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Replies to #1285 on Xtreme Plays

Arbel

11/11/12 3:00 PM

#1290 RE: JLPTNG #1285

I hear you Brian i would hate for admin to treat Xtreme Plays board any different than any other board on Ihub, that said im really excited for what EKNL has in store for us next week!!

Oh and im also a stock holder in SUTI, SSDS, CCAJ and CMGO in case admin is interested!!

Ecomike

03/01/15 8:07 AM

#3145 RE: JLPTNG #1285

Good morning JLPTNG!!! Got some fresh charts and long term plays to post here. Here is one that my chart buddy on my board posted about 8 weeks ago that has done awesome (wish I had bought it)!!!! I also like $MVTG right now, coming off a nice dip-bottom-correction in a 3 year bull run....!!!!!

If you all get the chance, please drop by and share great long term hold picks on my board too. Please Check out my Favorites DD page here:
http://investorshub.advfn.com/Ecomikes-Favorite-stock-picks-and-Stock-DD-topics-26971/

And please mark my board with a folow, also here is a great long term pick and flippers stock chart, AA Alcoa aluminum with a sideways, volatile triangle forming?

http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=111291787

Ecomike

03/17/15 4:43 PM

#3157 RE: JLPTNG #1285

Good evening my friend!!! Interesting find in China news on MVTG about Canadian efforts to promote Canadian high tech in China, and MVTG is on that list :-)

Can't recall ever seeing a National government like Canada backing a penny stock technology overseas that was verifiable like this oone :-)

http://service-industries-research.hktdc.com/business-news/article/Technology/Canadian-Technology-The-Hong-Kong-Bridgehead-into-Asia/rp/en/1/1X3MJ2O6/1X0A1778.htm

Mantra: A Recycling Technology Specialist

Despite the controversy over the promotion of pollution controls rather than prevention in many existing green regulations and standards, reducing the level of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions is a core element in many of the efforts to achieve many mandatory or voluntary green objectives. The push to reduce GHG footprints varies by country and industry, but all present major challenges for governments and manufacturers.

As a booming base for low-cost production, manufacturing has been growing rapidly in many parts of Asia – and so, too, have the relevant green manufacturing legislation and pollution reduction targets. On 24 April 2014, for example, China, as one of the world's largest GHG emitters, passed the first amendments to its environmental protection law in 25 years. The revised Environmental Protection Law took effect on 1 January 2015, and established tougher rules and harsher punishments for polluters. The new law also empowers the Ministry of Environmental Protection to order enterprises that discharge pollutants in excess of standards and a specified gross volume to limit or suspend production until the situation has been rectified.

Against this backdrop, many Asian manufacturers therefore have a greater incentive to look for ways to reduce their GHG emissions and avoid mandatory green levies, such as carbon taxes and pollutant discharge fees. For some more proactive entrepreneurs, though, innovative solutions that can actually recycle the emissions for other manufacturing processes are ultimately a better option when it comes to advancing their green agenda.

The Mantra Venture Group, a Vancouver-based clean technology incubator, is a pioneer in innovative emerging technologies and is now attempting to commercialise them across Asia. Through its subsidiary, Mantra Energy Alternatives, the company is currently developing two groundbreaking electro-chemical technologies, both designed to make the reduction of GHG emissions profitable – electro-reduction of carbon dioxide (ERC) and mixed-reactant fuel cell (MRFC). - See more at: http://service-industries-research.hktdc.com/business-news/article/Technology/Canadian-Technology-The-Hong-Kong-Bridgehead-into-Asia/rp/en/1/1X3MJ2O6/1X0A1778.htm#sthash.Ju7Nipmd.dpuf




Both are patented process technologies through which GHGs and dangerous industrial pollutants can be converted into valuable industrial chemicals. In short, ERC is a “carbon capture and utilisation” (CCU) technology that converts carbon dioxide into useful, valuable products including formic acid and formate salts. MRFC is an unconventional, cheaper, lighter and more compact fuel cell that uses a mixture of fuel and oxidant, thereby greatly reducing the complexity and cost of the fuel cell system.

To develop and market Mantra’s technologies and services throughout Asia and capitalise on China’s massive advances in the field of clean technologies and electric vehicles and equipment, the Mantra Venture Group formed a joint venture - Mantra China Ltd - with two Hong Kong-based partners, Green China Developments Ltd and Gateview Group Ltd. This saw it establish a 51%-owned subsidiary in Hong Kong in early 2014.

According to Larry Kristof, President and CEO of the Mantra Venture Group, Mantra China Ltd is the vehicle with which the group will establish a strong brand presence in Asia, identify new markets for Mantra’s products and build strategic alliances with technology developers, manufacturers and investors. Operating out of the Phase 3 development of the 22-hectare, Hong Kong Science & Technology Park, a specialist hub for the clean technologies sector, Mantra sees Hong Kong the ideal entry point to the East Asian markets. In particular, Mantra aims to capitalise on the concentration of entrepreneurs and industrialists in Hong Kong in order to look for suitable industries or investors to begin pilot operations and demonstrations on the Chinese mainland.

To better tailor their technologies and services to the needs of Chinese firms, the group has also been seeking collaborative opportunities with a number of academic groups, such as the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and City University of Hong Kong. Aside from technology transfer, the group’s new business venture in Hong Kong also aims to establish Mantra as the North American distributor of the innovative green technologies developed and produced in Asia. Benefitting from the city’s vibrant trade with the Chinese mainland and its reliable intellectual property (IP) protection and licensing infrastructure, the group’s Hong Kong office is already in negotiations with a mainland producer of solar-powered LED products in order to acquire the exclusive North American distribution rights. - See more at: http://service-industries-research.hktdc.com/business-news/article/Technology/Canadian-Technology-The-Hong-Kong-Bridgehead-into-Asia/rp/en/1/1X3MJ2O6/1X0A1778.htm#sthash.Ju7Nipmd.dpuf