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Pitt77

11/23/10 9:18 PM

#24037 RE: emailjanum #24034

I also wonder about the supremacy of institutions. For example, the judge's role on the process of a BK. Thus, a case of unfinished investigation, I question me whether the SEC may order the judge to stick to what the company gives him as documents and proceed with a normal output of BK. However, considering the following stage shornaked trading, like any other process that would the case of this institution (SEC), and thus force an amendment giving us justice. It's just a hypothesis, but might be unrealistic given the compexité of the problem..

KFC44

11/24/10 8:59 AM

#24039 RE: emailjanum #24034

Looks like pretty simple evidence to me.

A lot of what I mentioned on this borad previously is in here.

Note: I personally have paid a lot for information supplied by Deloitte Consulting LLP. I have most of the things that ABWTQ has in terms of where the future value lies -- and much of this work was done before their second amended POR. Disclosure -- Disclosure. Intent to mid-lead? or Intent to defraud?


Thanks to In0nS for finding this.

AbitibiBowater thinks green on growth

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By Tom Hals
WILMINGTON, Delaware | Tue Nov 23, 2010 11:36pm IST
(Reuters) - David Paterson wants to use the bankruptcy do-over for AbitibiBowater Inc to lead the world's largest newsprint maker to greener pastures, including green energy.

The company's chief executive said that, when AbitibiBowater emerges from bankruptcy in a few weeks, he will present to the new board plans for transforming the company away from one tied to the ailing newspaper industry.

That may include "substantial" investments aimed at expanding the company's energy production.

"There's a lot of opportunity we've identified to sell biomass or other green energies," Paterson told Reuters in a telephone interview. "We will try to find ways to become a green energy seller."

A Delaware bankruptcy court confirmed the company's plan of reorganization on Monday which transferred equity to bondholders in return for wiping away billions of dollars in debt.

Existing shares will be wiped out.

The Montreal-based company, which is Canada's largest employer in forest products, is expected to emerge from bankruptcy by the end of the year.

Transforming a pulp-and-paper mill operator to a green energy producer is not as radical as it sounds.

The company already owns or has a stake in hydroelectric operations that generate 300 megawatts of power, enough to power about 200,000 homes. In addition, six of the company's seven North American cogeneration power plants were generating green energy from carbon-neutral biomass.

The company also generates power from methane captured from landfills and black liquor, a byproduct of in manufacturing wood pulp. For now, this energy is supporting the company's mills, but Paterson said AbitibiBowater could make investments to change that.

"We're hoping to convince the new board that those are good investments and we can get going with them," Paterson said.

The Canadian government has thrown its support behind green energy production by pulp producers that can expand their co-generation capacity, giving AbitibiBowater an added incentive to expand its energy operations.

Paterson plans to direct the company away from its reliance on newsprint toward coated and specialty papers with a higher barrier to entry.

"We can either keep shrinking the company as the market shrinks or invest to make other grades that don't have the same demand characteristics as newsprint," said Paterson.

Paterson, who led Bowater into the 2007 merger with Abitibi Consolidated and then led the merged company into bankruptcy in 2009, also plans to focus on expanding international sales to growing markets.

PART 2


"We've seen quite a substantial recovery in global markets," he said.

He singled out Brazil, Turkey and China as areas of interest for the company's international push.

A global strategy carries risks. The U.S. dollar has fallen sharply since the middle of 2010, which should help the foreign pricing of the company's products.

However, much of AbitibiBowater's production takes place in Canada and is priced in Canadian dollars. During bankruptcy, the company was left exposed to currency changes and Paterson said AbitibiBowater will adopt a "conservative" currency hedging strategy.

Bankruptcy carries huge risks for companies. While the company battles creditors and shareholders over a reorganization, key executives tend to drift away, competitors peel away jittery customers and long-held relations are put to the test.

Many companies emerge from creditor protection and in a few years are gobbled up by a competitor or return to the bankruptcy court.

So how will AbitibiBowater look in several years?

"Hopefully at the end of that period, people will view us less as a newsprint company, but more as a diversified forest products company."

(Additional reporting by Allan Dowd in Vancouver; editing by Andre Grenon).