We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.
Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Redt Energy Plc | LSE:RED | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B11FB960 | ORD EUR0.01 |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 52.50 | 50.00 | 55.00 | - | 0.00 | 01:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
04/1/2019 10:26 | Capital outlay by the customer not RED. | ts0mev | |
04/1/2019 10:12 | That's why the finance announcement with a investment company late last year was a game changer for me, suddenly capital outlay is irrelevant. | gbjbaanb | |
04/1/2019 09:40 | 3128 - smaller capital outlay. £20k saving per year with replacement every 10 years? Should have considered VFRB. | ts0mev | |
04/1/2019 09:25 | The problem is that of transforming from a supplier of Vanadium batteries to a supplier of mass produced Vanadium batteries. The German order pushes that agenda and it is crucial it is landed. The moment a mass producing line is formally announced ONLY THEN can Red compete effectively in the market. Vanadium has the advantage of flamability so should be a first choice once clients can purchase without a 6 month + timeline | tradermel | |
04/1/2019 08:58 | It also shows the problem that when storage is selected it still tends to be Lithium, VFRB still a new technology. | owenski | |
04/1/2019 08:16 | Not redT and not flow, but good exposure re.the benefits of battery storage and shows businesses are looking at it more and more. | bluechimp1 | |
04/1/2019 05:46 | Many thanks to all the above for feedback re Cube and Gildemeister - Interesting and useful - If DMG MORI could not make VFRB work I wonder how a small Canadian company be able to obtain traction while still apparently manaufacturing in Austria - Will have to reseach further. | pugugly | |
03/1/2019 23:55 | I predict a fall here in the next few weeks and bod will panic place and make things worse. Fair value around 3p. | 1crackupboom | |
03/1/2019 23:27 | Today we had a Nr7 day on the chart lets hope its causes a positive out come. | chestnuts | |
03/1/2019 22:43 | Gildemeister was part of German engineering giant DMG MORI Gmbh (market Cap 3.5B Euro) who, for some reason let it "wither on the vine" before cutting it loose. | gerd212 | |
03/1/2019 22:33 | This is the appointment I was thinking about :- redT has also recently made two senior hires within the Sales and Research & Development divisions. Bengt Stahlschmidt has joined as Global Business Development Lead, alongside Adam Whitehead who has joined as Research Principle. Bengt was responsible for more than 16MWh of flow machine sales during his time at Austrian-based flow machine company Gildemeister, where he held the position of Head of Global Sales. With over 12 years experience in the energy sector, Bengt will work closely with the wider redT sales team on progressing and executing final stage customer contracts, in addition to strengthening the active customer pipeline outlined in the recent Operations Update. | edale | |
03/1/2019 22:26 | Looking at there share price they are not doing as well as Red and they also had a placing last yr | chestnuts | |
03/1/2019 22:16 | Bengt Stahlschmidt and Adam Whitehead | gerd212 | |
03/1/2019 22:14 | I think from memory that Redt acquired the Gildermeister Technical Director when they went bust. | edale | |
03/1/2019 22:10 | "Cellcube" was the product name used by Gildemeister before their demise. | gerd212 | |
03/1/2019 22:03 | Was Gildemeister (Bengt Stahlschmidt,Adam Whitehead) bought out of bankruptcy for peanuts by Stina Resources last April. | gerd212 | |
03/1/2019 21:46 | ALL OF YOU POSTING ON THE OTHER THREAD ABOUT CELLCUBE, REALLY ARE A SET OF PLANKS... CELLCUBE WAS GILDERMEISTER, REDT COULD HAVE BOUGHT THEM OUT FOR A PITTANCE, WHEN THEY WENT BUST LAST YEAR.. WHY WOULD THEY JOINT VENTURE THEM NOW..???? #"Stina Resources Ltd. ("Stina" or the "Company") (CSE: SQA) (OTCQB: STNUF) (Frankfurt: 01X) is pleased to announce the completion of an arm's length transaction to acquire all the outstanding assets of former Gildemeister Energy Storage GmbH, including its CellCube vanadium flow battery, and its energy storage business. " THE INSTALATIONS ARE THE FORMER GILDERMEISTER INSTALATIONS, THEY ARE CELLCUBE INSTALATIONS WHICH BELONGED TO GILDERMEISTER UP UNTIL MAY THIS YEAR.. | dlg3 | |
03/1/2019 21:12 | Yes, I came across them some time ago and mentioned it on the board, but can't remember what my/our conclusion was, except that there are clearly competitors in the field and it would be very strange if there weren't. China is producing huge VFRB machines, I believe. The upside is, that this all goes to demonstrate the acceptance of the technology as an alternative to lithium; and of course, the market is to all intents and purposes, limitless. I do notice however, that they are also a mining concern, sourcing their own vanadium. | brucie5 | |
03/1/2019 21:00 | Yup same business but with far more installations than Redt (if their website is to believed). Best pull that finger out Scotty! spud | spud | |
03/1/2019 20:34 | Sounds like major competition for REDT. A lot less expensive.Market cap $CND 22.143M Anyone come across it while doing enery storage reseach? | pugugly | |
03/1/2019 18:51 | Lots of macro support there. Right product, right sector, right time. | brucie5 | |
03/1/2019 17:29 | Might be of interest - 1st instalment of what we can expect from energy storage in 2019. | bluechimp1 | |
03/1/2019 16:00 | "Renewables overtake coal as Germany's main energy source" but the interesting point on this article is the line "The shift marks progress as Europe's biggest economy aims for renewables to provide 65 percent of its energy by 2030 in a costly transition" - costly for the Germans, but they'll have to invest in storage if they want renewables to work. Given this, I can't see the German contract being allowed to fail, their politicians need it to flaunt their green credentials. I think in a few years time, there will be more contracts for a few more hundred MWh of storage here. They have 45GW of solar capacity and 60GW of wind, providing 40% of their energy needs - but renewables contribute less and less as you add more (as its unreliable) so to get the next 25% out of that and stop relying on coal/gas will require more and more storage. So next the 10 years to achieve their goal will provide a lot of profit for RedT. | gbjbaanb | |
03/1/2019 13:28 | 3108 Agreed in principle. I took the point as being we are potentially closer to seeing profits. If you asked me how confident I was regarding profits in 12 or 24 months then I would not quote 12 months. | ts0mev |
It looks like you are not logged in. Click the button below to log in and keep track of your recent history.
Support: +44 (0) 203 8794 460 | support@advfn.com
By accessing the services available at ADVFN you are agreeing to be bound by ADVFN's Terms & Conditions