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.
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.
Whats the big deal about hiring 30 people? three shifts of ten each. A couple will have to be Oil people to certify the fuel to ASTM standards, at least one forklift op. truck drivers, feedstock, groundskeeping building maintainance etc.
Far as dilution just for fun lets see what a BILLION shares look like at .002 - only 2 million market cap for a complete biodiesel facility, existing sales contracts, two gold mines, and in all liklihood a couple more biodiesel plants.
Hello???? If they did nothing else but just get the one biodiesel plant running over the next year you are looking at multiples. Geez.
Hear a lot of this, a lot of that. If AS is now 355M and the share price is .002....hell even if it was 500M at .002 pps still cheap.
one biodiesel plant under construction, possibly two more to be added. There is also the goldmine and I dont count the radio station as worth anything.
If just ONE more biodiesel plant to be added...think about market cap. Even my seeing eye dawg see's profit potential here.
RCCH, PHGI RVGD CYPW TFZE GSPI USSE SSTP WWNG NUBV:
RCCH looks hot but would watch for gap to be filled at some point - maybe sooner than later looking at chart. The low float means it SHOULD move on air and very quick with news. Maybe set a lower bid and let the pps come to you which it should sooner or later.
PHGI@ .002 and 355M shares market cap sitting at less than 3/4 million. The company holds title to a patented goldmine with proven reserves, a biodiesel plant to come online in a few months (if everything goes right), and recent announcement of possible addition of two more diesel plants along with a nice future sale of biodiesel. Expecting a REAL nice multi-bagger from this one, having picked up some the other day at .0015
So, possible future announcements may be for two multi-feestock biodiesel plants, and gold mine startup (or financing). Hopefully they will find a JV partner to head it up. A long shot possiblility might be the Canadian division startup that if it happens may pay out a share dividend of the new entity.
RVGD seems to have suffered from a pr announcing additonal dilution but restricted for six months leaving the company with a current float of about 350M tradable float for six months. After six months the OS increases to 977M. The market already has factored that in it seems so fully diluted at todays pps gives it a 3.9M market cap. Pretty cheap for a company that says a yearly .004 dividend is possible. I think this one is about to turn around and head back up with Shakerzz group maybe helping to rocket this thing.
Keep in mind the company is coming out with TWO more major contracts, and the new Honda Ridgelines being showcased towards the end of this coming week or early the following week. Not bad looking weekly chart.
USSE - looking good for multi-bagger from these levels. It is expected that either usse or sstp would be purchasing algae systems to provide them with their own feedstock. USSE primary product is agri-char fertilizer with soil remediative properties and organic. Biocrude will be sold to sstp for further processing or resale, and the biogas is expected to be used for power generation.
Also, on the USSE site they highlight a recent article where a possible 4 BILLION dollar sale mentions between 400-800 reactors at a price tag of 7M each.
SSTP announced an MOU with an established Haitian power supplier and Caterpillar equipment dealer for 20 reactors.
Redwood Consultants - investor relations for both companies recently told an investor that they are gearing up for some major marketing. biofuelsdigest and quality stocks websites having run a few positive articles highlighting biocrude sales to George E. Warren (fuel wholesaler) of Florida.
PBLS soon to start litigation or negotiation for damages estimated to be in excess of 350M. Currently priced around .002 - this should take a little while.
cypw seems to have bottom and one can expect to hear a few good announcements from them if Im not mistaken, also tfzp is due for a good update and new sales pr. These two are sleepers flying WAY under the radar and should be consider longer term holds for real gains.
All the above is just my humble opinion and represent some stocks I THINK or BELIEVE are poised for some real decent gains in a short period of time. Remember its pinkyland where it sometimes hard to pick the goodguys from badguys.
Almost forgot,GSPI seems to be poised for some substantial sales this year, having just acquired a new oil extraction process for algae to go along with their covered algae pond systems. I expect a sale or two to be with either sstp or usse since the Baytown project seems to have increased in acreage from 120 to 500 as mentioned in the biofuelsdigest article.
- Thats a lotta room for algae ponds if thats the direction of things to come.
ONe last word - take a look at wwng. Management seems to suck and its hooked up with dvgi and wrnw. Boo hisssss!!!!
Good point is it can move up VERY quickly and is expected to complete a few deals, increase oil production and revs.
NUBV - seems like it wants to down a bit but check out the volume activity lately.
RVGD - might have turned up again, shakerzz gang watching this one so could grow wings. NUBV???
PHGI - could not resist the .0015 price tag, and up 33% by end of day. At .015 its a ten bagger - couple of months we may see the Opp faciltiy producing, with CREW purchaser in place, options for more.
Crew is division of Cheveron.
New corporate entity registered.
Also, seems Barrettjets posts on Baytown visit have attracted the wrath of EZmoney. Perhaps a little more caution is called for by some. I dont see how Barrettjets posts are anything more than what the Baytown Sun journalist or Jim Lane from biofuelsdigest has published.
Perhaps a little discretion is called for, and the old adage "Silence is golden" comes to mind. Please keep in mind sstp usse and JR have plenty of enemies. P.
Thank you.One of the things that interested me in picking up some more phgi was the conference pr.....There is no reason why one should have to export biofuels when there is such a demand in the United States and Canada - especially for biodiesel.
So many ethanol plants coming on line and using various cheap feedstocks there in all liklihood will be a glut on the market, and only the strong will survive the price wars. It will eliminate a lot of wannabe's.
Biodiesel is another whole ball of string. Any biodiesel depending on soybean based products is in for a rough time. BB has the right idea on seeking out used veg. oil and considering algae oil. Used veg oil (restaurants etc.) has a very good conversion rate and leaves a lot of room for profit, and algae dried and pressed (conventional tech) will have a good return, and the presscake residue is worth a pretty penny a few bucks per kilo.
Algae with the proper system can replenish itself once or twice a day. Having the ability to produce your own feedstock or part of it would reduce cost per gallon and help the company survive the upcoming price wars as second generation biodiesel tech. comes into it own.
Check out www.biofuelsdigest and suscribe to free email. Everyday you learn something new, and keep right up to date on any new deals going down, future market trends.
2008 should be a good year for biofuels I believe anyway.
GLTA - P.
Dont care where they are coming from. Seems BB hooked up with a few bucks in Florida, may have new tech and new plant(s) coming in, feedstock supplies etc. Even if they never materialize you will still have sales from Opp over the next 6 months and should be good for a five bagger at least from here.
Picked up some more phgi and usse this morining at what I consider discounted prices so Im happy. Thanks to whoever gave me them cheap shares.
Dont believe it will go down too much from here, but Im looking ahead to three or four months when things should be a lot rosier and news of financing details in.
Been wrong before so its no big deal. After all its pinkyland.
Seems to me like a few here trying to manipulate the pps. How many more million ya gonna dump trying? Found a few pennies and have an order in. Go ahead and filler for me please.
Weather..not sure where plant is (Opp). What is the weather outlook for there today and tomorrow. Just wondering about potential damage to progress made so far.
P.
you must be related to shortsinthesand or twin brother as your gloom and doom message is the same on just about every board. you wouldnt be the same person posting under a second alias would you?
Kingoil: in another one or two years time who will care? Its only 20 reactors. The effect on the economy of Haiti priceless as far as further marketing goes.
You'll come around. Might take a little longer than most folks, but I think you will eventually figure it out. Just the first of many pr's.
See todays phgi announcement of a few minutes ago.Should be good for EZ double with a little pump here and there. P.
Hi Oldguy, yesterdays close on both stocks represent the kind of opp. I was referring to for a "stock swap". usse gained while sstp lost ground, and pps difference shrank from sstp being twice the price of usse to having only a 25% diff. in share price.
If I swapped out now, and then pps righted itself back to where it was, (2 times) swapping back to USSE would result in havng a good amount of extra shares.
Doing it this way eliminates the need for "flipping" and correctly catching the highs and lows. Lot less stressful wondering if you did the right thing.
All you need is volitility which these two stocks have aplenty. P.
Public Reply | Private Reply | Keep | Last Read Next 10 | Previous | Next
Posted by: Pennimon
In reply to: None Date:1/31/2008 1:04:08 PM
Post #of 1769
Im recommending everyone take a look at GSPI. According to an article in biofuelsdigest.com sstp is looking to purchase some algae systems from GSPI. Because of the huge amount of feedstock required, I imagine more than one algae tech will be involved.
Because of the magnatude of the sstp Baytown project (article indicates expansion to 500 acres) one might be able to deduce some kind of JV between the two? Given GSPI's current reach into other countries there exists a possibility of a win win situation here.
Whatever the case, growing your own high yield feedstock makes a lot of sense and seems to be part of the overall plan now.
By the way, that article in biofuelsdigest is rumoured to have been published without companies permission as it gives current business details not yet pr'd.
JMHO. - Penn.
Ouch. seems my calculations a little off. do math yourself.
Should be a good week coming.
Hi Spec. ADM sells soybean hulls between 120 and 150 per ton.
Look where Fseint is located, the Natchez facility, and the Baytown facility - all on water with a port.
We are all looking to algae as the answer and the Rivera Process. Take a look at the logistics of algae oil. 65% oil content by weight. Current extraction process (not including GSPI new extraction process)is able to get a lot of oil out of it and then have a remainder called presscake which can fetch at least a buck a pound.
When extraction techiniques catch up in a few years, any other company can get huge yields of algae oil....so while algae is todays ticket, agricultural wastes should be the future ticket to economic growth (Rivera Process).
A 100% algae feedstock will not help regional economic growth beyound the people who work growing the algae and running the plant. A lot of money will change hands to very few hands and most likely end up in another state or big corps pockets.
But....when the Rivera Process uses the algae in conjunction with local agricultural waste feedstocks, other non-algae sustainable energy crops, then you will have true economic growth, with the money trickling through individual communities and staying in their homestate - for a good part.
This is the TRUE beauty of the Rivera System, sustained and meaningfull economic growth. Like a weapon, the technology has to be used responsibly or possibly face future legislation as to use. Right now in the beginning, we are going to build "have and have not" countries and societies.
I know that problem already exists, but when a lot of poor countries that import oil start exporting the richer countries are gonna feel it bigtime.
Interesting times ahead for sure. I am already planning to short the big oils and make a killing. Its a no brainer.
Posted by: Pennimon
In reply to: None Date:2/2/2008 12:36:34 PM
Post #of 1768
USSE reactors produce 6500 gallons per day.
If over the next five years you could build and install 1000 reactors each doing 6500 gallons each per day you would get:
422,500,000,000 gallons per year. Divide by 40 (bbls) 10,562,500,000
(These figures may be off because of the limited ability to show huge amounts. My hand held calculator can show only so many zero's.)
Ouch. Thats a lotta money out of someones pocket (big oils). Alberta's tarsand oil extraction is unprofitable below about about 75 - 80 a barrel I believe.
Think about all the gas production. Each large biomass to biofuel plant produces a huge amount of usable gas. So natural gas price will also be under pressure. Though I cant be sure I believe our gas would be less harmful to the environment to use.
Huge amounts of natural or organic fertilizer will hit the market. Think about each continent having 1000 reactors. This will be good for the planet.
How many barrels would you (USA)need to become totally energy independent?
I'll bet you could really kick with even larger reactors. With each reactor built and installed, you could go a running countdown to our countries energy independance! Build or install the last one needed on Independance day...
Zero waste products. Thats gotta be worth some kinda award.
USSE reactors produce 6500 gallons per day.
If over the next five years you could build and install 1000 reactors each doing 6500 gallons each per day you would get:
422,500,000,000 gallons per year. Divide by 40 (bbls) 10,562,500,000
(These figures may be off because of the limited ability to show huge amounts. My hand held calculator can show only so many zero's.)
Ouch. Thats a lotta money out of someones pocket (big oils). Alberta's tarsand oil extraction is unprofitable below about about 75 - 80 a barrel I believe.
Think about all the gas production. Each large biomass to biofuel plant produces a huge amount of usable gas. So natural gas price will also be under pressure. Though I cant be sure I believe our gas would be less harmful to the environment to use.
Huge amounts of natural or organic fertilizer will hit the market. Think about each continent having 1000 reactors. This will be good for the planet.
I'll bet you could really kick with even larger reactors.
From www.biofuelsdigest.com Read the part where it is said that countries now dependent of foreign supplies would be in a position to EXPORT biocrude....that has HUGE implications for the big oils. Give this technolgy a year or maybe two and you can make a killing on shorting the big oils. - Unless of course they wake up and smell what the coffee, and jump aboard with both feet.
..........................................
President of Central American Parliament earmarks $4 billion for alt energy investment; targets US Sustainable Energy’s Rivera process for Latin expansion
The Baytown (TX) Sun reported today that President Julio González Gamarra, president of the Central American Parliament (Parlacen), offered to contribute up to $4 billion for the rollout of the “Rivera” process to Latin America. The Rivera process is used at the Baytown Green Energy Facility, a joint venture of US Sustainable Energy and Sustainable Energy Corporation, now operating at 2.4 Mgy capacity.
President Gamarra and engineer Fernando Ricardo Luna Waldheim visited the Baytown facility following a demonstration of the “Rivera process” earlier this month in the Dominican Republic. “This technology has a great future,” Waldheim told the Sun. “It’s just a great opportunity for us to enter and to substitute the demand and to lower the energy costs in these countries where they don’t have crude oil, but they do have the agriculture,” he added.
“Instead of being energy dependent, they could be exporting crude oil. It’s a great opportunity for the democratic countries”, Waldheim said.
Panama, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua are members of Parlacen. Waldheim said that the Parlacen countries have the potential to install as many as 800 reactors, which would use the Rivera process to produce organic fertilizer, heavy crude oil, light crude oil and synthetic gas from carbon-based feedstocks.
The Baytown Green Energy facility has a current capacity of 2.4 Mgy, and is planning to expand capacity to 8.7 Mgy by May 2008. The joint venture partners also ultimately plan to add a 500 MW power plant at the Baytown facility.
SSTP/usse 4 Billion investment,no pr yet...
USSE IN The Baytown Sun
Baytown company plans major splash on energy
By Kari Griffin
Baytown Sun
Published February 1, 2008
Members of the Central American Parliament, which represents countries in South and Central America, and the Caribbean, were in Baytown Thursday because of one man’s process of turning soybeans – among other things – into biofuel.
John Rivera, CEO of Sustainable Energy Corp. and winner of an International Engineering Conference award and inventor of the “Rivera Process,” has found a way to produce biogasoline from pyrolysis biocrude oil – and he’ll be doing it right in our backyard.
Located across from Pinehurst on Highway 146, Baytown Green Energy Consortium employees have been hard at work these past couple of months setting up the test facility where a 65-foot unit of four reactors will turn substances with a carbon chain into 737 fertilizer, heavy crude oil, light crude oil and synthetic gas in just under 9 minutes – a process that has taken Rivera 20 years to perfect.
Using a prototype to show his guests how it’s done, Rivera produced the biogasoline that burned clean until it was mixed with regular gasoline, which produced black smoke.
Rivera also pointed out that what remains of the processed soybeans is used to make a 737 organic based fertilizer and soil treatment that removes harmful chemicals from soil.
“We have zero waste byproducts,” Rivera said.
The Baytown Green Energy facility, (a joint-venture with U.S. Sustainable Energy), is capable of producing 6,700 gallons of a petroleum product in a 24 -hour period and will be making 24,000 gallons a day within 90 days, Rivera said. And the completion of a 500 mega-watt green power plant, (the largest of its kind in the world), is on the horizon.
If successful, Baytonians will not have to pay the fuel adjustment charges that can make up 30 percent of their bill, Rivera said.
“I’m going to be the power company in Texas,” he said.
Parlacen President Julio González Gamarra and H.D. Fernando Ricardo Luna Waldheim from the department of engineering of Central American Parliament were impressed with what they saw going on at the Baytown facility – so impressed they were willing to contribute $4 billion for Rivera to move the project to a bigger scale right away.
“This technology has a great future,” Waldheim said.
The market for this type of product is especially strong in underdeveloped countries, he said.
“It’s just a great opportunity for us to enter and to substitute the demand and to lower the energy costs in these countries where they don’t have crude oil, but they do have the agriculture to make a joint venture with us,” Waldheim said. “Instead of being energy dependent, they could be exporting crude oil. It’s a great opportunity for the democratic countries.
Right now, these areas are making ethanol and producing a lot of sugar cane, “but it’s not a substitute for petroleum products,” Waldheim said.
Once the 400 to 800 reactors are placed all in these countries, they will use their local feeds such as nuts and other carbon-based food stock to make their own energy and export the surplus said Scott Hoerr of Farmer’s Sustainable Energy International, which is working with Rivera on this project.
“We want to take it to the grass-roots level,” Hoerr said.
Baytown Councilman Brandon Capetillo learned a lot from the informative tour.
“There is a global market for biofuels,” Capetillo said. “The City of Baytown is very interested in this type of development.”
Almost as interesting than the process that Rivas created, Capetillo said, is the fact that “this can happen right here in Baytown.”
For more information about the process taking place at Baytown Green Energy Consortium, visit http://gec.sstp.us.
http://baytownsun.com/story.lasso?ewcd=f8a2a036f1433f3d
BILLIAM:
go to my board important $$$$ alert.
MONEY ALERT!!!! SSTP PRESS COVERAGE
http://baytownsun.com/story.lasso?ewcd=f8a2a036f1433f3d
Eye witness report (he was there) -THIS HAS NOT BEEN PR'D YET.
return to board, top of boardMsg: 3738 of 3743 2/1/2008 10:22:14 AM
Author: barrettjet send pm · add member to favs · ignore · recommend
Recs: 0 Baytown Meeting
Baytown company plans major splash on energy
By Kari Griffin
Baytown Sun
Published February 1, 2008
This article by Kari Griffin is an eyewitness report, not a statement put out by the company or a JR said ...
The reporter was there ALL day.
From Barrettjet:
I was invited to attend the meeting of the named persons in this article. JR described it as the "Biggest event in the history of the company" and it certainly was. Not because of the number of participants but because of the business conducted. I live in the Dallas, Texas area and drove down to Baytown on Wednesday.
Members of the Central American Parliament, which represents countries in South and Central America, and the Caribbean, were in Baytown Thursday because of one man’s process of turning soybeans – among other things – into biofuel.
This article provides the names of the people participating and yes they were there.
John Rivera, CEO of Sustainable Energy Corp. and winner of an International Engineering Conference award and inventor of the “Rivera Process,” has found a way to produce biogasoline from pyrolysis biocrude oil – and he’ll be doing it right in our backyard.
Located across from Pinehurst on Highway 146, Baytown Green Energy Consortium employees have been hard at work these past couple of months setting up the test facility where a 65-foot unit of four reactors will turn substances with a carbon chain into 737 fertilizer, heavy crude oil, light crude oil and synthetic gas in just under 9 minutes – a process that has taken Rivera 20 years to perfect.
Everything is as shown and stated in past articles and pictures. The USSE building is located behind the concrete plant, and has a railroad spur track. A great location.
Using a prototype to show his guests how it’s done, Rivera produced the biogasoline that burned clean until it was mixed with regular gasoline, which produced black smoke.
JR had both the 65ft reactor and the smaller test reactor fired up and cooking.
The big unit ran all day and the smaller unit ran for the test
Rivera also pointed out that what remains of the processed soybeans is used to make a 737 organic based fertilizer and soil treatment that removes harmful chemicals from soil.
“We have zero waste byproducts,” Rivera said.
The Baytown Green Energy facility, (a joint-venture with U.S. Sustainable Energy), is capable of producing 6,700 gallons of a petroleum product in a 24 -hour period and will be making 24,000 gallons a day within 90 days, Rivera said. And the completion of a 500 mega-watt green power plant, (the largest of its kind in the world), is on the horizon.
6,700 gallons is the output from ONE reactor and that is what we have up and running now. The second reactor is about 75% complete and the third and fourth reactors are tube assemblies waiting on some heaters and other parts which are on the way. Four reactors comprise a "Set"" which means that they share some operating systems, operate as a unit and will be started and stopped together.
If successful, Baytonians will not have to pay the fuel adjustment charges that can make up 30 percent of their bill, Rivera said.
“I’m going to be the power company in Texas,” he said.
I think this refers to the coming on site 500MW Power Plant and many others in JR plans. Very ambitious but you know JR and he IS making it come true.
Parlacen President Julio González Gamarra and H.D. Fernando Ricardo Luna Waldheim from the department of engineering of Central American Parliament were impressed with what they saw going on at the Baytown facility – so impressed they were willing to contribute $4 billion for Rivera to move the project to a bigger scale right away.
These are not JRs words , as some will say. Rather, they are the words I heard at the luncheon meeting hosted by JR. They were speaking in Spanish and some English. I heard the words come from the mouths of the Presidente and Sr. Luna Waldheim. I heard things like 900 reactors and giga watt powerplant ant certain locations that I will not pinpoint. That's for JR to define. I guess JR has had many business dealings in Latin American because he speaks Spanish fluently.
The market for this “This technology has a great future,” Waldheim said. The market for this type of product is especially strong in underdeveloped countries, he said.
“It’s just a great opportunity for us to enter and to substitute the demand and to lower the energy costs in these countries where they don’t have crude oil, but they do have the agriculture to make a joint venture with us,” Waldheim said. “Instead of being energy dependent, they could be exporting crude oil. It’s a great opportunity for the democratic countries.
Many Latin American countries have no oil and even if the country next door has oil they still have to buy it. With our technology they can keep the countrys' funds at home and create many jobs. I heard conversation indicating that the monthly income of the small farmers could double.
Right now, these areas are making ethanol and producing a lot of sugar cane, “but it’s not a substitute for petroleum products,” Waldheim said.
Once the 400 to 800 reactors are placed all in these countries, they will use their local feeds such as nuts and other carbon-based food stock to make their own energy and export the surplus said Scott Hoerr of Farmer’s Sustainable Energy International, which is working with Rivera on this project.
“We want to take it to the grass-roots level,” Hoerr said.
Baytown Councilman Brandon Capetillo learned a lot from the informative tour.
“There is a global market for biofuels,” Capetillo said. “The City of Baytown is very interested in this type of development.”
Almost as interesting than the process that Rivas created, Capetillo said, is the fact that “this can happen right here in Baytown.”
What a day and I feel very honored to me invited. Mike Conklin and I hit it off and that is because we are both pilots. He was "Marine 1", the Presidents pilot, and I was "HQ 1", the LA Govs pilot, a long time ago.
For more information about the process taking place at Baytown Green Energy Consortium, visit http://gec.sstp.us.
Im recommending everyone take a look at GSPI. According to an article in biofuelsdigest.com sstp is looking to purchase some algae systems from GSPI. Because of the huge amount of feedstock required, I imagine more than one algae tech will be involved.
Because of the magnatude of the sstp Baytown project (article indicates expansion to 500 acres) one might be able to deduce some kind of JV between the two? Given GSPI's current reach into other countries there exists a possibility of a win win situation here.
Whatever the case, growing your own high yield feedstock makes a lot of sense and seems to be part of the overall plan now.
By the way, that article in biofuelsdigest is rumoured to have been published without companies permission as it gives current business details not yet pr'd.
JMHO. - Penn.
Could some one post or pm me Mr. Megas email address please.
Penn.
Total silence needed as outlined by Parson agreed. Think about it from a potential purchasers point of view. You have this opp. for obtaining fuel at discounted prices giving you a huge advantage. Especially if you are say a shipping line or train freight company, huge trucking company or such.
You would need time to prepare properly to make the most of the situation positioning yourself for increased business and profits - expansion. The bigger the company, the more time needed to get everything in place. The kind of opp. JR process provides for some companies smart enough to see it is huge.
Gonna be some rude awakenings for those companies not fueling up with JR juice. This will also apply to the big oils. Either get on or go under. That simple.
Even if another company came up with a tech that gave simlar yields, JR juice has qualities or characteristics others will not or cannot match.
According to the biofuelsdigest article, JR is making deals with a company to purchase algae systems. Making your own feedstock and utilizing the Rivera Process is almost unfair to anything else. Put the projected profit margin against anythng else.
If you have a feedstock for under a hundred bucks a ton with a 60% conversion rate to biofuel, your looking pretty darn good. If you use the high oil content algae as a mix to boost the yields of agricultural wastes or logging industry wastes your looking pretty good.
If you use a feedstock from a company that pays you to take the feedstock away your looking good.
Many potential feedstocks are a process waste product that must be landfilled at a very high cost. Using these wastes might qualify for green credits as well.
Cdnkid, just popping in and going over old posts. You asked if there were photo's? How about a slide show?
Here's an excellent link by an investor who seems to be very in the know, follow the link to Baytown Green Energy Consortium, hit the link and enjoy.
http://www.biocrude.us
Guess you might have missed an important article about Baytown. Go here, http://www.biofuelsdigest.com and in the on-site search engine type in algae testing and read what pops up.
If your not going to investor village to the private sstp board then you are missing out on key information posted by active investors. We got a couple of spies who keep a pretty close watch on things and some have visited and watched the new reactor in action.
Right now they are awaiting on four independent lab tests. Apparently the results are so good they keep testing it over and over. Thats funny. I believe it was an algae soybean mix but cant be sure.
Thats it for now - later.
All, the post about the visit was a copy and paste from another board by a fellow who goes by the handle of 2guard.
How I wish I could have seen it in action! Good luck to all.
Penn.
The post about the visit was from an IV poster named Jerry. I did not visit the facility. Jerry goes under the handle of 2guard on investor village message boards.
Sorry for confusion. If it was me I would not have put my name to it - just Penn.
I will be taking a holiday from posting for a while, but hope to be back soon. Dont let the board die on me. Dont sell your usse or sstp shares too cheaply. Think YEARS and not shareprice and you will do very well. Thats the take Im going to have anyway, but good luck to all.
Penn.
Baytown visit (USSE,SSTP)
Dear All,
Had the privilege of visiting the Baytown facility on Monday and taking a tour led by JR. I also had the opportunity to talk with Vice-Admiral Dr. Salcedo, for which I thank him.
I witnessed biofuel produced from algae at a very high ratio of biofuel weight to algae. The large reactor is very large indeed, and very impressive.
The entire site is huge - I believe over 150 acres. The potential use of the site is incredible. A rail spur runs within 20 feet of the main building. Pipelines run through the property. Major powerlines are extremely close. And let us not forget the concrete production on site. Further, JR ran the old diesel engine for me and I felt the manifold (cool) and the exhaust (barely warm). Awesome!
After seeing everything, in my opinion the site has the potential for major production of biofuel and electricity generation.
It is impossible for me to estimate when a major deal will be signed, sealed and delivered. However, I am convinced it is a matter of "when" and not "if."
I wish to take this opportunity to publicly thank Mr. Rivera for permitting me to visit the site, and for taking time from his obviously busy schedule to show me around.
Sincerely yours,
Jerry
Baytown visit (USSE,SSTP)
Dear All,
Had the privilege of visiting the Baytown facility on Monday and taking a tour led by JR. I also had the opportunity to talk with Vice-Admiral Dr. Salcedo, for which I thank him. I witnessed biofuel produced from algae at a very high ratio of biofuel weight to algae. The large reactor is very large indeed, and very impressive. The entire site is huge - I believe over 150 acres. The potential use of the site is incredible. A rail spur runs within 20 feet of the main building. Pipelines run through the property. Major powerlines are extremely close. And let us not forget the concrete production on site. Further, JR ran the old diesel engine for me and I felt the manifold (cool) and the exhaust (barely warm). Awesome!
After seeing everything, in my opinion the site has the potential for major production of biofuel and electricity generation.
It is impossible for me to estimate when a major deal will be signed, sealed and delivered. However, I am convinced it is a matter of "when" and not "if."
I wish to take this opportunity to publicly thank Mr. Rivera for permitting me to visit the site, and for taking time from his obviously busy schedule to show me around.
Sincerely yours,
Jerry
Someone else likes sstp: http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=26139515
Thanx for keeping board clean, and not attracting Shelleys or Matts attention. You know who visits here a lot I imagine. P.
Biofuel development - unless he owns his own palm oil plantation it would be a losing proposition given the price of it now.
Single source feedstock sucks for anybody in the biz. Biodiesel companies depending on soybean products are dropping like flies...
Better to go with biomass to biofuel (cellulosic).
For anyone wishing to get ahold of me, I dont have pm capability and will have to join investors village, or...leave me your email by pm or posting here on the board.
The BHM systems are not cheap, but can pay for itself in one to two years which ain't too shabby. Other than that the company BHM has an email link to get more information.
A small group of investors are sponsoring me to attend the Globe 2008 Environmental technology expo happening in Vancouver mid march. If everything goes right, I will be at booth #1803.
If you want to help with donations (still needed) anyone at this board can point you my way at this board: http://www1.investorvillage.com/groups.asp?mb=14022&pt=m
From IV board on Rivera Process:
Author: Pennimon send pm · add member to favs · ignore
view thread, thread start In response to msg 3006 by RealSeer
Recs: 1 Re: GOOD MOOORRRNNNNNNNIIIIINNNGGG USSE/SSTP!!!!!!!
I agree. USSE SSTP have the answer. A few dayz back I posted an article on Ontario biodiesel. That article reflects the current state of renewable fuels in Ontario and in Canada in general. Yes there are biodiesel plants in Canada, and technology to make biodiesel from chicken fats or animal fats, sewage, animal wastes, etc, but look to what big oil Suncor does....import diesel from the United States to resell to wholesalers and distributors in Canada.
Folks here dont want no SOYLENT GREEN type biodiesel. We dont want fuels made from garbage. Thats why Suncor IMPORTS biodiesel made from virgin SOYBEAN OIL. Its too bad for the other companies developing technology and products folks here dont want.
What would you rather have in your brand new $50,000.00 automobile? I think that Canadians if given a choice would very happily embrace the Rivera Process family of bio-products, and at Globe 2008 every person in Canada will be made aware a choice is now available by attending media.
Being a Native person, I can put the Rivera Process in every Native newspaper and magazine in North America. My previous experience and relationships with various organizations might come in handy again.
This in turn will be picked up by mainstream media making JR's job here a whole lot easier, by bringing public pressure to bear on decision and policy makers. I am already working with a few organizations to have the Rivera Process investigated and bring tech. awareness about.
In fact, by the time Globe 2008 rolls around, I expect to have been given up to half a million dollars worth of free publicity in advance. Canadians are hungry for an acceptable renewable energy fuel, but wont put just anything in their tank as the article will show. Canada is years behind the states in this regard and has some serious catching up to do, so the strategy here has to be a little different. Just waiting for JR to pay his half of the Globe 2008 deal and we are there.
With the BHM algae technology feedstock problems are removed from the equation, 40M pounds of dry algae product per year per acre and more since the modular designs are well suited for vertical integration, the potential of doubling or even tripling those acreage production numbers exists. The BHM algae production methods and the Rivera Process are both super techs as a stand alone technology, but when combined into a single process will be a force that other methodologies cannot hope to compete with.
No feedstocks supply or price problems, no transport or storage costs, no need for outside suppliers unless desired. I will be able to offer Canadians here a complete turnkey biomass to biofuel manufacturing system
comparable to a large producing oil well and refinery, all on a fraction of the landbase, and fraction of costs.
While success here is not guaranteed, failure to accept the Rivera Process is not an option as corporate America jumps aboard the RiveraProcess gravy train. Canada and Ontario MUST jump on board or lose industrial competitiveness in both domestic and international markets at a very rapid pace.
All of this possible because of a few investors here in support of JR, the Rivera Process, and in finacial support in getting me to Vancouver mid March. A BIG THANK YOU to contributors for Globe 2008.
ALL ABOARD!!!
Calculations for 50 ton per day BHM algae plant which sits on about one acre, will produce 2 million gallons using algae with only 50% oil content. Other pond type systems only produce about 20,000 gallons per acre....
I believe that blows away the competition as far as algae production, and will help many companies who really really need a source of cheap feedstock.
Maybe Vinod should be calling ME, LOL.
Raindreamer, if you like alt.energy stocks then you should visit my board...
Nice but I still think USSE will triumph over sstp for gains again today. Nice to have stock in both!
Todays third day...what shakerzzz to do? Maybe big pr tomorrow for JR.
P.
Anyone noticed that since PP stopped posting nasty on our company that our share price has gone up on no news? Things that make ya go hmmmmm.
Where oh where have the bashers gone,oh where oh where can they be?
nawww. he still here like a tic on a hound. Has toned down some though.