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BRIG_88

04/25/12 10:09 AM

#179343 RE: Stock #179341

Good point. JBI seems to be getting by anyway....it makes me wonder how Exxon can take an entire crew and equipment half way around the world...pay them to drill...pump out oil....ship it half way around the world....refine it...then ship the fuel all over the US...and yet still make money....it boggles the mind eh?....just boggleingin'
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capra1

04/25/12 10:18 AM

#179348 RE: Stock #179341

A great many are dropped off by the individual auto wreckers , glad to rid them as land fill sites will not take them
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StockSnyper

04/25/12 10:20 AM

#179351 RE: Stock #179341

Consider that the cost of transport to the shredding facility is picked up by the entity that is trying to get rid of those tanks, i.e. scrap yard. The only shipping cost is from the shredding facility to the processors, and the last time I checked it was not that far. You seem to imply that these things are being shipped 10,000 miles, when in fact they are not.
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NewMoney

04/25/12 10:23 AM

#179354 RE: Stock #179341

Nah, the gas tanks are arriving on a regular basis. As a matter of fact they can actually be seen in this excellent segment from the Discover Channel.

See it here:http://watch.discoverychannel.ca/#clip641572
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Rawnoc

04/25/12 10:31 AM

#179367 RE: Stock #179341

DEAD WRONG. The plastic gets delivered to JBII at no cost.

"The principal goods that we require for our P2O operations are the waste plastic that we use feedstock for production of our fuels. We collect waste plastics, at no charge, from commercial and industrial business that generate large amounts of this waste stream. Furthermore, such waste plastic is delivered to us by such businesses at no cost to us."

http://www.otcmarkets.com/edgar/GetFilingHtml?FilingID=8491922

JBII doesn't care if it's shipped from the dark side of the moon (to quote another poster). If somebody from Mississippi finds it economical to give JBII free waste plastic, and deliver it, it goes to show you how desperate industry is to get rid of it.