Adam Davidson, CEO of Trident Royalties, discusses offtake milestones and catalysts to boost FY24. Watch the video here.
How many days to Wireline logs
Can’t find twitter rumour this morning? Was on yesterday but not this morning
Hopefully we can see a rise on the open here ?
Any one bullish on this statement,, Ron has stopped answering my @s.. Hopefully update due next month?
http://media.simplecast.fm/episodes/audio/6517/ep_06_tips_on_how_to_get_b2b_ecommerce_and_eprocurement_right_by_ronald_duncan_of_cloudbuy-1420833235.mp3 Last 7 minutes not to be missed
Infamous bear raider Evil Knievil is long an oil stock. That stock being Madagascar Oil (MOIL). Knievil says that wider family interests now own around two million shares and he is thinking of adding to that holding. He admits that there are risks, notably the huge capex that will need to be funded to develop the resource. However he sees the appointment of Jefferies as a Strategic Advisor yesterday as a leap forward on that front. The NPV of Madagascar's Tsimiroro oil project is said to be $2.6 billion - whereas Madagascar is capitalised, at 8p, at just £40 million. Knievil admits that you must risk weight the NPV massively for financing, political and other risks but says that even accounting for that this could well be a multibagger.
http://bbc.in/1bzPr19 Listen from 6minutes 40secs
Grid seeks temporary generators to keep lights on There are fears of winter blackouts P Print Share via Facebook Twitter Google+ There are fears of winter blackouts P Martin Waller Published at 12:01AM, September 15 2014 The National Grid has approached suppliers of temporary generating capacity to head off the prospect of crippling power cuts. Talks have taken place over the past couple of weeks with Aggreko and the smaller APR Energy to assess how much generating capacity they have available and how this could contribute to Britain’s power needs, The Times has learnt. The companies, the biggest in the global market for temporary generation, are more accustomed to supplying developing countries, although Aggreko has a business that supplies customers such as music festivals and other one-offs. They have been called upon only once to provide power to a developed economy, it is believed. Aggreko was brought in by the Japanese authorities after the Fukushima nuclear disaster in March 2011. Some of the company’s equipment is still operating there, although it will be moved next year. No one involved in the talks would comment formally. There are technical difficulties in supplying plant to provide extra generating capacity to the grid and it may not be possible to bring it online by this winter. It is, however, an option in succeeding years. “As the system operator, we continually work with the industry and others to develop a range of tools to balance the grid as economically as possible —and, as part of that process, we regularly discuss with various companies how new services could be provided,” a grid spokesman said. It has become apparent that Britain is facing a possible crisis this winter, if the weather is much worse than last year’s relatively warm season. As a result, the grid has had to move forward plans to pay the owners of mothballed power stations to keep them on standby, ready to boost supplies. The company had been planning to bring in its supplementary balancing reserve in the winter of 2015-16. A report in the summer from Ofgem, the power regulator, suggested spare capacity was dangerously low. Since then, EDF Energy has had to shut four nuclear reactors after discovering cracks in a key part of their structure. This prompted a warning that profits at Centrica, which has a 20 per cent stake in EDF’s nuclear operation, would suffer. EDF said that the reactors would be restarted this winter but it could not provide firm dates. At the same time, two other power plants have been forced to close. The Ferrybridge coal-fired station in West Yorkshire was hit by fire, while a gas-fired plant in Barking, east London, is shutting down because of high gas prices. The earlier Ofgem warning suggested that if half a dozen plants were to close, there could be blackouts. Those involved in the talks said that bringing in the temporary power generators was only one option. The fir
First eMarketplace deployment in Australia builds on recent Spend Analysis contract wins as cloudBuy continues to expand global presence cloudBuy plc, the cloud eCommerce marketplace, today announced it has won a new contract with an Australian State Government (the “State”) to deliver an eProcurement marketplace for the State’s treasury and IT departments. Once deployed, the new eMarketplace will consolidate existing shared services through a single online platform, delivering financial and efficiency savings. The eMarketplace will also be integrated with the State’s existing SAP enterprise platform, enabling electronic invoicing and purchase order synchronisation. The first phase of the project, which will run for a minimum six month period initially, will see cloudBuy implement its end-to-end Software as a Service (SaaS) eMarketplace for the State and support the onboarding process of 20 key treasury and ICT suppliers to ensure a smooth migration. "This is cloudBuy’s first eMarketplace project in Australia and follows earlier contract wins for our Spend Analysis solution in this market,” said Ronald Duncan, Chairman of cloudBuy plc. “As we continue to grow our global footprint, we are in discussions with many similar potential customers who wish to explore the benefits that cloudBuy’s solutions can bring.” Following the initial set up fees, the terms of the new contract will see cloudBuy receive ongoing revenues via a transactional charge, calculated as a percentage of the value spent within the eMarketplace. Based on the State’s existing procurement card spend, estimated revenues are expected to be approximately $900,000 AUD in the first year, rising to a potential $7.2 million annually over time. “Traditional annual license fees are becoming increasingly unpopular with SaaS vendors and customers alike who want more flexible payment models based on actual usage and needs,” said Ronald Duncan. “Our new transaction based model, developed in conjunction with Visa, will eliminate annual license costs for customers, whilst for cloudBuy it provides a much closer link between platform usage and revenues generated.”
Just got an email from RD..... He's on holiday taking a well earned rest!! After such a busy year rolling out cbuy to the world!!! He has signed off an RNS for tomorrow.. No details will have to wait for 7am ....