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SLE San Leon Energy Plc

16.50
0.00 (0.00%)
23 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
San Leon Energy Plc LSE:SLE London Ordinary Share IE00BWVFTP56 ORD EUR0.01 (CDI)
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.00 0.00% 16.50 - 0.00 01:00:00
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs 5.75M 40.72M 0.0905 1.82 74.24M
San Leon Energy Plc is listed in the Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker SLE. The last closing price for San Leon Energy was 16.50p. Over the last year, San Leon Energy shares have traded in a share price range of 12.30p to 29.00p.

San Leon Energy currently has 449,913,026 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of San Leon Energy is £74.24 million. San Leon Energy has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 1.82.

San Leon Energy Share Discussion Threads

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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
29/11/2016
12:04
Sat, 16 Nov 2013 11:33:27 GMT

Turkish licences are already producing,they already have 6.5bcf ready its worth 65million...so your your doubting is cancelled,the reason for the upgrade in the pipeline is to get this gas to market..its already there mate..the CNG bottling plants are producing..sle want to increase production there with more bottles and transport ... the market is there..please do think the BoD have not looked into all the sinarios that come with a buy in..the deal has been going on for over a year not a few days..cheers links

...............

if u think u have read it all before u have. was it correct last time, no, will the outcome be the similar this time ?

o1lman
29/11/2016
11:59
to assist any new readers, I am going to produce a fruitloop dictionary below.
any suggestions please post to the board.

A.
B. bases > basis
C.
D. dowbt > doubt
E.
F.
G.
H.
I.
J.
K.
L.
M.
N.
O.
P. patients > patience
Q.
R.
S.
T.
U
V.
W.
X.
Y.
Z.

o1lman
28/11/2016
09:50
While countries that have suffered disruptions such as Nigeria and Libya will likely get exemptions, Saudi officials don't want to make sacrifices and then allow their rival Iran to keep upping output.
stockriser
27/11/2016
05:13
The mug troll won't answer why he's still after promising I'll leave. Come on answer with the truth this time,if you can?
triple seven
26/11/2016
13:52
so nowt to do with our oml 18..eh bonny tirader! I no its a "heart ache" but bilton are the "hero!..your the zero!!

Erotons structuring of
security and community agreements, with the assistance of Bilton, have ensured almost non-existent theft or sabotage at OML 18 since Eroton took over as Operator in March 2015.

Bilton

Bilton is an indigenous Nigerian carry vehicle, which has been set up to maintain security and community relations to help minimise any disruption of the operations at OML 18.

As a shareholder in Eroton, Bilton was an integral part in the acquisition strategy for OML 18. In addition to its other responsibilities as a shareholder, it has the responsibility to design and implement a host community and security package. This package has effectively turned the OML 18 area from a restive community into one that has virtually eliminated the community disturbances that existed during the period prior to Erotons ownership of its interest in OML 18.

Biltons efforts have helped to build a mutually beneficial relationship with local communities, ensure peaceful co-existence and worked as a driver for development of its host communities

production from January 2016 has increased 100%..proving the oml 18 pipeline is in safe hands of bilton a Nigerian company run 100% by Nigerians..



sort of farts in the face of the no nowt with a brown nose!..

linksdean2
26/11/2016
11:45
Come on answer,why you still here?
triple seven
25/11/2016
20:09
Date/Time: Fri 25th Nov 2016 18:47:29 ▼


DJ Nymex Crude Settles Down $1.90, or 4%, at $46.06/Bbl


Headline: *DJ OPEC, Russia Disagreements Cause Biggest Loss by Percent in Two Months

o1lman
25/11/2016
19:50
I wonder what the real reason is that links doesn't post here any more ? guess he finally realised he was always going to lose the discussion and capitulated.
o1lman
25/11/2016
19:46
anyway look on the bright side u could have been posting here, like sl1nky, since it was £40.00, that is some out performance.
if u had bought 9k worth of shares it would be worth after nearly 4 years £450
if u get 17% yield on that, u will not but let's fantasise for a moment, £76.50, going to take a while to get back to 9k !!!!!
now if the share value rises the yield falls so will still receive £76.50, u should be able to buy some ' stuff ' with that.
looking at the figures I understand why u never comment on SLE but follow me around like a dog with rabies.
having supported the share for 4 years, how many cheap warrants were u offered ?
TOSCA got there's at 25p.

o1lman
25/11/2016
19:45
More then you
triple seven
25/11/2016
19:22
In commodities, oil prices declined Friday, weighing on shares of energy and mining companies. U.S.-traded crude oil declined 4.2% to $45.99 a barrel as skepticism grew about whether global exporters can strike an effective deal to curb output.
o1lman
25/11/2016
19:21
More then you anyway
triple seven
25/11/2016
18:43
now if Mr Kristian Ewen Ainsworth, the Finance Director of the Company had used the money in his ISA to buy another 66k shares that would have shown some confidence in
the company's prospects.

o1lman
25/11/2016
18:30
Shell also uses UNEP to argue that the situation in the Niger Delta is "uniquely challenging", due to problems of militancy, oil theft and the illegal refining of oil. While these are undeniably real issues, Shell conveniently ignores the fact that pollution linked to the oil industry is one of the key drivers of these problems, destroying people's traditional livelihoods and plunging them deeper into poverty.
o1lman
25/11/2016
18:30
Africa: Shell Tries to Dodge Responsibility for Nigeria Oil Spills... Again

ANALYSIS
By Joe Westby
The oil company is back in the UK courts trying to shift the blame for the environmental destruction wrought in the Niger Delta.

At a hearing in the UK courts this week, oil company Shell asked the judge to throw out two legal actions concerning oil spills from the company's pipelines in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria. Shell doesn't deny the areas are polluted. Instead, as it has done for decades, the company is trying to shift responsibility for environmental destruction onto anybody but itself.

The claims against Shell have been brought on behalf of more than 40,000 people from two communities, Ogale and Bille. Over the years, these areas have suffered the impacts of numerous oil spills, devastating their environment and polluting their drinking water. The king of Ogale, Chief Emere Godwin Bebe Okpabi, travelled from Nigeria to attend the hearing; in his golden finery and jewels, he cut a striking figure alongside the grey suits of the assembled lawyers and journalists.

This week's hearing will determine whether the UK court can consider the Nigerians' claims. Shell would prefer for the case to be heard in Nigeria and its defence team put forward various reasons why.

One of the company's most striking claims is that the case should not go ahead because it will conflict with a newly-announced government-led programme to clean up pollution in the region. This project followed the landmark 2011 environmental assessment by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which exposed massive and widespread pollution across the Ogoniland region of the Niger Delta - an area that includes Ogale, but not Bille.

But what Shell's argument amounts to is an attempt to use the much-needed clean-up process to deny justice to two individual communities, flouting Nigeria law and common sense in the process. Take a step back: Shell has a legal obligation to properly clean-up all oil spills from its pipelines. And this case alleges that Shell has failed to do so in Ogale and Bille. Yet now Shell is trying to suggest that it is in fact up to the Nigerian government to take the lead on cleaning up the mess, something the company is supposed to have done already.

The Niger Delta urgently needs a comprehensive clean-up operation to restore an environment that has been devastated by decades of pollution linked to the oil industry. But UNEP made clear that the clean-up will take another three decades. In the meantime, oil companies cannot use the UNEP report to get off the hook for cleaning up the hundreds of spills that still pour into rivers and creeks every year.

Shell also uses UNEP to argue that the situation in the Niger Delta is "uniquely challenging", due to problems of militancy, oil theft and the illegal refining of oil. While these are undeniably real issues, Shell conveniently ignores the fact that pollution linked to the oil industry is one of the key drivers of these problems, destroying people's traditional livelihoods and plunging them deeper into poverty.

Shell is not an innocent bystander thrust into a bad situation. It has been the main oil company operating in the region for half a century and shares substantial responsibility for the current state of affairs.

Unsurprisingly, Shell's lawyers didn't mention one of UNEP's other key findings: that Shell's clean-up of oil spills has failed to meet standards set out in Nigerian law or even the company's own standards. UNEP was clear that its clean-up was so inadequate that "the difference between a cleaned-up site and a site awaiting clean-up was not always obvious".

Last year, Amnesty went to the Niger Delta to see what had changed on the ground since UNEP published its report. What we found was shocking: standing pools of oil and a strong stench of petroleum in the same places where UNEP had exposed pollution four years earlier. One of the sites visited was Okuluebu in Ogale, an area covered in the UK court case, and saw for ourselves that the site was still visibly polluted. When UNEP visited the site, it found groundwater contamination at 450 times the level where Nigerian regulations state that intervention is required.

Repeated promises and commitments by Shell and the Nigerian government to implement UNEP's recommendations have so far not led to any actual clean-up of pollution in places like Ogale. And for communities like Bille - one of thousands of oil-impacted villages in the Niger Delta outside the relatively small Ogoniland area covered by UNEP - hopes of seeing their environment restored are even further away.

In this context, communities in the Niger Delta are forced to seek justice through legal action in the home states of oil companies like Shell. This case is by no means the first of its kind. In 2015, another UK case forced Shell to pay £55 million ($70 million) in compensation to the Bodo community over two massive oil spills in 2008, while in the Netherlands four fishermen are still fighting for clean-up and compensation in the courts.

Following the hearing this week, the judge is expected to issue a ruling in early 2017. If the claims are allowed to go forward, it will pile further pressure on Shell to recognise that it cannot continue to dodge responsibility for its legacy of decades of pollution in the Niger Delta.

o1lman
25/11/2016
18:28
24 November 2016

San Leon Energy plc ("San Leon" or the "Company")

Director's Dealing and Shareholding

San Leon Energy, the AIM listed company focused on oil and gas development and appraisal in Africa and Europe, announces that it was informed today that Mr Kristian Ewen Ainsworth, the Finance Director of the Company sold 66,666 ordinary shares of no par value in the Company ("Ordinary Shares") held in his own name at a price of 42.5 pence per Ordinary Share on 24 November 2016.

On 24 November 2016, Mr Ainsworth then acquired an interest in 66,666 Ordinary Shares, which are held in his Stocks and Shares ISA in the registered name Mr Kristian Ewen Ainsworth, at a price of 42.55 pence per Ordinary Share.


.............

he's actually raised cash, he must have had cash in his ISA which he never wanted to lose the tax free status, by selling and buying back his shares he has raised
28k to pay for his xmas.

o1lman
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