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EVM - Enviromission Limited

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Interesting this solar energy junior has gone into a trading halt on the day the government anounces major funding for another solar project. i think about 100 million of 500 million from the governments environmental fund was handed out today. Maybe this company is going to get a slice of the pie.
 
billhill said:
Maybe this company is going to get a slice of the pie.

Could do, although the more probable explanation is the press mentioned early today that a grant was given to a solar power plant but I don't think a name was mentioned. In early trade people thought it may of been EVM, hence they asked for a halt. The solar power plant is actually being built by solar systems (http://www.solarsystems.com.au/154MWVictorianProject.html)
 
This certainly looks like an interesting company to be involved with. If I recall correctly, they were considering building a solar tower near Mildura in Australia. (Announcement dated 14/12/06 confirms this)

From what I can see though is a lot of hot air (oh very punny!) but no actual product. 5 years of development but they haven't actually built anything yet?

Quick bit of research and you dig up articles like this - http://www.smh.com.au/news/business/enviromission-seeks-a-handout/2005/12/05/1133631200657.html - like I said, it seems an interesting company but does interesting company = good investment, at this point in time?
 
This certainly looks like an interesting company to be involved with. If I recall correctly, they were considering building a solar tower near Mildura in Australia. (Announcement dated 14/12/06 confirms this)

From what I can see though is a lot of hot air (oh very punny!) but no actual product. 5 years of development but they haven't actually built anything yet?

Quick bit of research and you dig up articles like this - http://www.smh.com.au/news/business/enviromission-seeks-a-handout/2005/12/05/1133631200657.html - like I said, it seems an interesting company but does interesting company = good investment, at this point in time?

It is just interesting, but has no competitive edge. The record of its past performance is weak. He lose a big contract to his competitor Solor system. I agree the solar energy market cake is big but this one just too weak to get a decent piece of it.
 
David Gelbaum Who is he? Apparently a billionaire ;)
Heres a bit of info
He has given more money to conservation causes in California than anyone else. His gifts have helped protect 1,179 square miles of mountain and desert landscapes, an area the size of Yosemite National Park.In manner and appearance, David Gelbaum has maintained a low profile for someone who can afford to give away hundreds of millions of dollars.

At age 55, retired from the rarefied world of Wall Street hedge funds, he lives in Newport Beach (Orange County) with his wife and two of his four children in a large home where visitors on occasion have mistaken him for the gardener. Bespectacled, 5-foot-5 and slightly built, he speaks softly, barely above a hoarse whisper. He drives a Honda Civic hybrid, wears jeans and T- shirts to business meetings and helps the kids clean up at the wilderness camp- outs he sponsors.

Those who know him say he is never more uncomfortable than when asked to talk about his wealth or how much of it he has given away.

His donations, which according to public records and other sources total at least $250 million, have preserved hundreds of miles of wildlife corridors across mountains and deserts, tying together once-isolated national parks and wilderness areas. One conservation deal, land trust experts say, is the largest single purchase of private land ever handed over to the U.S. government for one purpose: to leave it alone. Gelbaum, a native of Minnesota who moved to California as a teen, was a math prodigy who parlayed his talents into a highly lucrative three-decade career using mathematical formulas to pick stocks and bonds for wealthy investors in hedge funds.

He won't say how much he made. He started giving his money away in ever- larger amounts in 1994.

"Most wealthy people spend their lives trying to make more and more money rather than give it away," Gelbaum said during a series of interviews that he agreed to only reluctantly. "They wait too long. They are depriving themselves of a lot of joy. I'm doing what I want to do. It's not like it's money that I or my family will ever need.

Why do i talk of this fella you ask:confused:
Well on the 28th of August he and his wife became a substantial holder of EVM and as the announcements go have increased their holdings from 5.15% to 6.25% then to 7.28% and now sits at 9.15%
The Last three increases have happened within the month
Apparently he owns 10% stake in DYE (dysol) aswell
Are they gonna just buy the company :rolleyes:
Yes i'm still holding:p: take a look at the graph (someone care to draw lines on it) :eek: Could be on the verge of a Breakout (I aint no analyst you work it out) Or is it just returning to its former glory.

Below 3month and 1month
 

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moneymajix, that link does not work? It has put the ... in the URL, can you use the vB forum tool to put the link in?
 
Kieran

I will attempt to fix it.

The Discovery Channel segment is quite impressive - use of great graphics to show how the tower will look in the outback (400 miles from Sydney). Power for 100,000 homes without any coal burned. Equivalent of taking 90,000 cars off the road!


In the meantime, here is an interview from Boardroom radio in February with the CEO, in the meantime.

www.brr.com.au


http://www.brr.com.au/event/EVM/1674/18879
 
Kieran

The link works now. Joey B. "fixed it".

Enjoy!



Need to do some research to see who the majority shareholders are.
I think the CEO, Davey, may hold quite a few.

BBL.
 
Big


You are ahead of me.

Thanks for posting.



The first segment you posted seems a longer version of the segment I posted.


Your second segment was interesting, too, giving some explanation of how a solar tower works (although a little dated, maybe).

Higher the tower the more efficient it is.
 
Back to 8c. Seems that tower has no funding to be built or is the share price just related to the general doom and gloom.
 
Back to 8c. Seems that tower has no funding to be built or is the share price just related to the general doom and gloom.

Share price has been holding fairly steady for the last few months, currently 0.055.

Mixed signals as to when/if/ever a solar tower is built in Australia - EVM has the property in SW NSW near Mildura, but seem to expect more progress in the USA than locally:

From the website:http://www.enviromission.com.au/irm/content/technology_technologyover.html
<quote>
Close to 15% of EnviroMission's shareholders live in the district (ie Mildura and Wentworth Shire), whilst the broader community has generally expressed encouragement for the project and the anticipated economic benefit expected to flow into the region as a result of development.

The region also forms an axis of the borders of three Australian States; Victoria, New South Wales, and South Australia.

Whilst EnviroMission now expects the first Solar Tower will be developed in the USA, it is felt international development will provide important leverage to increase development prospects in Australia. EnviroMission is seeking the strongest business case for development, and conditions in the USA support development ahead of Australia at this time.

</quote>

EVM has recently expanded its corporate profile in the USA (refer ASX announcements). Whether that translates into columns on the skyline is another matter.

EVM CEO Mr Roger Daley has recently acquired a substantial holding via his associated entities (refer ASX announcements).

Hmmmm, very interesting. I'm watching with interest.

Disclosure 1. I do not hold.
Disclosure 2. I am a Greenie.
 
Quite a bit of action on this lately.

Recent announcements include:

* Given the green light to commence purchase negotiations for 2 x 200MW solar power stations in california.

* Some good press and profiling of the solar tower technology by a US financial services and investment bank.

Good price jump on low volume on Friday too.

Anyone holding or expecting any other big news?
 
Quite a bit of action on this lately....

Indeed there was in the lead up to Copenhagen: the 6-month chart from now looking back is one for the climate-wars history books:

EVM20100305_6months.gif


Who knows, EVM may conjure up the opportunity to be in the right place at the right time, and actually turn into something.

Not for the foreseeable future, however, IMO.

P.
 
Quite a bit of action on this lately.

Anyone holding or expecting any other big news?

News on negotiations with SCAPAs requirements will come soon. Roger Davey is a very approachable CEO. I suggest anyone with questions re EVM should contact him via their website. I did and I received a prompt reply.

They are actually gonna do it in Arizona. I'm in for a penny and it'll make me money. It's just a matter of how much.

Do some sniffing around it's all very interesting.
 
Given the green light to commence purchase negotiations for 2 x 200MW solar power stations in california.
I'm guessing that a number quoted in MW won't mean a lot to most, so to put it in perspective:

A typical large coal-fired plant is around 2000MW. For example, Loy Yang A in Victoria was originally built as 4 x 500MW, since uprated a bit. Next door is Loy Yang B, originally 2 x 500MW also uprated slightly since construction. This is Australia's largest brown coal-fired plant (and if you count all 6 units as one power station then it is the largest power station of any type in Australia).

Torrens Island A power station (Adelaide) is 480MW, the B station next to it is 800MW. Counting both plants, this is the largest gas-fired power station in Australia, and the largest power station of any type in SA.

Gordon hydro-electric power station in Tasmania is 432MW with an average output (the critical point in the context of a baseload integrated hydro system) of 160MW. This is the largest power station of any type in Tasmania, and the highest annual output of any non-fossil fuel plant in Australia.

Tumut 3 (Snowy Hydro) is rated at 1500MW peak output, the highest peak rating of any hydro plant in Australia. It's average output is only 66MW however - it's a peaking plant that is idle most of the time (in contrast to the hydro plants in Tas which were built for baseload operation).

Newport D, the power station with the tall chimney clearly visible from Melbourne CBD, is rated at 510MW from a single steam turbine unit (gas is the primary fuel but it can also burn oil).

Right now, the combined electrical load of Qld, NSW, ACT, Vic, Tas and SA is 21,843MW. That is being supplied predominantly from coal (black and brown) plus a bit of gas, hydro and wind.

So the 2 x 200MW proposed is certainly a significant power station but it's not huge in its own right. If it were built somewhere like SA or Tasmania then it would be locally a major energy source, but in the context of California it's not - it's just another medium size power station in a huge grid.

Certainly a good start for the company to get something like that up and running though. 200MW is certainly a "proper" power station, nobody could deny that.
 
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