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thanks for pointing that out
Welcome back z EOM
HANS - Zardiw - what is up? eom
hmm mentions Bunge, one of USSEs neighbors in Vidalia.
Thanks Stephanie for posting that vid. Powerful.
risk of Fascism in US - PAY ATTENTION
Be active
Thanks pete. Great reminder of who is behind the scenes. Players.
Patience - the longer it takes to go up the more I can accumulate.
Who didn't let the dogs out?
JK LOL
after the pps performance following the latest pr releases I'll bet they are not in any sort of a RUSH to tip their hat too early.
NPK = Nitrogen Phosphorus Potassium. The fertilizer is a by product and the 737 refers to the proportion of each. I would like to know how much of the carbon of the soybean plants is bound up in the fertilizer and thus returned to the land and not the atmosphere.
Yup. P&W is pretty credible. Not to mention UCONN. He's got a Phd too.
Hell YEah!! Looks like a great addition to the team! This kind of thing adds street cred to our pinkie. Is there more news?
C'mon buddy-- 3.5hrs! U know you want to post again.
Welcome to the RSHN IHUB board.
Mr. Keys'? hmm I am not familiar with such a poster...
Hell yeah! Sound good!!
I refuse to believe we have been so blessed.
I was/am on the edge of returning to Raging (GAG) B.
TOU Refresher
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That squealing pig is music to my ears!
Biofuels are coming to the forefront and USSE appears to have a technology to lead a market segment (at least).
Hi lady1242. Nothing new yet. Still waiting on further developments along the path of CONTINUED PROGRESS. Oh and a bit of a soap opera taking place with a giant ego.
The motivation of a certain poster here should be very CLEAR. It is laughable. RSHN stock price is not affected by news so why should it be affected by a board poster? Think about it.
Remain calm - all in due time.
Why don't you eeyores finish buying the shares you need? Don't be greedy there are plenty of good stocks to pick from.
My tea leaves tell me that USSE is going to rock.
Well this board sure is boring now. RSHN will surprise....
and for science sake PLEASE DO your own DD. The Ibox and prs are good for starters. Try to answer your own questions.
In the description of the P&W product is says: "Modular options can also be added to allow long term environmentally compatible operation."
It would be wishful thinking to connect the dots without more information.
I'll be darned if it ain't a Pratt & Whitney product. They are working with USSE to provide their equipment.
Augsburger did you say?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stroh_Brewery_Company
RSHN and USSE 10 baggers + in the making.
"We all are committed to complete this fast track project in record time."
:)
Some people like to hear themselves talk.
bloated egos
OT: vets deserve more. WW1 vets marched on DC for their due benefits. The true cost of war includes caring for all these vets who have put their lives on the line to carry out the wishes of the government. I got a co worker in the marines for 18 years and now he is in the national guard trying to get a decent retirement package.
The military industrial complex gives big money to politicians so they do their bidding. The politicians can't justify continued expenditures unless the equipment is used. I hope we don't go broke like the Soviets.
Protect the Constitution.
OK that is my soapbox.
Thank you VETS!!!
wow I never thought about a possible Walmart deal for Apple rush etc. Do they sell Arizona iced teas?
Goji berries, Rhodiola and Ginseng!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibetan_Goji_berry#Functional_food_and_beverage_applications
Ginseng, Goji berries and rhodiola BOB! That is your next functional beverage. Anyone with his ear tell him Goji berrries are the next craze.
December 4, 2006 9:37 am
Many questions = much DD left to do (or too lazy to do it)
Yup!
I think nanobacteria is what they use to get the conversion process going so fast. I don't really understand it but have seen similar articles.
Biofuels lure U.S., but agreement on cost elusive
SCIENCE NEWS
November 08, 2006
By Missy Ryan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Politicians may be pushing ethanol as a magic bullet for the United States' foreign energy addiction, but even biofuels experts disagree about the cost, efficiency and viability of a ramped-up U.S. biofuels program.
Experts at a biofuel conference on Wednesday easily agreed on the urgent need to wean the United States from foreign oil, which now makes up about 60 percent of U.S. oil supplies.
In recent decades, ethanol has been become an increasingly attractive choice to sidestep volatile oil prices and avert the environmental toll of burning fossil fuels.
Ethanol in particular -- made mostly from corn in the United States -- has become a bipartisan winner in Washington.
U.S. law now mandates that refiners and gasoline blenders use at least 4 billion gallons of biofuels a year. That is set to hit 7.5 billion gallons by 2012, but could ramp up even faster under a plan floated by Democrats, who took control of the House of Representatives in elections this week.
But scientists and other experts still disagree over how much energy biofuels could save, how much they'll cost in the long run, and how widespread use would affect the environment.
"If we're going to make sound decisions ... about energy, we need to understand what we're talking about," Bruce Dale, a chemical engineer at Michigan State University, said at the conference, sponsored by the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative Washington think tank.
Dale and many others are confident that switching from gasoline to corn-based ethanol would reduce greenhouse gases.
He said biofuels hold great promise overall if new technologies whittle down processing costs, which now account for the bulk of making ethanol, and can deliver more efficient ways to feed cattle.
Yet some in the U.S. farm sector worry about how expanding ethanol production could affect livestock production. Others worry about the true public policy costs of ethanol, which enjoys large government subsidies, and how much of the biofuel can be produced.
According to David Pimentel, an ecology and farm science expert at Cornell University, almost a fifth of U.S. corn goes to make ethanol today, but that amounts to a fuel equivalent of only about 1 percent of oil consumption.
Even if all U.S. corn went to make ethanol, he said, it would satisfy only a fraction of U.S. energy needs.
Lester Lave, an economist at Carnegie Mellon University, projected the cost of producing bioethanol -- currently around $0.60 a gallon -- could eventually get down to $0.34 a gallon.
That would make biofuels even more appealing if oil prices slide further. But Pimentel said that the economic and environmental costs of producing corn -- and other fuel fodder like woodchips, rapeseed, or switchgrass -- cannot be ignored.
Producing corn quickly becomes costly when one takes into account farm labor, machinery used in fields, and irrigation, Pimentel said. Policymakers must also think about soil erosion and the use of nitrogen fertilizers, he said.
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa003&articleID=890FF058169B5A1D1A7F07D467F1F57B
Many thanks Alpha!
what's happening on Monday alpha?
More blogging: New Type of Bio-Fuel Announced Wednesday, November 08, 2006
U.S. Sustainable Energy Corp. has announced a unique new patent-pending biofuel.
"A very fast to manufacture bio-diesel which has a high power output and the huge advantage that it does not turn to jelly in cold conditions!!
Well done guys!! - But why can't you drop the "spin-speak" and just say it in English
On the Sustainable Energy, Wood Pellet, Boilers, Alternative Energy, Biomass blog: http://wood-pellet-ireland.blogspot.com/2006/11/new-type-of-bio-fuel-announced.html
-----
USSE hits the blogosphere. WHo knows who these people are or what level of investigation they have done. To my reading it looks like knee jerk responses from people who have not read the recent lab results.
FWIW:
http://www.icis.com/blogs/biofuels/archives/2006/11/im-confused-by-this.html
ALSO
http://biodiesel.infopop.cc/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/419605551/m/9011060371/p/1
After or while you read it review the Nov 6 pr:
November 6, 2006 - 10:21 AM EST
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USSE 0.44 -0.05
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U.S. Sustainable Energy Corp. Announces Analysis Reports of Company's Unique Patent-Pending Green Biofuels Conducted by Summit Environmental Technologies, Inc.
Testing Shows Superior Biofuel Over Competition
U.S. Sustainable Energy Corp. (PINKSHEETS: USSE) announced today the revolutionary cold weather, viscosity and energy content properties of its unique green patent-pending biofuels as reported by Summit Environmental Technologies, Inc., an ISO, A2LA and NELAC certified environmental analytic laboratory utilizing the standard methods, SW-846 & ASTM NIOSH, to perform their tests.
"We are thrilled with the results that Summit has provided on our biofuel," stated John Rivera, CEO of USSEC. "Where the most efficient processes today create 1.5 gallons of an inferior biodiesel in over 24 hours, our proprietary technology allows us to create 5 gallons of a far superior biofuel in under 9 minutes. We believe Summit's analysis further validates that our patent-pending process combines both much higher yield and superior quality, which is essential for the sustainability of bio-renewable fuels. We will be expanding production to our new 4 reactor system generating 24,000 gallons per day in our Natchez facility within 10 weeks time. That system will be the first step in eradicating the nation's dependence on foreign fossil fuels."
The heating value, which is the amount of heat produced when the fuel is burned completely, is higher for the USSEC liquid biofuel than traditional biodiesel. Using ASTM D-240-76 testing standards, Summit reports the heating value of the USSEC biofuel is 128,000 BTU/gal. Traditional biodiesel, which typically has a value around 117,000 BTU/gal and compares favorably to petroleum diesel which typically has a heating value of 130,000 BTU/gal. For comparison, the heating value of typical regular unleaded gasoline is 114,200 BTU/gal, premium gasoline is 116,200 BTU/gal and jet fuel is 122,200 BTU/gal.
In addition the USSEC biofuel exhibits remarkable cold temperature physical properties. Using ASTM D-445 testing standards, Summit reports the pour point of the USSEC biofuels, which is an indication of the lowest temperature at which the fuel can be pumped, is typically less than or equal to -90°F. In fact, the USSEC biofuel did not freeze even at -90°F, the limit of the pour point detector. For comparison, the pour point for petroleum based diesel is around -16°F; the typical pour point for soy bean based bio diesel is 30°F. This allows the company's biofuel to be used in extremely cold temperature conditions.
The USSEC liquid biofuel cloud point is lower than the end temperature limit of the typical cloud point measurement. At low temperatures, paraffin constituents in a fuel oil may appear as a wax forming a cloud. Hence, cloud point is important since the wax formation can clog many fuel filters and render the engine useless. Using ASTM D-97 testing standards, Summit reports the USSEC biofuels may have a cloud point less than or equal to -70°F, even less than or equal to -90°F for some formulations. For comparison, cloud point for petroleum based diesel is about 15°F while the cloud point for soy bean based bio diesel is around 35°F. Thus in addition to being a valuable fuel in its own right, the USSEC biofuel can be used as a supplement or blended with other biofuels and diesels to dramatically improve their cold weather performance.
The USSEC biofuel has an outstanding flash point between that of regular gasoline and petroleum diesel. Using EPA 1010 testing standards, Summit reports the USSEC biodiesel exhibits a flash point ranging from 90°F to 95°F. While flash point can affect a fuel's performance in an engine, e.g., too low will cause the fuel to burn prematurely, causing decreased power and lowering fuel economies, it is primarily important from the viewpoint of safe fuel handling. For example, too low a flash point (high volatility) will cause the fuel to be a fire hazard, subject to flashing.
Finally, using ASTM D-445 testing standards, Summit reports the USSEC liquid biofuel has a viscosity (cSt at 50°C) ranging from 0.8 to 1.1. This range is lower than that of traditional bio-diesels, which range from 1.9 to 6.0 cSt. The higher viscosity of traditional biodiesel has been known to result in gum formation on injector, cylinder liner etc. For this reason, it has been required in the past to blend traditional biodiesel with petro-diesels in an amount of up to 20% of biodiesel. The lower viscosity associated with the USSEC biofuel avoids this gum-formation problem.
About U.S. Sustainable Energy
USSEC holds patent pending technology for a new breakthrough biofuel and carbon-based fertilizer. USSEC has successfully demonstrated the most cost effective method of producing biofuel estimated at $.50/gallon according to exhaustive studies and independent Lab confirmation. The company has developed the process, units and catalyst that will transform agricultural biomass into biofuel and fertilizer. This technology offers a solution for foreign oil dependence, balancing industrial and agricultural concerns with environmental issues and stabilizing and eventually reversing global greenhouse gas emissions. USSEC's research and development has successfully demonstrated the core technology in its fully functional facility located in Port Gibson, MS. The company is currently pursuing fully scalable implementation and deployment at further locations. Unlike other biomass gasification, the USSEC process can operate at a variety of scale, converting even waste biomass into fuel and fertilizer. The fuel produced will ultimately be more valuable than ethanol or methanol, and the USSEC process can convert biomass materials at an efficiency that cannot be matched by currently planned operations. In addition, unlike virtually all other approaches for biomass to energy, which deplete soil nutrients, the USSEC process restores and enhances soil mineral and carbon content. As a direct result of this revolutionary approach to integrated energy and fertilizer production from biomass, the USSEC process effectively removes Greenhouse Gases from the atmosphere, and can do so profitably before the value of Green Certificates and Carbon Credits are considered.
For further information on the company, please visit www.ussec.us.
Investors are cautioned that certain statements contained in this document as well as some statements in periodic press release and some oral statements are "Forward-Looking Statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (the "Act"). Forward-Looking statements include statements which are predictive in nature, which depend upon or refer to future events or conditions, which include words such as "believes," "anticipates," "intends," "plans," "expects," and similar expressions. In addition, any statements concerning future financial performance (including future revenues, earnings or growth rates), ongoing business strategies or prospects, and possible future actions, which may be provided by management, are also forward-looking statements as defined by the Act. Forward-Looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the Company to materially differ from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements and to vary significantly from reporting period to reporting period. Although management believes that the assumptions will, in fact, prove to be correct or that actual future results will not be different from the expectations expressed in this report. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and the Company has no specific intention to update these statements.
Source: Market Wire (November 6, 2006 - 10:21 AM EST)
News by QuoteMedia
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Hello deki51000 no news yet. Well except for a change in American government that may be less oil cartel friendly.
Who wants a positive change in the energy field?
EVERYONE (almost)