Lon's sig right now.
It proves just how shortsighted BEHL's axe grinders are.
For instance, you own a company that makes cosmetic products. You put algae derivatives into the products. A company comes to you, holds up a vial of purple liquid gold, and says to you 'We can make this cheaper for you than anyone else by XX%'.
You literally fall out of your chair at the cost savings and struggle to get your question out:
'When can you mass produce it on the scale I need?'
LOL...
To me, this is exactly why when SJC went to foreclosure and the bank attempted to hold BEHL hostage, it was imperative for DF to find BEHL a new home that was cost effective. First and foremost.
And during the search, RWE takes a deeper look at the PBR and says 'Hey, with a tweak here and a twist there, we can get this PBR producing at a more efficient rate than it is now'.
And now...we're so close to commercializing the moneymaker, you can smell all the different shades of green gold.
Ah, the wonderful world of the internet.
Where information, disinformation, and misinformation are only a click away!
You are right. We have not been informed. I would assume when something comes to fruition, it will be announced.
It may be that Dennis has read this board and is going to wait for the voting results to see if he still has a position on BEHL's board...LOL.
PBR ME ASAP!!!
Thank you.
Bid support?
Sara Lee: DHA Omega-3 in Bread?
Buying it from Martek.
http://www.nutraingredients-usa.com/Health-condition-categories/Eye-health/Sara-Lee-targets-kids-with-low-dose-DHA-omega-3-bread
Sara Lee targets kids with low-dose DHA omega-3 bread
By Shane Starling, 16-Feb-2010
Illinois-based food multinational, Sara Lee, has made its first leap into the functional bakery, omega-3 space with a DHA-fortified white bread aimed at children that has been backed by the Disney Corporation.
The bread that retails at the same pricing range ($2.39 to $3.49) as the rest of the Soft & Smooth range it has joined, is fortified with 12mg of DHA (docosahexaenoic acid) supplied by global DHA market leader, Martek Biosciences Corporation.
It will be distributed nationally in grocery stores and coupons for it will be available on selected Disney websites.
A Sara Lee spokesperson told NutraIngredients-USA.com Sara Lee arrived at the level of 12mg per two-slice serving because at higher levels taste and texture issues came into play.
“We were not on the absolute limit at 12mg but that was a level we felt could significantly contribute to DHA intakes without taste and textures,” she said. “This product will appeal to mums as children begin to consume whole foods.”
Sara Lee Soft & Smooth Plus Made with DHA Omega-3 comes in two versions - '100% Whole Wheat' and 'Made with Whole Grain White'.
The world’s most successful omega-3 bread, ‘Tip Top Up Omega-3 DHA’, sells in Australia and similarly targets children’s brain health, but contains 32mg of fish-sourced DHA per two-slice serving. Martek’s DHA is vegetarian and algae-sourced.
The US Institute of Medicine recommends DHA intakes of 70mg for 1-3 year-olds; 90mg for 4-8 year-olds; and 120mg for 9-13 year-olds, meaning Sara Lee’s bread comes in at about 10 per cent of the suggested intake for pre-teens and more for younger children.
It is estimated the average American child consumes between 30 and 40mg of DHA per day.
A website set up to back the product, in conjunction with a Facebook page, states: “Based on a growing body of scientific evidence, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) Omega-3 helps to support healthy brain development.”
Sara Lee said the statement had been cleared with the Food and Drug Administration.
DHA and bread
Martek has supplied ingredients to other bread makers but none on the same scale intended by Sara Lee. These include a west coast US brand called Oroweat, Dempster’s in Canada as well as tortilla called Mission.
“This is an exciting launch because Sara Lee is a leader in the bread category and a fantastic partner,” Martek spokesperson, Cassie Frances-Kelly said.
“Formulation challenges always exist when using fatty acids – for example, shelf life and stability – but we have been quite successful in overcoming them in nearly every major product category,” she said.
Of the dosage level, Frances-Kelly observed: “The idea is to introduce life’sDHA to family diets in a variety of ways – breads, yogurts, juices, milks – so that at the end of the day the consumer is able to conveniently add DHA to their diet in a way that really adds up and provides brain, eye and heart benefits.”
In a statement, Tim Zimmer, vice president of Sara Lee North American Fresh Bakery said: “We understand the need to ensure proper nutrition through all stages of life especially in younger children. Bread with DHA Omega-3 is an excellent and simple way to provide moms with a great-tasting, nutritious option their little ones will love.”
Exactly. Rawson. This is a scare tactic of the naysayers to bring Pawson's name into the mix.
He sold the shell to DF. We all knew that.
It came with baggage. That was made clear by RWE and now we see DF clearing the books with repeated filings.
What position does this Pawson hold with BEHL?
Paul McGuire left because the technical aspects of the BEHL PBR are fine tuned by RWE.
McGuire got Shen's concept up and running with Shen.
RWE joins the picture and brings in their engineering expertise to the BEHL PBR, solving protype issues that McGuire and Shen did not.
RWE is getting a lot of press in engineering mags lately.
I see this, again, as a non-issue.
How much is BEHL getting to promote ENTK, who has also had interviews done multiple times with emerginggreen.com?
I would imagine if the whole operation is a BEHL operation, like you say, those funds should show up on BEHL's books, right?
I wonder if BEHL ever puts the phone number for investor relations on their PRs for investors who truly want the information.
They acquire things and maybe other companies' things too.
Anticipation of a pop on S/H conference news in addition to the PPM section of the January 30th filing making sense with the 150 Acre Farm Solution proposal PR'd earlier this month.
All IMO.
I guess I should also add the lack of FUD-able PRs. At least one FUDer has reduced his postings recently.
Lots of eyes on BEHL. Kinda funny to see a BoD member and head of a different company's 'green team' keeping an eye on BEHL. Especially considering the LOI was not with BEHL for the BEHL PBR.
Hmmmmmmmmm...
Maybe they'll sign up to be a VAR shortly after KEPI.
Hope Barry didn't burn that bridge.
More like good luck finding a real email addy for them.
I wonder if Shen did his DD before leaving...LOL.
Well, scratch that. Undeliverable email addy...OOF.
I'll try tomorrow and keep people posted.
Just sell off 25% of your BEHL stock in 6 months.
WINK WINK NUDGE NUDGE.
I'm trying to fish some info out of clean power's IR via email.
I have expressed concern over an inhouse design infringing on patents filed by BEHL due to Shen's close knowledge of the system.
I'll see if anything happens from it and post it here.
Kind of wish everyone answered emails and phones like RWE...LOL.
This is supposition at best.
I could easily assume he was given restricted convertible preferreds much in the same manner as BEHL.
Remember, Shen was not collecting any salary from BEHL. Is he really going to throw X amount of years of work down the drain or would a smart man find the best solution to win at both sides?
Shen's going for the win-win here, not a wash.
Increase your net worth to above a million dollars and/or have a steady source of income in the 200K to 300K range for the last two years and expect the same range in the future.
In general.
Thank you Big. Shen still has a vested interest in BEHL from a financial standpoint.
He can get $$$$ two ways from BEHL - operating the equipment and watching his shares gain value with every sale.
No PR, but I also don't see where it says KEPI is going the PBR route.
How many years of R&D were undertaken before BEHL bought the Automax shell?
Who built the control unit for the commerical product BEHL is marketing?
Who filed the pending patents on Shen's groundwork and has one of them get approval?
Yes, KEPI is getting a man with a plan. But he would have to start funding and financing production of his plan now and rework the design of the PBR to circumvent the patent pending and approved patent parts.
Much easier to buy wholesale from Dennis and a lot less of a cash outlay to get going when it appears BEHL is a few weeks away from commercial sales of the moneymaker to start.
So Shen's contacts are vendors/suppliers for BEHL. Good. KEPI buying PBRs from BEHL = more money to his contacts (I heard family but chose not to believe it).
The corners are patent pending. I don't see Shen burning that bridge. He makes his living taking an idea to concept, which is exactly where BEHL is at.
I'm a little worried with the players at Aventura though. They have a past with CCAJ that doesn't seem very good.