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PHE Powerhouse Energy Group Plc

1.00
0.125 (14.29%)
08 May 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Powerhouse Energy Group Plc LSE:PHE London Ordinary Share GB00B4WQVY43 ORD 0.5P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.125 14.29% 1.00 0.95 1.05 1.00 0.875 0.88 5,547,547 16:27:52
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Scrap & Waste Materials-whsl 380k -46.2M -0.0111 -0.90 41.57M
Powerhouse Energy Group Plc is listed in the Scrap & Waste Materials-whsl sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker PHE. The last closing price for Powerhouse Energy was 0.88p. Over the last year, Powerhouse Energy shares have traded in a share price range of 0.245p to 1.325p.

Powerhouse Energy currently has 4,157,414,135 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Powerhouse Energy is £41.57 million. Powerhouse Energy has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -0.90.

Powerhouse Energy Share Discussion Threads

Showing 18476 to 18497 of 26975 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
03/1/2021
17:50
Smokey -- it's a sad fact that one of the key characteristics of a lemming and mushroom mug punter, is they don't realise they are a lemming and mushroom mug punter. You are a classic. Lemmings and mushrooms only.
ken chung
03/1/2021
16:35
Since when was it mandatory to make your position in a stock public ?
kreature
03/1/2021
16:23
Deccer1
I most certainly dont associate with the so called Lemmings or Mushrooms.
To me you have had ample opportunity to explain yourself and have failed to answer whether you are long short or ambivalent. You have nothing of value to offer me so I have blocked you.
LOL

smokey 1o3
03/1/2021
15:51
Smokey.. The TW articles I linked to can only be read by subscribing to his website and in so doing accepting his disclaimers. All the rest are free to read and have been in the public domain for some time. None were written by me or reproduced by me so as to imply my own words. If you become aware of any legal challenge to, or action against, the original writers or publishers, please let me know and I will delete the relevant link. Presumably you don't though?I am not a 'Lemming Investor' and don't know what you mean by that phrase. What are you inferring?Ken Chung often refers to posters as 'lemnings and mushrooms'. Presumably you understand what that means and identify with it personally?Fair to say you don't get out much and don't have any friends?
deccer1
03/1/2021
14:33
Deccer, thanks for the links and comment. Good work.
kreature
03/1/2021
10:48
Deccer1 - Your 14266.

As i have said as a Lemming Investor you should not be reproducing this material here with no comment of your own.

Its Blog says specifically it is not advice and you are copying its content here without that qualification and in doing so are misleading others.

Not even being prepared to say if you are short or long,or neither like your mentor Elric has declared in his Blog.

Come on "Step up to the plate."

smokey 1o3
03/1/2021
10:12
I get the impression someone's getting desperate.
vatnabrekk
03/1/2021
10:05
Tom winnifith? Hahahahahahahahahahaha
johnkettleyistheweatherman
03/1/2021
09:54
Just a thought....Electrolysis splits water into hydrogen and oxygen. Therefore could a simple electric current split old tractor tyres into hydrogen and aviation fuel ?
kreature
03/1/2021
09:04
Do your own research rather than asking here. Why not try hTTps://www.powerhouseenergy.net/ first.
nick of the north
03/1/2021
08:59
LOL

Do your own research - simple

tenapen
03/1/2021
08:44
Lol? Yeah very funny.... I asked for a summary of the process used to extract hydrogen from a tractor tyre, and you can’t provide it. But that’s okay, it gives me more confidence in my 3p target. ATB
kreature
03/1/2021
00:14
Ah...

The good old-fashioned troll.

I guess that's what I get for crashing other people's threads.

Not like I even have any PHE ;0)

cassini
02/1/2021
23:23
So an old tractor tyre turned into pure hydrogen? What’s the net calorific value ?
kreature
02/1/2021
19:47
Would that solve the plastic crisis, Sheedy sweet? Answer no. No gate receipts either.Its best to understand the subject before you start with the deramping. Many of us know its overvalued. You are clueless on all fronts.
slartybartfaster
02/1/2021
18:55
That's okay, if you can't do it, just be honest about it
kreature
02/1/2021
18:43
CASSINI, I have concluded, as I should have realised from the outset, that kreature is not asking genuine questions on here, and he/she has not taken the trouble to do any serious research. He/she is playing the "daft laddie/lassie" just for fun. So it would be a complete waste of time trying to educate him/her any further.
vatnabrekk
02/1/2021
18:15
Would be grateful if you would summarise the process here......I'm more interested in your understanding of it
kreature
02/1/2021
18:13
kreature, I really wish you would do some research so that you would at least have a basic understanding of what you are talking about. Read PHE's web site.
vatnabrekk
02/1/2021
17:14
I do know that the one thing you definitely do not burn in the garden is tyres. So perhaps someone would explain how you cleanly extract hydrogen from an old tractor tyre in an economically viable way. And how many parts per million of hydrogen are there in an old tractor tyre?
kreature
02/1/2021
16:37
I do know the answer to this one. No, it isn't easier to extract hydrogen from water. The reason is, it takes the same amount of energy to electrolyse the hdyrogen from the oxygen in water, as you get from burning them again later on to produce energy.

No overall net energy gain.

It's worse than that though, as you lose energy in the process of electrolysis - it's not 100% efficient. Also to get electricity to electrolyse water you have all the losses involved in generating and distributing that energy in the first place. No electricity generation process is 100% efficient, indeed, far from it, so you actually lose on the deal. You'd be paying £1 in in energy costs to get 50p of hydrogen energy out. I made those numbers up but you get the idea.

Now I suppose you could use wind or solar energy to electrolyse hydrogen from water if you view them as free, but of course they're not. They cost money. More than fossil fuel generated electricity last I heard. Then yes, you have hydrogen, but you might as well have used the input electricity directly as a power source (and more efficiently).

If PHE burns rubber tyres to generate hydrogen I suspect it's because rubber tyres are essentially free and hard to destroy otherwise - nobody wants them and they never rot. They're free at source, apart from transport and handling costs I'd imagine.

cassini
02/1/2021
16:23
Wouldn’t it be easier to extract hydrogen from water, rather than from tractor tyres ?
kreature
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