ADVFN Logo ADVFN

We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.

Trending Now

Toplists

It looks like you aren't logged in.
Click the button below to log in and view your recent history.

Hot Features

Registration Strip Icon for default Register for Free to get streaming real-time quotes, interactive charts, live options flow, and more.

EDEN Eden Research Plc

4.80
0.00 (0.00%)
Last Updated: 07:49:48
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Eden Research Plc LSE:EDEN London Ordinary Share GB0001646941 ORD 1P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.00 0.00% 4.80 4.60 5.00 4.80 4.80 4.80 356,947 07:49:48
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Biological Pds,ex Diagnstics 1.83M -2.24M -0.0042 -11.43 25.6M
Eden Research Plc is listed in the Biological Pds,ex Diagnstics sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker EDEN. The last closing price for Eden Research was 4.80p. Over the last year, Eden Research shares have traded in a share price range of 3.20p to 12.00p.

Eden Research currently has 533,352,523 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Eden Research is £25.60 million. Eden Research has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -11.43.

Eden Research Share Discussion Threads

Showing 8176 to 8197 of 17800 messages
Chat Pages: Latest  328  327  326  325  324  323  322  321  320  319  318  317  Older
DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
24/6/2020
13:07
Super,

The study showed the greatest dollar-loss impact to dairy, $1.4 billion to $2.3 billion; grapes, $1.5 billion to $1.7 billion; and flowers and nurseries,

Sad though those losses are, a quick EPA approval of Mevalone gives Eden and its distributor a significant platform from which to launch Me alone for good.

investingisatrickygame
24/6/2020
12:18
Report details pandemic losses to California farms and ranches.

Analysts looked specifically at 15 different agricultural sectors, using data on production, exports and prices through early May, plus interviews and surveys of people and businesses. The study showed the greatest dollar-loss impact to dairy, $1.4 billion to $2.3 billion; grapes, $1.5 billion to $1.7 billion; and flowers and nurseries, $660 million to $740 million.

supersonico
23/6/2020
21:25
Investing,



Also a potentially off target guess but interesting for those following the story;
.
Remember post 6326 of 7828 where we discuss a supportive comment from Anne Williams the now Global Product Manager Tomato at Bayer Crop Science.
She worked for Monsanto vegatable seeds 2014-2018 when Monsanto was making roads into more sustainable coatings;

'Monsanto replaces vegetable seed coating with more ...

08/07/2016 · Monsanto replaces vegetable seed coating with more sustainable potato starch Tomato seeds with potato starch seed coating that protects the seed and young plant from pests and disease. These coatings normally have colours to help identification of treated seeds and can make seed storage, handling and measurement easier'.





AWGATWT

supersonico
23/6/2020
15:02
Why do you think that super?
investingisatrickygame
23/6/2020
13:51
I feel in future we could find that Eden's 'Consolidator' role might be referred to by Corteva as a 'platform'.
supersonico
22/6/2020
11:00
Super, re Zach Bush, thanks.
brucie5
21/6/2020
20:11
Short on facts ,very messianic.
I was told when searching him that I couldn't access one site because I was based in the EU. It was his church.

chrischas
21/6/2020
15:02
Super,

that was fascinating and seems logical to me, even though it is clearly a complicated subject

investingisatrickygame
21/6/2020
06:01
Chrischas,

Care to elaborate?

supersonico
19/6/2020
08:30
EPA drops regulation for contaminant linked to infant brain damage
supersonico
19/6/2020
08:23
parked;
Sumitomo Corporation (Head Office: Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo; President and CEO: Masayuki Hyodo), has decided as part of its strategy to grow its crop protection business in South America to establish Summit Agro Paraguay (Head Office: Ciudad del Este, Paraguay; hereinafter, “SAPY”) in August (date tentative) as an affiliate of Summit Agro South America SpA (Head Office: Santiago, Chile; Representative: Daniel Stante; hereinafter, “SASA”), a holding company that administers crop protection distribution companies in the region. This will be the first crop protection distribution company established in Paraguay by a Japanese corporation.

supersonico
18/6/2020
23:36
One question is, will we get decent mevalone sales this year ? I hope we do. If not is it because (a) French growers are slow to take up new stuff or (b) doesn't work that well ? Cedroz not really marketed until this year so can't moan there but would love to see some real promotion and sales. Sustaine, I am very hopeful.
paulpaolo
18/6/2020
18:17
It's only important if you eat food': inside a film on the honeybee crisis
The Pollinators investigates the honeybee, which is essential to America’s agriculture and food supply, and dying by the billions in the process

Adrian Horton
Wed 17 Jun 2020 15.10 BST
Every February, Brett Adee joins a caravan of semi-trucks, bound for California’s Central Valley, loaded with millions upon millions of fragile, precious cargo: honeybees. In order for the state’s almond trees to bear fruit – and thus generate an $11bn industry supplying 80% of the world’s almonds – they must be pollinated during the brief window in which the trees flower, from late February through March. And that requires an army of pollinators: some 1.8m hives of honeybees, almost the entire commercial supply in the US, drafted into big agriculture and trucked into central California from as far as the Great Plains and the east coast.

The almond enterprise is cutthroat and risky, reliant on honeybees sent not so much to work as to war, which makes the European honeybee “a keystone species for us in the United States, even though they’re not native to the US, because of the way that they’re used in agriculture”, Peter Nelson, a 30-year beekeeper, told the Guardian. Which is why Adee monitors his hives so closely – the bees are the difference between an almond crop and a bust year. And the bees face increasing risks of disaster; in Nelson’s film The Pollinators, a 90-minute documentary on commercial beekeeping and its linchpin role in the American food supply, Adee assesses a field in Kern county, California, which appears hazy and idyllic – rows of white-bursting almond trees, dotted every couple of lines or so by palettes of Adee’s hives. But up close, it’s a scene of carnage.

Piles of dead honeybees pool around each hive like splotchy puddles; Adee reports a “mass die-off”, probably from acute pesticide or fungicide poisoning. It could have been a neighbor who sprayed their trees too soon, or used a legal chemical toxic to bees without knowing. Adee’s team inspects, collects samples, runs tests – for the bees, and because hundreds of thousands of dollars are on the line. “If we put the same economic value on a honeybee as cattle, we wouldn’t have a pesticide investigator out there for these kind of losses,” he says. “We’d have the FBI out there.”

The precarious state of the honeybee is not a new phenomenon, nor an understudied one, but its implication for American agriculture – and therefore America’s supply of produce in its bountiful supermarkets – is vast and undervalued by the general public. “Most of us are three or four generations off of the farm … for many people there’s not a real connection to who grows their food and how food is grown,” said Nelson. Disconnected from the massive farms which supply produce, most Americans are unaware of the honeybee’s essential role. “The farmers are using these bees essentially as an insurance policy to make sure that they have pollination,” Nelson said, “because if there isn’t pollination of something, you have no crop. It’s a necessity.”

The Pollinators follows the frenzied, relentless work of the commercial honeybees, whose biological stability is threatened by a host of interlocking factors, and the workers who ferry them across America’s ravenous agricultural expanse. These beekeepers, the “last of the cowboys” as Adee calls them, crisscross the country from bloom to bloom, lugging a cumulative 2m hives from the almond groves in California to blueberry patches in Maine to apple orchards in Virginia – some 22 moves a year, according to keeper Davey Hackenberg.

As numerous beekeepers, scientists and farmers explain, such harried movement – along with the pesticide use demanded by the market and American consumers, bee immune systems weakened from monocultural habitats, invasive mite species, and of course the exacerbating effect of climate change – has cultivated a beekeeping crisis. Between 2007 and 2013, more than 10m hives were lost worldwide – twice the normal rate – many from Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), a mysterious phenomenon with no known single cause in which a hive’s worker bees disappear. Where beekeepers used to expect about 5% hive losses a year, they now routinely see upwards of 30%. One survey found that commercial bee farmers lost 40% of their hives – some 50 billion bees – during the winter of 2018-2019. “People talk about the financial viability of the bee industry,” says Adee in The Pollinators. “But I think what I’m more concerned with is the biological viability of the bee industry.”

The Pollinators argues that CCD as a term masks a network of threats to the honeybee exacerbated by several interconnecting, preventable factors. “It would be nice if there was a tidy answer, like ‘bees are dying because of X,’” Sally Roy, Nelson’s wife and a producer on the film, told the Guardian. “But it’s more than one thing that’s causing the losses for bees.” Individual factors such as Varroa mites or overwork in monocultural fields would be more manageable in isolation but are compounded by a staple of American agriculture: pesticides. From the Central Valley’s toxic soup of chemicals to apple orchards’ crop-beautifying sprays, America’s agricultural industry runs on chemicals. Since 1996, farmers have shifted from a class of chemicals called organophosphates, which were dangerous for humans, to neonicotinoids, which take years to decay naturally and ravage bee health. And in a cruel irony, the chemicals stick around best in fatty substances, such as honeycombs.

A still from The Pollinators
Photograph: Peter Nelson
America’s current pesticide model – spray everything preventively – is “kind of like taking an aspirin in the morning because you might have a headache in the afternoon”, said Nelson, “whereas a much better approach would be integrated pest management”, a more labor-intensive method that targets certain pests in limited populations as they appear. “I don’t think it’s realistic to think we can live in a world without pesticides,” he said. “But it’s how we use them and the type that we use that really makes a difference.”

While it may seem daunting to think of taking on entrenched and, as farmers testify in the film, economically necessary pesticide use, much of beekeeping and apiary science and improvement is “completely actionable”, said Nelson. “There are some global issues that we’re facing that can sometimes seem overwhelming … but with this problem, we can all do something.” He proposed a “scale of actionable things that people can do, from supporting your local beekeeper and buying local honey, support local CFAs, farmers’ markets”, to political action, such as advocating ending pesticide use on local roadsides. Even growing a pollinator garden, with a window box in cities, or not using herbicides or pesticides on your lawn – “lawns in America are essentially a giant monoculture that is everywhere,” said Nelson – can improve a local ecosystem, itself a smaller web of America’s food ecosystem dependent on strained populations of pollinators.

“You can really participate in making a change, through education, through action, through becoming a beekeeper, through gardening – all of those things are super important to this issue and really can make a difference,” said Nelson. After all, Roy added: “this film,” and the health of the honeybee, “is only important if you eat food.”

The Pollinators is out in the US digitally with a UK date yet to be announced

We've never had a better chance ...

… to make a greener world. Covid-19 has delivered unusual environmental benefits: cleaner air, lower carbon emissions, a respite for wildlife. Now the big question is whether we can capitalise on this moment. The Guardian aims to lead the debate from the front.

In the weeks and months ahead, our journalism will investigate the prospects for a new green settlement. We will showcase the big thinkers and protagonists and amplify the arguments for authorities everywhere to consider as they lead us out of coronavirus.

Our credentials suit us well to the task: we are independent, we have no owners, no paymasters or oligarchs pulling the strings. We have committed to carbon neutrality by 2030, divested from the oil and gas sectors and renounced fossil fuel advertising. But at this crucial moment, news organisations like ours are facing a daunting financial challenge. As businesses everywhere feel the pinch, the advertising revenue that has long helped to sustain our work has plummeted. We need you to help fill the gap.

You’ve read 22 articles in the last six months. Our journalism is open to all because we believe everyone deserves access to factual information, regardless of where they live or what they can afford to pay. If you can afford to, we hope you will consider supporting our journalism today.

The Guardian believes that the climate crisis we face is systemic. We will inform our readers about threats to the environment based on scientific facts, not driven by commercial or political interests. We will keep reporting on the efforts of individuals and communities around the world who are fearlessly taking a stand for future generations and the preservation of human life on earth. We want their stories to inspire hope.

We need your support to keep delivering this kind of open, committed independent journalism. Every reader contribution, however big or small, is so valuable. Support the Guardian from as little as £1 – and it only takes a minute. Thank you.

sortudo7
18/6/2020
16:54
Because imo I'm unlikely to get a meaningfull answer.

Been there done that..

I'll just wait until the Rice related RNS drops ;)

supersonico
18/6/2020
16:50
Why not submit your questions as per the RNS to the email AGM@edenresearch.com.
investingisatrickygame
18/6/2020
16:13
I'd be interested in the answers to the questions...

..why two Rice specialists?

..what does 'consolidator' mean?

what does short order mean?

is it longer than in the coming five years?

which School?

supersonico
18/6/2020
15:52
With no traditional AGM this year, I am interested to see the questions submitted by shareholders and the subsequent answers provided.

If anything, with a non-physical AGM, I am hoping we get more questions submitted and ones that I haven't thought of so that the outcome is a more detailed understanding for all.

investingisatrickygame
17/6/2020
20:53
Air pollution /Glyphosate /Cov19

5 Qs with Zach Bush & Sacha Stone

supersonico
17/6/2020
16:33
Blend each bad Dicamba or neonicotinoid head line with the following paragraph and decide for yourself if you were Bayer what 'challenge' is top of the big genie wish list?

I think Mrs75K has worked it out.

2017 Eden Reset UMMS commercial terms.

Sean Smith, Chief Executive of Eden, said: "We are pleased to announce the re-setting of some of the key commercial terms of our licence agreement with UMMS. We believe that the new terms reflect both the long term potential of our next-generation encapsulation technology whilst also reflecting the current stage of technology development. We look forward to the ongoing collaboration with UMMS which is, in part, focussed on the further development of this technology with the objective of creating a next-generation encapsulation system to help us solve a broader set of challenges for our partners."

supersonico
17/6/2020
15:04
Super,

The blog is most helpful as it explains processes, something I know has been asked for before and in doing so, this eliminates the need for such questions and therefore, investors are better educated and less prone o be nervous about timelines and unexpected events e.g. France and Cedroz recently.

investingisatrickygame
17/6/2020
13:29
Eden Research plc

@edenresearch
Our most recent blog explores Emergency Use authorisations for plant protection products in the EU. Read about why they're granted and what Eden's perspective is.

supersonico
17/6/2020
08:21
Croatia region declares natural disaster after 50 million bees were poisoned
supersonico
Chat Pages: Latest  328  327  326  325  324  323  322  321  320  319  318  317  Older

Your Recent History

Delayed Upgrade Clock