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Anybody seemn a CFO runing out the door? They are ALWAYS the first to bail if there is trouble brewing!
Hey cerp why not contact whoever it is you contact and find out why Jim is selling this insignificant stock. Oh and why not ask him if he would be interested in buying you out since your so unhappy?
Does't look like a normal day for this POS. Everybody go to sleep today?
Alrighty then! Pot calls kettle black! This isn't PLUG, BLDP or FCEL either now is it? And quite frankly it looks like this bohard was rather boring today. And hey how do you know that Jim isn't looking at hypersolar as a merger partner. The two technologies could complement each other quite well. Don't you think?
Have any of you geniuses look at a 1 year or 6 month history on this stock? No genie is going to pop out a bottle and make rich or even make you a dollar or two. This stock and company is dead. The only thing missing is the obituary. RIP
Sorry, while working to set up my post you beat me to it.
From their web site.
If some of you believe this is a lie then you should sell now and get the hell away from the rest of us.
A Breakthrough
Technology
HyperSolar has developed a breakthrough technology to make renewable hydrogen using sunlight and any source of water. Renewable hydrogen, the cleanest and greenest of all fuels, can be used as direct replacement for traditional hydrogen, which is usually produced by reforming CO2 emitting natural gas.
HyperSolar Eyes Growing Demand for Hydrogen
04/03/2014
SANTA BARBARA, CA--(Marketwired - Mar 4, 2014) - HyperSolar, Inc. (OTCQB: HYSR), the developer of a breakthrough technology to produce renewable hydrogen using sunlight and any source of water, today commented that it is strongly encouraged by recent commitments of Fortune 500 companies to use hydrogen fuel cells for a number of applications.
Last week, Walmart, the world's biggest retailer announced it had ordered an additional 1,738 GenDrive cells from Plug Power to be used in lift trucks at their six North American distribution centers. (http://onforb.es/1evJK2k)
In January of this year, both Sprint and FedEx announced they were increasing their use of fuel cell technology. Sprint said it would begin deploying hydrogen fuel cell technology as backup power to rooftop network sites replacing diesel generators. (http://bit.ly/1fwaknu) FedEx placed an order with Plug Power for Fuel Cell Extenders to increase the range of their fleet of electric delivery trucks. (http://bit.ly/1kymv86)
Tim Young, CEO of HyperSolar, commented, "With our commitment to develop a method for onsite renewable hydrogen production, we are encouraged by the growing demand for hydrogen production infrastructure. Toyota, Hyundai, and Honda have led the way with recent announcements about new fuel cell cars. Many big companies, including Walmart, are now using fuel cells to power warehouse lift trucks. We believe that Sprint's commitment to deploy fuel cells as a source of backup power is just the very small tip of the very large iceberg for this type of application."
"The missing link for commercial success is an economical source of renewable hydrogen," continued Mr. Young. "Today the feedstock to produce hydrogen for all these commercial applications is natural gas. While natural gas is plentiful, the supply is not infinite and it certainly isn't renewable. Also, there is a distribution problem that must be solved. At HyperSolar, our goal is to use our proprietary technology to produce renewable hydrogen at or near the point of distribution or deployment."
HyperSolar's research is centered on developing a low-cost and submersible hydrogen production particle that can split water molecules under the sun, emulating the core functions of photosynthesis. Each particle is a complete hydrogen generator that contains a novel high voltage solar cell bonded to chemical catalysts by a proprietary encapsulation coating. A video of an early proof-of-concept prototype can be viewed at http://hypersolar.com/application.php. HyperSolar recently extended its sponsored research agreement with UCSB to further the development.
About HyperSolar, Inc.
HyperSolar is developing a breakthrough, low cost technology to make renewable hydrogen using sunlight and any source of water, including seawater and wastewater. Unlike hydrocarbon fuels, such as oil, coal and natural gas, where carbon dioxide and other contaminants are released into the atmosphere when used, hydrogen fuel usage produces pure water as the only byproduct. By optimizing the science of water electrolysis at the nano-level, our low cost nanoparticles mimic photosynthesis to efficiently use sunlight to separate hydrogen from water, to produce environmentally friendly renewable hydrogen. Using our low cost method to produce renewable hydrogen, we intend to enable a world of distributed hydrogen production for renewable electricity and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. To learn more about HyperSolar, please visit our website at http://www.HyperSolar.com.
Safe Harbor Statement
Matters discussed in this press release contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. When used in this press release, the words "anticipate," "believe," "estimate," "may," "intend," "expect" and similar expressions identify such forward-looking statements. Actual results, performance or achievements could differ materially from those contemplated, expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements contained herein, and while expected, there is no guarantee that we will attain the aforementioned anticipated developmental milestones. These forward-looking statements are based largely on the expectations of the Company and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties. These include, but are not limited to, risks and uncertainties associated with: the impact of economic, competitive and other factors affecting the Company and its operations, markets, product, and distributor performance, the impact on the national and local economies resulting from terrorist actions, and U.S. actions subsequently; and other factors detailed in reports filed by the Company.
Press Contact:
Tim Young
HyperSolar, Inc.
510 Castillo St. Suite 304
Santa Barbara, CA 93101
Email Contact
Office: 805-966-6566
Thanks. Just got back from a birding trip to the gulf coast.
Sat down opened up my accounts and felt my jaw drop. Up 2G so far on hysr am one happy dude here.
The competition.
Energy sector’s newest power player: Elon Musk
March 02, 2014
78,161 832 Likers114 Comments
inShare
2,430
Elon Musk has established a well-deserved reputation for designing and building things that take off quickly — rockets, electric cars … and stock prices. But his biggest impact won’t necessarily be in speeding up how we get from here to there. It may be in transforming a much slower-moving industry: electric utilities.
Musk’s transportation companies, Tesla Motors and SpaceX, as well as SolarCity, the solar company whose board he chairs — not to mention the still-theoretical Hyperloop high-speed rail system — are tied together by one underlying idea: how we power things is archaic and inefficient. And in his peerless zeal and passion to reinvent automobiles, space travel and more, he is — wittingly or not — creating innovative and less-polluting energy ecosystems.
A key component of that ecosystem was announced last week: a $5 billion, 10-million-square-foot so-called gigafactory, to be located somewhere in the western United States, for producing lithium-ion batteries. These are the devices that power much of our rechargeable world, from phone and laptops to — well, electric vehicles. The 7,000 or so standard-issue lithium-ion batteries crammed into a Tesla Model S, for example, enable it to go from zero to 60 in less time than it takes to say “We design, develop, manufacture and sell high-performance fully electric vehicles and advanced electric-vehicle power train components,” the opening line of the company's IPO application.
Until Tesla, battery technology hadn't historically advanced to the point where it could provide consumers with an electric vehicle that had compelling range and performance, one reason why incumbent automobile manufacturers focused largely on hybrid-electric vehicles instead of pure electric models. The lithium-ion battery cells Tesla uses have evolved to the point that they can provide higher energy density, or more energy per kilogram, at a lower cost per energy unit than competing battery cell chemistries.
By building its own battery factory, Tesla is doing what it does best: engineering and building a higher-performance, lower-cost version of an existing technology. Those batteries will help usher in Tesla’s third-generation vehicle, a relatively affordable mass-market vehicle.
But the company’s gigafactory stands to energize much more than that. By optimizing the price and performance of rechargeable energy storage, Tesla stands to upend the staid business model of electric utilities.
In December, SolarCity — co-founded and run by Musk’s cousins, Lyndon and Peter Rive — announced a service, called DemandLogic, to install and operate lithium-ion batteries made by Tesla alongside photovoltaic panels. As GreenBiz.com reported,
Business customers sign a 10-year contract with monthly fees, rather than purchase the batteries and solar panels up front. SolarCity is also putting combined solar-storage systems at residential buildings in California but has not yet made that offering generally available.
The batteries themselves are the same used in Telsa's electric cars, but packaged with power electronics to store solar energy, provide power to a building and connect to the grid. The entire system is remotely monitored by SolarCity.
The ability to store solar (and wind) energy in batteries has long been considered renewable power’s killer app. Batteries allow renewable power to be utilized when the sun isn’t shining and the wind isn’t blowing. Marrying solar with batteries — and doing so with innovative financing that doesn’t require a hefty downpayment — is a game changer for owners of homes and commercial and industrial buildings. That's SolarCity's ploy.
It’s not just about saving money — or being environmentally responsible, for that matter. It’s about resilience. As the electricity grid becomes less and less reliable — whether from outages due to extreme weather, physical and cyber attacks on power stations and grid operators, fuel shortages or other factors — being able to operate a business or simply keep the freezer cold will become of growing importance. Never mind the ability to keep streetlights and traffic lights powered, ATMs humming and the Internet streaming.
For utilities, this may be the beginning of the end of the current monopolistic business model. Today's electric power utilities could lose half of their addressable market to energy efficiency, solar and storage and other distributed generation technologies, according to "Energy Darwinism — the evolution of the energy industry," a recent report from the investment banking arm of Citibank.
Traditional utilities’ central power plants have been a vital service to building economies around the world, but today’s market needs — not to mention the disruptive specter of climate change — demands a new, distributed business model. Much like the Internet itself, energy needs to be a dynamic ecosystem where at any given time an electricity customer can be either an energy producer or consumer. That opens to door to a new generation of products and services, including arbitrageurs that negotiate prices and redirect kilowatts in real time in order to provide the grid with the electricity it needs. (Think eBay for energy.)
The SolarCity-Tesla hook-up already is providing some of what utilities have traditionally offered. As Laurie Guevara-Stone at the Rocky Mountain Institute recently put it:
What's really exciting in the solar-plus-battery arena is what batteries offer beyond backup — to both solar PV and the grid and utilities. Voltage and frequency regulation. Black-start capability after macro- or microgrid outages. Using batteries as a less expensive alternative to peaking plants during high demand periods. Demand charge reductions via peak shaving. Shifting load profiles with batteries to take better advantage of time-of-use electricity pricing. The list goes on.
The threat to utilities is hardly hidden. “Our business model is to become the energy company of the 21st century,” SolarCity CEO Lyndon Rive told The Atlantic late last year. “You’re still connected to the grid but the grid would be your secondary provider and the primarily provider would be your solar system and your storage device.” Imagine: coal-fired power plants as back-up, not primary power.
Tesla and SolarCity are hardly alone in this quest, and lithium-ion batteries are only one of several promising energy storage technologies. There’s compressed air, liquid air, pumped-storage hydro, flywheels, superconducting magnets, molten salt, underground hydrogen and more. Each of these has its own ecosystem of startups, funders, pilot projects and potential customers. And each is vying for what is seen to be a massive market opportunity that will upend how we think about, buy and use energy.
But Musk is alone in leading the disruption, what with his hyper-ambition, systems thinking and almost limitless ability to attract money and attention. Will Tesla’s sleek vehicles someday be an afterthought, much like the Apple II, largely forgotten amid Steve Jobs’ roiling of the media and entertainment industries?
It could well be that Tesla’s Roadster, Model S and whatever comes next will be mere vehicles to a new energy future.
Hope you get better belief on the 10b than I did! But then it's a mother this time so maybe they will believe.
I do believe that I have posted more than once that that 300% percent was meaningless until the quarterly post. So I do not see that as a negative post but a realistic assessment of the current situation. My last post was and is aimed at anyone who posts unsupported ramblings about this company being a scam. And I will attack any posting that can not support those accusations.
ENOUGH, ENOUGH! Some of you are making me craze! STOP THIS ASSINE DEBATE AS WHETHER OR SOLAR3D IS A SCAM. Damn! There are some of us here who have been on this stock since almost day ONE!
We have done our home work! A couple of us have talked to Jim Nelson one on one. A couple of us have spoken with SunWorks! STOP THIS NONSENSE NOW!
This is all real. The fact that it is not happening at a pace some of you who like to see is totally IRRELEVANT, it will happen in it's it's own allotted time. NOT ON MY TIMELINE, NOT IN YOUR TIMELINE!
Your speculations, questions, doubts, hesitations, nightmares, daydreams, fictions are your own. Keep them to yourselves. If you feel the need to post TRY FACTS!
ENOUGH ALREADY!
This goes back to 2010.
Check out hypersolars site.
More like 3.7 billion not to be to exact here.
Yep, yessiree, the sun now sets in the east the north pole is now the south pole. East is west.
Pretty much see this one as a long term wait just like sltd. I know there are a few flippers here however I think those that just settle in and wait will get the big payoff eventually.
You are correct and then he will lose his as by hanging on. A reverse will kill you every time.
Oh here is some light reading for you. This is the forum that JERRY (CEO). JERRY, ESTABLISH FOR THE PURPOSE OF OPEN COMMUNICATION! Please note the last posting was four days ago. Please also note that all those red thingies point to post ( questions) that have been archived, READ CENSORED, by Jerry. See he doesn't like to be challenged, OR answer questions. That last part of course is probably in violation of SEC rules, but who cares, right?
Unbelievable! There is idiot that thinks that someone will give them .0004 for this crap! Whoeeee Whoeeee. Twilight zone just ahead!
What funding? They haven't been able to raise a dime in months and months now! What makes you think it will happen now? I like making money as well as anyone and I' m patient as hell, but even I run out of it. "Tolstoy said: SLOW AND STEADY WINS THE DAY". However he was talking about war. There is a limit to everything.
Oh I see that this wonderful stock is exactly where it was at opening! Hmmmmm?
Hey by the way, sorry I gave such grief. Sometimes I just don't want to believe someones an ASS ( Read CEO) until I see the color of it. Live and learn. Right?
Actually I think he is involved in some company that is creating an extract of MJ.
Was it Tolstoy who said "SLOW AND STEADY WINS THE RACE"? . Yes I believe it was! I wonder what he meant?
Won't help. You can't rise the dead, and this is dead. IMO
This in the intro of this very ihub company page. Read it and weep!
Shares Outstanding 1,119,040,557 per T/A as of Dec 16th
Restricted O/S = 246,017,687 per latest Filing
Float
Non-Res O/S = 680,207,223
Authorized Shares 5,000,000,000
Called T/A and Using the latest 10k and subtracting the restricted shares to show the public float.Restricted and non restricted are estimated since T/A is gagged.The restricted number was the last official number we recieved from the T/A around Sept 1st 2013
From. http://www.vastenergy.com/faqs.htm
Read it all if you wish but below should be enough.
Can technology guarantee to find oil and gas?
The advanced technologies, such 3-D seismic, good geological and geophysical data and drilling techniques are far more advanced and precise then ever before. This can help identify certain surface and subsurface features, which may indicate the presence of oil and/or gas, but there are still no guarantees of finding oil and/or gas until a well is actually drilled, tested, and completed. However, good technolgy and geological studies can help reduce risk substantially.
How long does it take to complete a well?
ssuming completion does not encounter any setbacks or delays, a standard shallow well will typically take 2 to 4 weeks, while a deeper well may take us much as 4 to 12 weeks. It also depends on the amount of completion equipment being installed and distance to production facilities.
How long does it take to drill a Well?
Assuming drilling operations do not encounter any setbacks or delays, a standard vertical well 2,000 to 5,000 feet in depth will take 5 to 20 days; a well 5,000 to 10,000 ft., 20 to 40 days; and a well from 10,000 to 14,000 ft. 40 to 150 days. However, these estimates very dramatically and have many other variables to consider such as rock quality, formation pressure, rig type, etc...
Here's some DD on what this fracking bss is all about along with an idea is to how long it should take to get in production. Compare to lenght of time this company has been trying to do this.
This is interesting, note date.
http://www.implu.com/releases/2011/20110908/58918/implu_viewer?f=3
You know you are talking about people on this board, at least some of them. They seem to think they hit the jackpot here. Well they are half correct they do have a pot or pit or......
Hey there your starting to get it. Oh the company is broke and does not have a drilling permit for it's oil site.
http://search.sunbiz.org/Inquiry/CorporationSearch/GetDocument?aggregateId=domp-p12000014797-65308beb-04f4-4e32-9265-ac3fe4e76b63&transactionId=p12000014797-ef593e0e-17f4-42c9-8151-5e96a4ceef55&formatType=Image
Plz note the filing date also note it has not been updated with correct addys.
http://www.secinfo.com/d12391.x7.htm. Jerry info. Note he is a Canadian citizen.
Please note that Jerry lives in Ft. lauderdale