ARISE die canadische Solarperle !
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Aber mich die letzten Jahre massivst denunzieren...MIR ist es eine Genugtuung....
letztes post from woanders:
12.02.14, 11:36
Hallo tfaat und Blue Tornado - ich finde es echt sehr nett von Euch, dass Ihr mir so sachlich und schnell antwortet. Ja, das mit den 800 auch noch verlieren, wenn man schon 30T verloren hat, ist auch so ein wenig meine Einstellung - wobei natürlich immer die Hoffnung mitspielt, sie nicht zu verlieren, sondern wenigstens noch ein wenig herauszuholen bei dieser Firma, auf die ich so vertraute. Ich werde jetzt bis zum 17. warten und dann wahrscheinlich kaufen. Mir ist völlig klar, dass es meine Entscheidung ist, die mir keiner abnehmen wird, dennoch bin ich sehr dankbar für Eure objektiven Überlegungen.
Gruß madrilena
Madrilena aus WOanders hat nicht nur hier, sondern auch bei Solarworld den Totalverlust hinter sich.Und das soll was heissen.Aber jedem gebührt sein Strafe.
Die Herren sind da sicher sehr einfallsreich, der Drops ist m.m.n noch nicht gelutscht den da hätte man das Teil längst komplett von der Börse genommen..
ehem.CEO und President von Arise zudem noch "Sultan of Solar ",seines Zeichen..,
>Ian MacLellan, President & CEO
>Sjouke Zijlstra, Vice President, (CEO Arise OSTdeutschland)
haben schon wieder diese Firma gegründet und leben wie die Maden im Speck......
http://www.ubiquitysolar.com/company/
Rein kommt man jetzt eh nicht in die Aktie, der Handel ist nach wie vor ausgesetzt.
Und irgendwer bezahlt noch immer die Börsennotierung das macht man doch nicht weil man zuviel Geld hat.. sondern mehr möchte
Viel hohe Ex Arisler sitzen auf riesigen Altbeständen, die werden nochmal vergoldet!
Schreib dort mal, die werden es dir danken .Viele frustrierte Altaktionäre haben aber ihre Shares ausbuchen lassen ,um diese Altlasten aus den Depots zu bekommen.Da ist man auch wieder frei für Neues.Sicherlich kann hier nochmals ein Mantel aufgelegt werden ,aber nur wann und mit welchen Mitteln?Meinst du IAN bereit da etwas vor?
Gruss
Heute wird Arise in meinem Depot sogar wieder mit Wert gestellt, merkwürdig..
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By Paul Morden, Sarnia Observer
Monday, December 29, 2014 2:57:20 EST PM
George Mallay can point to several economic success stories in the region over the past year, as the general manager of the Sarnia-Lambton Economic Partnership looks ahead to 2015.
The county-funded economic office is charged with promoting and selling the region, its economy and its workforce.
Most recently, Mallay joined representatives of a dozens local organizations announcing the new tag line, "Discoveries That Matter," as part of a $70,000 branding exercise for Sarnia-Lambton.
He also pointed to ongoing work with the Sarnia-Lambton Industrial Alliance, a group of metal fabricators and other companies that service industry.
They have been working together in recent times to connect with new markets, beyond their traditional sources of work in Chemical Valley, and have begun bidding and securing projects located outside of the area.
"It's very positive for the community," Mallay said.
The continued construction of the $135-million BioAmber plant on Vidal Street in Sarnia is another positive sign, he said.
"Sarnia is in a phase of rapid progress and is beginning its final sprint to mechanical completion," Jean-Francois Huc, BioAmber's chief executive officer, said recently.
The plant that will use high fructose corn syrup to manufacture bio-succinic acid, a platform chemical used in the making of plastic, cosmetics and other products, remains on-budget and on-schedule to be completed in early 2015, Huc said.
Approximately 200 construction workers were on the work site daily through the later portions of 2014.
The plant is expected to employ 60 permanent workers. The company has already begun hiring and training staff.
Also this past year, the startup Ubiquity Solar made progress, securing a $3.1 million contribution from the federal government through Sustainable Development Technology Canada.
The funding will help the company with its plans for a high-performance PV polysilicon and ingot pilot plant in Sarnia to service the solar energy industry.
"They're a bit behind schedule, but they still plan on building a pilot plant, with eventual plans for a polysilicon plant on the TransAlta site that would create several hundred jobs," Mallay said.
Early in 2014, Montreal-Based Atelka announced it was coming to Sarnia to open a call centre at the Western Sarnia-Lambton Research Park.
"They're up to about 400 jobs now," Mallay said.
Also in 2014, the economic partnership's Business Enterprise Centre worked with a number of companies that opened 34 startup businesses, Mallay said.
And, early in the winter of 2014, Nova Chemicals held a ceremony at its Corunna site to celebrate the arrival of its new supply of shale gas feedstock.
"That's a big thing for our area, and we're seeing plans to bring more shale gas there," Mallay said.
"We're looking at trying to secure funding to do a study related to shale gas and identify best prospects and projects in that space."
Mallay said the partnership has been seeing an increase in the number of potential investors taking a look at the community, including those exploring opportunities around industrial bio-products.
"We do have a strong pipeline of prospects in that area," he said.
Mallay also sits on the board of Bio-Industrial Innovation Canada, a group involved in study attempting to locate a plant in Sarnia-Lambton that would produce sugar for industrial uses from corn.
"That's an important project for the area," Mallay said.
At the same time, he said, a local group continues its work to attract a new refinery to the community that would upgrade western oil sands bitumen, as an alternative to shipping that raw resources to refineries outside of Canada.
The partnership has also been looking at the opportunities locally in energy storage and will begin a creative industry mapping exercise in the new year.
"We also had a project where we went out and started to talk to firms that are export-oriented that we've identified," Mallay said.
They discovered a number of local companies that haven't been taking advantage of programs available to assist exporting.
Mallay said the partnership will be working to connect those business to that additional support.
"There is some good funding out there for exporting."
paul.morden@sunmedia.ca
http://www.theobserver.ca/2014/12/29/...-transalta-site-down-the-road
By Paul Morden, Sarnia Observer
Sunday, February 1, 2015 3:56:48 EST PM
The start of construction on a $11-million pilot plant in Sarnia is taking longer than expected, but the CEO of Ubiquity Solar says it's getting closer.
The company has been assembling financing and making plans to establish a pilot plant at Sarnia's TransAlta Bluewater energy Park to make high-performance polysilicon bricks and wafers for use in photovoltaic cells for the solar energy industry.
"We're still working very hard to get this thing going," said Ian MacLellan.
"The financing has taken a little bit longer to come together than we had expected, more due just to the complexity of all the moving pieces."
Last June, the company received $3.1 million from the federal government for the pilot project.
"We now have 97% of the resources committed," MacLellan said.
"It is coming together, but there is some complexity we've had to deal with."
Ubiquity Solar has said that it wants to quickly scale up to commercial production and have a 10,000-tonne-per-year production plant operating within a few years. The company has also said it plans to create more than 500 "export-focused" jobs at the plant, within five years.
"We're pushing as hard as we can, and we'd like to get this going in the next couple of months," MacLellan said.
The company has been seeing increased interest for the polysilicon it plans to make in Sarnia, and recently signed a memorandum of understanding with a customer, he said.
"What we had anticipated in the marketplace is starting to show itself, so that's encouraging."
Since it began talking about the proposal for Sarnia, the company has simplified part of its plans for the site, MacLellan said.
"We actually anticipate still getting into some form of commercial production in 2016," he said.
"Although it has taken us longer to get the pilot plant launched, we are still looking at ways to get into production quicker."
When he spoke about the pilot plant during an event the Sarnia-Lambton Economic Partnership held in November 2013, MacLellan said the company was attracted to Sarnia's chemical industry infrastructure, as well as the unique features of the energy park.
TransAlta purchased the former Dow Chemical lands in Sarnia to create the industrial park to attract customers for the electricity and steam it generates.
MacLellan has a background in venture capital and technology companies, and was the founder of Cambridge-based Arise Technologies that installed rooftop solar systems and built a plant in Germany to manufacture solar panels.
The plant opened as the world was falling into recession and Arise later went out of business, but there have been positive signs for the solar industry in the years since.
"We saw another record broken in 2014, worldwide," MacLellan said.
While the final numbers aren't out yet, it appears approximately 45 gigawatts of solar energy was installed last year, up from approximately 37 gigawatts in 2013, he said.
"We're seeing good, solid growth."
MacLellan said the U.S. market for solar has also been growing.
In 2014, "there was more new solar installed in the U.S. in the second quarter than in all other forms of electrical generation combined," he said.
"And, that's where we expect a lot of our product will go."
Canada's low dollar has also given the project "an unexpected boost," he said.
MacLellan said the company has an experienced team, and its efforts have been supported by all levels of government, as well as officials in Sarnia.
"We're really been quite pleased with that," he said.
http://www.theobserver.ca/2015/02/01/...-set-up-pilot-plant-in-sarnia
paul.morden@sunmedia.ca