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.
Thanks Technoman...I am glad youe decided to share this information...Funding is upon us...so that must mean that we have a large backer too?
$1.07 Nice close!
ANy clues if bond money going to be this year?
TECHNO-I am curious what did Joe Sanzero state during your lunch with him on Tuesday....
Well I am back and I look forward to the unveiling of news in during the next 1-3 months. The PA site could be ready as soon as October which is only a couple of weeks away. Also does anybody have any ideas on how much money FFI plans on raising to construct their plants seperate from bond applications?
Nice to see that there is some movement. I look forward to seeing if NSOL crosses over in the MACD from negative to positive tommorrow. If that happens we should move up at least 0.15-0.20. Interesting to note the same trend has occured prior to each significant run of this stock. When the 50 day crosses the 200 day moving averages followed by a rebound to a higher base (if you look at the 3 year chart).
By the way I met a very interesting individual who invested in startech before they went public. He mentioned that in New York that Startech is working with New York Solid Waste to set up their systems to incenerate the trash within New York. I suspect that FFI will be involved with an ethonal plant in New York too.
It is nice being up for the past 26 hours. I will set a new record probably stay up for 40 hours. I am at the airport in Brazil. I will scope it out so when NSOL hits we can all celebrate here. So far the weather is nice and yes...the woman are beautiful.
Now I would like to see some news out on NSOL while I wait for my next flight at this internet cafe.
The good news is there is a total minimum planned 350 million gallons of ethanol. That means that when these plants are built that will be minimum 700 million in reveue.
Thanks Technoman....for sharing your information at the meeting...I still have my shares and I am waiting like evrybody else....might be another 6 months before we get serious movement in the stock price.
Plus, the ethanol plant was unvieled in the 10-Q so this was known from that point...
Until FFI, proves that it can obtain financing, just like PEIX and XTHN have done its not going to move way up. NVAO has a very low float at it moved up just because of that....I like the news, but it is not the catalyst investors are looking for that will move the stock up. Until the company proves it can obtain financing on one ethanol plant, then these PR might have an effect that is more than what we are seeing. The other possibility is NSOL does not have enough investors aware it.
Overall it is a good quarterly report....
Remember way back....NSOL gave one million shares in exchange, for the scientist services!
I do not care for this statement. If collected.........
In addition to the revenue provided by the license agreement with IPTH, additional financing is required in order to meet our current and projected cash flow deficits from operations and development. We are seeking financing in the form of equity in order to provide the necessary working capital. We currently have no commitments for financing. There is no guarantee that we will be successful in raising the funds required. We intend to use the proceeds derived from revenues or financing to pay salaries, and general and administrative expenses to maintain the core operations of the company. By adjusting our operations and development to the level of capitalization, we believe that the annual expected license revenue of $970,000 if collected will be sufficient to sustain the basic company operations over the next 12 months.
Here is some new information
The establishment of Liquidyne Fuels coincides with a purchase option on a potential property site in Union County, Iowa to construct the first conventional ethanol production facility. We are currently developing the project and bringing together the necessary elements--including permits, corn/grain contracts and financing--to operate a proposed 50 million gallon per year conventional ethanol production facility at the site. We paid $7,500 for the option to purchase approximately 110 acres for $824,550. The option expires January 8, 2007.
It is okay...lol...no need for a collection fund. But, if that is the case send me to Australia or New Zealand. I have never been there.
497K shares....I hope there is signifacant news...So it would make that vacation that much better! Anybody think that the last few days was a shake out attempt by the MM just like last time right before it ran to 2.35. Volume appears to be consistent. Maybe we will see 800K+ today.
1.07/1.06
NSOL has less than 8 days before I go on vacation again. I want to see the stock move on the Bond money. But, with my luck, I will be gone when it happens as always.
410K shares traded so far. Not bad for this stock so early for a Monday.
Technoman...What is an update on the progress of the bond money? I called Fred Frisco, but he has not returned my phone call. Any ideas?
Israel approves truce, continues barrage By RAMIT PLUSHNICK-MASTI, Associated Press Writer
28 minutes ago
JERUSALEM - After a stormy debate Sunday, Israel's Cabinet approved a Mideast cease-fire, agreeing to silence the army's guns in less than 24 hours. The Israeli military embarked on a last-minute push to devastate Hezbollah guerrillas, rocketing south Beirut with at least 20 missiles.
ADVERTISEMENT
The 24-0 vote, with one abstention, came a day after the Lebanese government approved the agreement and Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah gave his grudging consent. The truce was to take effect Monday morning.
But questions as to the truce's durability quickly arose Sunday, when the Lebanese Cabinet canceled a critical meeting that was supposed to discuss the deployment of 15,000 troops to southern Lebanon, a key part of the cease-fire deal. Published reports said the Cabinet had been sharply divided over demands that Hezbollah surrender its weapons.
A heated debate erupted during Israel's Cabinet session, with minister Ofir Pines-Paz criticizing the government's decision to order an expanded ground offensive in the days before the cease-fire is to take effect.
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said the cease-fire agreement would ensure that "Hezbollah won't continue to exist as a state within a state."
"The Lebanese government is our address for every problem or violation of the agreement," Army Radio quoted him as saying.
The Israeli Cabinet session came as some 30,000 Israeli troops fought heavy battles with Hezbollah a day after 24 soldiers were killed in the highest Israeli toll of the monthlong war.
As the vote took place, Israeli shells slammed into the hard-hit Dahiyeh suburb, a Hezbollah stronghold just south of Beirut. Lebanese television reports said the strike destroyed a complex of eight residential buildings where at least six families lived. TV footage panned across massive damage that appeared to stretch for several hundred yards in all directions.
An Associated Press photographer who reached the scene saw the body of one child being removed from the wreckage. He said Israeli jets were still in the air overhead.
The explosions reverberated across the Lebanese capital, and there were reports of other strikes south of the city on the Christian town of Damour and a nearby village, dl-Naameh. Those reports could not be independently verified.
Earlier Sunday, Israeli warplanes fired missiles into gasoline stations in the southern port city of Tyre, killing at least 12 people in those and other attacks.
The cease-fire was to go into effect at 8 a.m Monday. After a halt in fighting, some 15,000 Lebanese troops and an equal number of U.N. forces were to be deployed in south Lebanon and create a Hezbollah-free zone, from the Israel-Lebanon border to Lebanon's Litani River, 18 miles away.
Israel said it hopes Lebanese troops will start deploying quickly, within a week or two.
"When the Lebanese and multinational force enters, Israel will withdraw and not before," Israeli Cabinet minister Yaacov Edri said after the Cabinet vote.
Former Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz abstained in the vote, said a senior government official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The Lebanese government approved the deal Saturday, and Nasrallah signaled grudging acceptance, but also warned that "the war has not ended." On Sunday, Hezbollah fired more than 150 rockets at northern Israel, killing an Israeli man.
In the Cabinet meeting, Olmert praised the cease-fire agreement approved by the U.N. Security Council, saying it will prevent a return to the status quo in which Hezbollah ran a state-within-a-state in south Lebanon, participants said.
The deal was seen at best as a draw with Hezbollah, and some felt Israel — unable to subdue a guerrillas force — had lost.
Neither the Lebanese army nor U.N. forces can be counted on to challenge Hezbollah and prevent the Iran-supplied guerrillas from rearming, military experts and commentators said.
The deal buys a period of calm, at best, and sets the region up for the next war with Tehran's proxy army, critics said. The truce will be "a time-out until the next confrontation, and maybe not even this," commentator Nahum Barnea wrote in Israel's Yediot Ahronot daily.
The Cabinet session was overshadowed by rising Israeli casualties. Twenty-four soldiers were killed Saturday and at least 73 wounded.
Hezbollah appeared to be fighting as fiercely as ever. The guerrillas shot down an Israeli helicopter, a first in the war, and killed five crew members. Other troops were killed by Hezbollah anti-tank missiles. The army said it killed more than 50 Hezbollah fighters.
The violence has claimed more than 900 lives: at least 763 in Lebanon — mostly civilians_ and 147 Israelis, including 109 soldiers. On Saturday, 19 Lebanese civilians were killed in Israeli air raids, one of which blasted a highway near the last open border crossing to Syria.
Lebanon's Cabinet said Israel's military push presented a "flagrant challenge" to the international community after the U.N. resolution was issued.
President Bush had an 8-minute phone call Saturday with Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora to discuss the truce. The White House said it is determined to vanquish the hold of Hezbollah — and that of its Syrian and Iranian benefactors — on the south.
"These steps are designed to stop Hezbollah from acting as a state within a state, and put an end to Iran and Syria's efforts to hold the Lebanese people hostage to their own extremist agenda," Bush said.
____
I think it was a very good article.
I only want to see FFI succeed. I unfortuanetly am on the West Coast so I cannot just appear there and witness what you witnessed. I believe you are probably right technoman. For a final word do not leave this board because you have more information than most. I appreciate your information. I want to see the company succeed withing beginning building their first plant shortly...I will wait...thats all I can do...
I called NJEDA to confirm if FFI will be present on August 8th, 2006 for final approval. FFI is not on the list. The company has to still get someone to purchase the bonds prior to getting the final approval. I was dissapointed because I thought next week would be the week. I guess when I go on vacation in September is when it will happen.
Now it is almost a sure thing that FFI will be at the NJEDA August 8th meeting to finalize the bond money.
I like the letter, but I do not like how it suggest that until they recieve working capital, then the bond money will be finalized. It almost sounds like they are telling us that it may be awhile or the flip side of the coin is that they have raised the money and that things will be going forward. Maybe Monday we will get a PR stated that FFI raised millions of dollars. Maybe someone like Bill Gates is backing FFI. That will help get FFI on the map.
FFI better close the deal with the bond money in August. If they do not it will be a big dissapointment. They will miss their conservative estimates for the beginning of construction to start by late summer. Summer ends on September 23, 2006.
Also when will we get an update about their Nuclear Detector. They were in possible discussions with Homeland Security. Did anything come to fruition with those discussions?
It is time that we get an update on TWR. What is the plan for TWR? Wait until FFI is up and running before they pursue NSOL tehcnologies.
All I care about is FFI secures final approval for the 84 million dollar bond on August 8th, 2006. All we have is 12 more days of waiting.
Allright 1.17 ask. Maybe the MM are tired of shorting and are calculating that they have less than 2 weeks to cover their short position.
Thanks for sharing Jeff that information!
I hope that NSOL detector will be tested in the New York trial test.
So much for NSOL nuclear detector system. NSOL just lost out on a a total of 1.1 billion dollars to upgrade nuclear detection equipment across the country.
Government orders better nuclear scanners By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 37 minutes ago
WASHINGTON - Nuclear detectors that shouldn't be triggered by cat litter and other harmless materials will be installed this fall at major seaports and border crossings, the government said Friday.
ADVERTISEMENT
The rollout of the high-tech systems to detect radiological substances arriving in the United States will be at the Port of New York and New Jersey, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said.
The department also is expanding a test program to prevent nuclear and dirty-bomb materials already in the U.S. from entering New York City, he said.
The estimated 670 detectors currently in place at ports and borders have long frustrated Homeland Security officials because of false positives triggered by medical supplies, cat litter, banana truckloads and other innocuous materials with low levels of naturally occurring radiation.
"We don't want to send the red flag up every time someone moves a shipment in of perfectly respectable granite," Chertoff told reporters in announcing $1.1 billion in contracts to three companies to help develop and deploy the systems. Officials said the new detectors are expected to reduce about 831,000 false positives each year to 15,000.
The department wants to have 80 of the new detectors in place by this fall, Chertoff said, and 1,400 for the nation's 317 ports of entry by 2011. The new scanners cost an estimated $350,000 each, about double the price of each detector currently in place.
Congressional investigators in March questioned whether the cost of the scanner upgrades would be worth the results. The Governmental Accountability Office continues to analyze a Homeland Security cost-benefits plan justifying the expense, said GAO assistant director Jim Shafer.
While the new scanners may cut down on false positive rates, "these things are marginal gains" against "extremely high costs," Shafer said in an interview Friday.
Penrose Albright, who led Homeland Security's border nuclear detection program before leaving the agency a year ago, said the new scanners will "dramatically complicate the lives of people who want to smuggle materials."
But Albright noted that the detectors still won't be alerted to uranium or plutonium shielded by thick cases of lead. And installing them above speeding traffic on highways or bridges — as Homeland Security is considering in metropolitan New York — raises questions about how vehicles would then be stopped, he said.
Chertoff said the department was looking at ways to put the detectors in a variety of transportation byways — roads, rails and seaports — outside New York. Scanners already are in place at the Holland Tunnel and John F. Kennedy International Airport, said Vayl S. Oxford, director of the department's domestic nuclear detection office.
The three companies awarded the contracts are Raytheon Co. and Thermo Electron Corp., both of Waltham, Mass., and Canberra Industries Inc., of Meriden, Conn.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060714/ap_on_sc/nuclear_detectors
Isreal started the long war as it promised back on July 4th, 2006. Now that oil is $78 and appears to be going higher on supply fears ethanol stocks may become HOT again. This will bring new light on Americas dependence on foreign oil. Maybe additional legislation from congress will be past in the comming months to increase the use of ethanol beyond 10%.
I like the new website. Now that it is in place we can expect that the significant news will be released shortly. Maybe tommorrow will be the bond money news....
OT: It looks like Isreal will start a war!
Israel warns of "long war" By Nidal al-Mughrabi
1 hour, 28 minutes ago
GAZA (Reuters) - Israel defied a Tuesday deadline set by Gaza militants for the release of Palestinian prisoners and warned Hamas leaders the "sky will fall on them" if an abducted Israeli soldier is harmed.
ADVERTISEMENT
With Israeli tanks and infantry massing along the Gaza Strip's northern border, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said the campaign launched last week to free Corporal Gilad Shalit could turn into "a long war."
Increasing political pressure on Olmert to launch a broad ground offensive, Palestinian militants carried out their deepest rocket attack yet against Israel, hitting a school yard in the coastal city of Ashkelon, causing no injuries.
Israel ignored a 6 a.m. (0300 GMT) ultimatum set by three militant factions, among them the Hamas armed wing, to begin freeing 1,000 Palestinian prisoners, as well as jailed women and youths, in exchange for Shalit.
The factions vowed not to release any information about the soldier and pulled out of negotiations with Egyptian mediators trying to end the standoff, a Hamas political leader said.
But Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas called on the factions to return to the negotiating table, putting himself at odds with militants who said further discussions over Shalit's fate were out of the question.
Haniyeh, whom Israel has hinted could be targeted for assassination, also urged militants to keep Shalit alive.
The factions had warned Israel that it will "bear full responsibility for future consequences" if their prisoner swap demands were not met.
Israel has given the army a green light to launch a deeper incursion into northern Gaza, though there was no indication when it might begin, the Maariv newspaper reported.
"Hamas well understands ... that the sky will fall on them if they harm Gilad Shalit," Israeli Interior Minister Roni Bar-On said.
"LONG WAR"
"This is a long war," Olmert said. "It requires lots of patience, sometimes endless restraint. We have to know when to clench our teeth and to deal a decisive blow."
Washington has been urging Israel to show restraint and take steps to minimize civilian casualties.
Israel Television's military affairs correspondent, who is briefed regularly by the army, said after Ashkelon was hit that the attack could lead to an Israeli ground offensive aimed at taking over the northern Gaza Strip.
Hamas's armed wing, the Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, said it fired the rocket.
Hamas accused Israel of trying to topple its three-month-old government, which the Jewish state and Western powers have pushed to the brink of financial collapse by cutting off aid.
The smallest of the three militant groups, the previously unknown Islamic Army, said there would be no further information released on 19-year-old Shalit, who was seized in a cross-border raid on June 25.
"Whether he will be killed or not killed, we will not disclose any information," said Islamic Army spokesman Abu al-Muthana. He later added: "We do not kill captives. Our Islam requires that we treat captives well and fairly."
Israel has said it will hold moderate Palestinian President Mohammed Abbas and the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority (PA) responsible for Shalit's safety.
"Gilad Shalit is alive," said David Baker, a spokesman for Olmert's office. "The PA must bring about his immediate and unconditional return to Israel."
Israel has hinted it could assassinate leaders of Hamas, whose government is under an international aid embargo, if Shalit is not freed. "None of them will be immune," Olmert said.
Hamas, which advocates Israel's destruction, does not want to lose face by freeing Shalit without getting something in return. Israel says it does not want to set a precedent that could lead to more abductions.
Israeli security sources said a commando raid to try to rescue Shalit remained an option but would be risky in Gaza's maze of alleyways. The last Israeli soldier abducted by Palestinians was killed in a failed rescue bid in 1994.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060704/ts_nm/mideast1_dc_2;_ylt=Ak14Mv4DP_y8673N4BCnwhUUvioA;_ylu=X3oDM...
Tomatoes- What else did you here besides that good things occured? Anything? You mention that this is growing into bigger things....like what more ethanol plants?
I cannot wait to see the Bond money news. Does anybody think we will see a 20 million share trading day when it gets released? Also the MM are walking this up 1.20 on a measly 12K share volume.