silverado goldmines (867737)
Eine korektur wie ich sie in 3-5tagen sehen wollte auf 0,0965 wurde mal eben in zwei tagen abgearbeitet und sofort wird iweder gas gegeben...
Wer hat Angst vorm Kartenhaus... hehehe... ich nicht....
http://www.cdispatch.com/articles/2007/04/11/.../area_news/area04.txt
wo morgen ? ;)
Quelle : Gazette Washington Bureau
http://www.billingsgazette.net/articles/2007/04/...ming/30-thomas.txt
by NOELLE STRAUB
Gazette Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON - A bipartisan bill promoting biofuels would snub coal-based liquids and could drive up the price of corn and food worldwide, Sen. Craig Thomas, R-Wyo., said Thursday.
An administration official agreed that the bill should include coal-to-liquids, but senators indicated during a Senate Energy Committee hearing that the issue would be one of the main sticking points of the measure.
Thomas praised the underlying purpose of the bill, to reduce reliance on foreign oil and promote cleaner energy, but said the measure lacks balance.
"I think overpromoting some of these fuels can have harmful consequences," Thomas said. "And our infrastructure is not adequate to deliver these fuels under the circumstances we have now."
Thomas said there are 114 ethanol refineries producing 6 billion gallons a year, and another 80 plants under construction. But despite the progress in that area, there are no commercial-scale coal-to-liquids plants or carbon sequestration projects.
"Why are we not trying to fix that shortcoming in this bill?" he asked.
The bill does not include coal-based liquids because the Democratic chairman and environmentalists say they could give off more greenhouse gases than regular gasoline.
Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., called coal-based liquids a "dirty fuel." He said liquid coal, according to the Environmental Protection Agency, has carbon emissions that are at best 3.7 percent higher than conventional gasoline, and at worst more than double the carbon emissions of gas.
Thomas countered that biofuels are not entirely a carbon-neutral approach.
"It takes diesel to run the tractors, it takes natural gas to provide the fertilizer, it takes more diesel to run the trucks that deliver," he said. "I just think we have to take a long look at this. I'm for moving in this direction, but I think we are overlooking some of the things that we already know how to do and that can produce a great deal more than we are here."
Thomas also criticized the administration for a singular focus on biofuels.
"All I hear from the administration lately is alternative biofuels," he said. "Well, I have to tell you that that's out there a ways before there's enough to make a great deal of difference. In the meantime, we know how to do some of these other things where there is a great deal of fuel available and we are not moving."
He said the Energy Department has committed about $400 million this year to produce cellulosic ethanol. But he said the current bill would add $225 million more to help biofuels and more than $1 billion for research and development.
He said he visited an ethanol plant in Wyoming recently that is planning to produce 1 million gallons a year from wood chips. "I wonder why we continue to research these things," he said. "They seem to be done pretty well."
Thomas said U.S. farmers will plant nearly 90 million acres of corn in the next year, 27 percent of which will be used for ethanol.
"It has higher prices," he said. "Corn's now selling for $4.20 (per bushel), a little tough on our cattlemen in Wyoming to feed the cattle and on people across the world using corn as a staple for their diets."
Chairman Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., and ranking member Pete Domenici, R-N.M., introduced the bill two weeks ago. The Biofuels for Energy Security and Transportation Act will require the production of 36 billion gallons of renewable fuels by 2022.
Beginning in 2016, the bill would require an increasing percentage of the renewable fuels to be "advanced biofuels," including cellulosic ethanol, biobutanol and other fuels from unconventional biomass feedstocks.
The bill also would boost Energy Department funding for advanced biofuels research and development by 50 percent from 2007 to 2009. That would establish seven bio-energy research centers in the country and grants for renewable technology research in states with low rates of ethanol production. It would offer federal loan guarantees of up to $250 million per renewable fuel facility.
Alexander Karsner, assistant secretary for energy efficiency and renewable energy, said the Bush administration generally supports the bill. But the administration would prefer a 10-year time frame, with a goal of 2017 rather than 2022, and a "wider variety of alternative fuels" than the bill includes.
Asked about coal-to-liquids, Karsner said the market should set the mix.
"The focus shouldn't be on any one specific technology's role but rather on all of the technologies that Americans can throw at the problem of gasoline consumption reduction," Karsner said. "So of course we favor the inclusion of coal-to-liquid technology ... and we would be open to a dialogue on how to make that best work in a sustainable way."
President Bush called for an "alternative fuel standard" that would require 35 billion gallons of renewable and alternative fuel by 2017. Karsner predicted that "cellulosic ethanol and ethanol in general would make up the overwhelming majority of that."
Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., who sits on the Energy Committee, believes that biofuels are part of the solution to reducing oil consumption and sees cellulosic ethanol as particularly promising for the state's farmers and ranchers, said press secretary Aaron Murphy.
"Jon believes coal is part of this package of options we need to put on the table in order to get off our dependence on foreign oil," Murphy said. "Whether it should be part of this bill or not deserves a closer look."
Published on Friday, April 13, 2007.
Last modified on 4/13/2007 at 12:23 am
Bush presses for coal liquids to cut gasoline use
The Salt Lake Tribune wire services
Article Last Updated: 04/12/2007 04:51:10 PM MDT
http://www.sltrib.com/ci_5652297?source=rss
Posted: 4:48 PM- By Jim Efstathiou Jr.
Bloomberg News
The U.S. Congress must not exclude fossil-based fuels, such as liquids extracted from coal, from proposed legislation to reduce gasoline use, said Alexander Karsner, assistant secretary for renewable energy at the Energy Department.
President George W. Bush wants Congress to require refiners, blenders and gasoline importers to use 35 billion gallons of renewable and alternative fuels, including synthetic fuel from coal, by 2017 as a way to help cut gasoline demand 20 percent in 10 years. Using coal as a feedstock to produce fuel can generate twice the greenhouse gasses that are produced when crude oil is refined into gasoline.
The Senate is debating legislation that would mandate the use of 36 billion gallons of biofuel by 2022. While the U.S. is estimated to have a 250-year supply of coal, the draft bill does not count liquids from coal because of environmental concerns.
"The President is the one who has a National Security Council report every morning that is driving his thinking on the urgency of displacing gasoline consumption," Karsner told a Senate panel today. "America should throw all of its resources at this problem."
Consumption of biofuels, such as corn-based ethanol and cellulosic ethanol from farm waste, will reach about 17 billion gallons in the U.S. by 2017, according to forecasts by Energy Department officials. To push the total toward 35 billion gallons, the administration bill counts hydrogen as a transportation fuel, plug-in hybrid cars which use electricity instead of gasoline, and synthetic fuel from coal.
Senate Bill Differences
The Senate bill, sponsored by Jeff Bingaman, the New Mexico Democrat who chairs the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, mandates that 8.5 billion gallons of renewable fuels be used by 2008 and 36 billion gallons by 2022. The measure would speed up the shift to biofuels compared with the energy bill enacted in 2005, which requires 7.5 billion gallons of renewable fuels by 2012.
"The broad goal here is to stimulate development of cellulose-based feedstocks for ethanol production," Bingaman said in an interview. "They obviously have some differences on details, but I'm confident the President would sign this bill."
The draft Senate bill is "more enlightened" than the Bush proposal because it excludes "dirty fuels" such as synthetic coal, Senator Bernie Sanders, a Democrat from Vermont, said at a hearing of the Senate energy committee. Bush's proposal also counts natural gas as an alternative fuel.
Coal Support
"Why, Secretary Karsner, would the administration promote a fuel, liquid coal, that according to the EPA has carbon emissions that are at best 3.7 percent worse than convention gas and at worst, double the carbon emissions of conventional gasoline," Sanders said.
Karsner said the development of liquid coal must go hand in hand with the development of technologies to capture carbon and store it. Coal supporters on the energy committee, such as Wyoming Republican Craig Thomas, said the Senate proposal overstates the environmental benefits of biofuels and under funds other alternative fuels.
"I'm for moving in this direction, but I think we are overlooking some of the things that we already know how to do," Thomas said. "All this progress and we have zero commercial scale coal to liquids. Why aren't we trying to fix that shortcoming in this bill?"
Mandatory Limits
Earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered Bush administration environmental officials to reconsider their refusal to regulate greenhouse-gas emissions. Bush opposes mandatory limits on carbon emissions linked to global warming.
Environmentalists and 12 states, including California and Massachusetts, are seeking to force the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to limit emissions from new cars and trucks. New York is leading a separate state effort to curb power-plant emissions.
"We don't support modifying this bill to include coal to liquids," Daniel Lashof, science director for the National Resources Defense Council said. "But if coal to liquid were to be used, it would certainly be more assuring if it were subject to a greenhouse gas performance standard."
Last week, a United Nations panel warned global warming will cause extinctions to increase, water shortages to spread and droughts and floods to become more frequent as man-made emissions of greenhouse gases cause the Earth to warm.
ConocoPhillips, USCAP
The report, the second of four to be issued by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change this year, is aimed at informing policymakers of the known and predicted impacts of climate change, and of ways to adapt to global warming.
On Tuesday, ConocoPhillips Chief Executive Officer Jim Mulva became the first head of a major U.S. oil company to join the U.S. Climate Action Partnership, a coalition of business and environmental groups that have called for federal rules to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. London-based BP Plc, Europe's second- largest oil company, is one of USCAP's founding members and the only other major oil company in the group.
http://www.ccnmatthews.com/news/releases/...chText=false&showText=all
so daß wir jetzt in der 3.Unterwelle der 5. welle sind.
folglich sehen wir noch eine 4 runter und lange 5 hoch.
nur meine Beobachtung.
Times: Fri. Apr. 28 - 7p.m.-9p.m.
Sat. " 29 - 7a.m.- 6p.m.
Location:- Holiday Inn Convention Centre -
Rolling Meadows, ILL.
Speakers: Joe Cranville - rated #1 Gold Timer
Bob Moriarty - of 321gold.com
Jay Taylor of miniongstock.com
Jason Hommel
Dr. Mike Berry
Clyde Harrison
Steve Carr
Featuring 25 mining co. exhibits
Silverado Boothe # 23
Admission FREE
Refer to www.321gold.com/PR/Chicago confererence 2006/html
Bob Dynes will be there Thurs, night & come back Monday. Many Silverado shareholders are in Chicago & are urged to contact Bob Dynes for private consultations in after hours if they wish. Good Luck to all!
Da Silverado trotz unserer Träume von Green Fuel ja immer noch sein
Hauptbetätigungsfeld bei der Goldsuche(und hoffentlich bald auch beim
Goldfinden und vorallem beim Abbauen) hat dürfte der heutige Tag wohl
mit einem plus enden.
Scheinbar auch mit einem höheren Volumen als gestern.
Kann jetzt also beruhigt aus dem Haus gehen.
Bis denn
SLGLF - News - Website
SILVERADO has committed over 3 decades of work to the exploration, development and test mining of gold properties throughout North America. In the mid-1980’s, the Company decided to focus all its efforts in Alaska. Since then it has sold $20 Million USD of gold and silver bars and gold nuggets derived from test mining on a small but representative part of its extensive property holdings, wherein 354,686 troy ounces of gold resources have been delineated by mining and drilling. At today’s price (December 1, 2006) of $US 645.10, the gross value of this resource is $US 229,000,000. The Company has also developed excellent relationships with Alaska’s government agencies and political leaders.
Goldfunde abgeben kann.
Darum liebe ich Silverado so. 2 sehr atraktive Beine.
Super sexy.
Man bin ich verliebt. :-))
Standing at Crossroad
The battle begins between those shorts that want to destroy the bullish pennant flag pattern (that has been forming) to take the price down and the forces that want to take the price higher.
Volume Confirmation is close to confirming early in the trading session that todays close will exceed yesterdays close. A good indicator in favor of SLGLF price to move to higher.
We have to keep in mind that SLGLF closed yesterday up almost 1 1/2 cents needs time to consolidate and build this technical solid base before moving higher in price.
Just so you know, I don't like this technical garbage but it is what controls the patterns they dictate should be. I believe that no other trading should exist in trading stocks of out right buying the stock and selling the stock you bought. None of this shorting of stocks without first purchasing them at full price. We wouldn't be witnessing today the manipulation of share prices from bad elements that have hidden a agendas to destroy a company or to make a quick buck by causing panic selling within start-up companies.
Time will tell which forces win todays battle. I'm not concerned since I know the trend for Silverado and I am in for the long haul and know that prices never travel in a strait line-up.
The Future,
Silverado Oil�
Derzeit verläuft der Kurs nach fibo times und fibo retracement! das steht auf jedenfall fest da wir immer an diesen punkten landen!
Mit der Woche kann man schlußendlich zufrieden sein! wir freuen uns auf nächste Woche...
PS. das Boot in dem wir alle sitzen gefällt mir immer besser, Herr Ober zwei Brünetten und eine Blondinne bitte
http://www.kitco.com/
Nach dieser spannenden Woche mit Happy End wünsche ich allen ein schönes und
vor allem erholsames WE.
Bis Montag