We would love to hear your thoughts about our site and services, please take our survey here.
Hopefully the case numbers will continue to drop. People will continue to be vaccinated and the world will return to normal. Thats what investors in TUI believe. Suggesting when is a good time to be selling based on hindsight isnt really of any value to anybody without a tardis.
Surely the point of JCB doing a deal with an australian company is the fact that we dont have enough spare green electric to convert to Hydrogen. Its not just a case of electrolysers its where the green electric is most plentiful.
Possibly - the numbers who are now booking is increasing across the board and also the covid case numbers seem to be heading downwards. That's for the UK - I can't speak for Germany and other countries that TUI operates in. The current share price is clearly seen as a bargain by people in the know.
Somebody who it would be fair to say - has a closer insight into the companies performance and capability going forward than the gloom mongers on Lse.co.uk
On a different subject - the infection and case numbers are looking to all be turning downwards in all groups. Good news regardless of your views on TUI.
This current energy squeeze will really concentrate the minds of the government as we go into winter that we really need to consider a massive ramp up of alternative tech rather than relying on Europe and the World Market to help us out with gas. Good news for ITM and other players in the field.
Sadly when the Government are involved to such an extent going forward all companies involved will be holding back in the hope of a Government funded initiative. If you buy an electrolyser today you could miss out on hundreds of thousands
THis company now has a world changing product on its hands - just a case of getting the word out there. From my experience once one major customer jumps on board - all the others will follow suite. Within six months the share price will be transformed. Covid isnt going away.
Sir Jim Ratcliffe's chemicals empire is getting behind the global hydrogen rush, investing £25m in a new fund that will join the main London stock market.
Ineos's energy division is buying 25m shares in HydrogenOne Capital Growth, amounting to 10pc of the £250m the fund is raising in an upcoming float.
Utilities giant Centrica is preparing to press the button on a £1.6bn overhaul of its Rough gas storage site in the North Sea so it can store hydrogen instead of methane.
The FTSE 250 owner of British Gas says repurposing the site roughly 18 miles off the coast of Yorkshire could create 3-4,000 jobs during construction and help develop the market for hydrogen to help meet climate goals.