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REH Renew. Energy

0.875
0.00 (0.00%)
28 Mar 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Renew. Energy LSE:REH London Ordinary Share GB00B063PD00 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% 0.875 - 0.00 00:00:00
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
0 0 N/A 0

Renewable Energy Share Discussion Threads

Showing 3576 to 3592 of 3775 messages
Chat Pages: 151  150  149  148  147  146  145  144  143  142  141  140  Older
DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
07/4/2015
06:59
Looks undervalued by a huge a amount, expecting a correction once the punters realise what this company has going on in the back ground.
Directors buying news pending all looking set to spike.

rugby
06/4/2015
19:48
So many power companies are buying up wind projects in Poland they want to get in before the subsidised regulations change. Anytime now for REH. Should get about £180k per MW..so £5-6m for 30MW. REH Mcap 1m!!

Also Poland have to reach a target by 2020 for renewables. They are not going to comply at current levels of power generation as they rely on coal. They will get fined euro 60-70k per day if they don't meet guidelines, hence they need as many wind farms generating. Wind speeds are good for REH wind farm project..

Note the change in tune. This from 29/09/14 interims, which sounded positive and for which we are awaiting news.

"The resurgence of interest in the Polish market and renewed efforts to find a buyer has continued.

We are engaged in early discussions with a number of potential acquirers, further updates will be issued in due course."


Compare the resurgance comments to the AR a few months before in 25/06/14, they sounded less enthused and we know since then the director bought 900,000 shares in December..wonder why?

"The Group has planning consent for a 30MW wind farm at Kobylany, Poland. As previously reported the Group is looking for a buyer or joint developer, but the long running uncertainty over the Polish government's policy towards "green" energy has meant there has been no progress. Recent announcements by the Polish Energy Minister appear to have temporarily rekindled the Polish market, albeit likely for a brief period. Attempts to achieve a sale will continue, but in the meanwhile ongoing expenditure is severely restricted given the overall uncertainty in this market and the limited cash resources available."


Clearly expectations have changed from looking for a buyer, to now in discussions with various acquirer's of the Polish wind farm project.

whoppy
06/4/2015
19:21
Hope everyone had a great easster.

The 2qtr has started and we need to roll and bankrupt small MM counterparty scumbags

bad robot
06/4/2015
19:04
CWE/REHEnel, DCNS to Set Up USD 20 Mln Marine Energy Centre in ChileEnel Green Power (EGP) and DCNS have been selected by the Chilean government's economic development organization CORFO (Corporación de Fomento de la Producción) to establish a groundbreaking global centre of Marine Energy R&D excellence in the country, named Marine Energy Research and Innovation Centre (MERIC).The Centre will be supported by a contribution of approximate 20 million US dollars in cash and in-kind funding, 65% of which will come from CORFO. MERIC's applied research and development work will focus on key sources of marine renewable energy such as tidal power and wave power.Salvatore Bernabei, General Manager for Chile and Andean Region at Enel Green Power, said: "Marine energy is one of the most important frontiers in the renewable sector and innovation is key to unlock potential of this renewable energy source. MERIC, thanks to the support of all its Chilean partners, will revolutionize the way we produce energy from the oceans in Chile and at global level."Thierry Kalanquin, Senior Vice President Energies & Marine Infrastructure at DCNS, warmly welcomed the announcement: "The country has tremendous potential and can become the global laboratory for Marine Energy on Pacific coast. The creation of MERIC answers that objective and we have the ambition to turn it into an international centre for adaptation and qualification of Marine Energy technologies."EGP and DCNS will bring their respective strengths to MERIC. EGP is a world leader in the renewable energy sector. It will contribute to MERIC giving the point of view of the end user by highlighting what are the most important factors in the installation, operation and maintenance of marine power plants in order to secure safe, sustainable and profitable projects.DCNS is involved in marine renewable energy systems with a significant track record as well as technical expertise in Tidal, Wave, Offshore wind and Thermal energy conversions, and brings valuable experience in naval and marine industrial project management and methodology.In addition, MERIC will be supported by the resources and substantial expertise of the Chilean development organization Fundación Chile, the R&D foundation INRIA Chile, research institutions Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, and Universidad Austral de Chile, as well as Enel Group's subsidiaries Chilectra and Endesa Chile.During the first 8 year, the Centre will gather researchers to support work related to marine resource assessment, site characterization, bio-fouling, bio-corrosion, environmental and social impact, and technology adaptation to extreme ocean conditions. The experts will also begin developing tools to test and adapt MRE technologies to the country's unique natural conditions (seismic activity, rugged coastline, a particularly rich and diverse array of marine flora and fauna).MERIC will implement an innovative, integrated approach to R&D in the sector, which includes the installation of an experimental wave energy converter to serve as a "validation test bench" allowing comparison of theoretical results with real world data.
tidy 2
06/4/2015
18:55
Great discussion on here, see you guys at 3p.
drif
06/4/2015
13:34
This is entertaining u two keep it up.
tidy 2
06/4/2015
13:31
Well, since you're obviously not too keen to use your physics knowledge, I'll supply a few number sofr you.

Take the Nissan leaf, an electric car optimised for electric use. It has a 24kWh battery - your battery is 1kWh. The leaf is a very small car, i imagine your camper is 5 or 6 times the size.

The leaf charges up from a 3kW charger in 12 hours. Your solar panels stuck to your van give you - and I'll estimate here - 200W peak, at midday on a sunny day, for an hour or two. So in an hour, you'll store in your battery 1/5th kWh (or 1/140th the leaf requires). You'll get out from your battery probably half what you put in, so 0.1kWh available during your 1 hour midday recharge stop. If your leisure battery can deliver sufficient power to overcome the inertia required to get your van moving (which is doubtful), you may travel a few metres before flattening your barely charged battery.

That is physics, not the feeling in your bones you are asking me to trust.

pierre oreilly
06/4/2015
13:07
listen i'm not talking normal motorway van...i'm talking campervan that can travel a few miles then stop and recharge via solar energy...trust me it will work..when i get my MODEC i'll prove it
temmujin
06/4/2015
11:38
err...i did do physics and yes i believe you would be able to run the van a certain distance...probably not many miles but that depends on the lithium batteries.. by the way have you not seen the tanker ships running on solar power?

and regards physics i bet you still believe jet fuel and fire brought down the twin towers...so i suggest you need to brush up abit re your science education

temmujin
06/4/2015
11:10
I am wised up mate.

Do you think if you covered your van in panels (and got some litium batteries), you'd be able to run your van without fossil fuel?

I take it you didn't do physics at school?

pierre oreilly
06/4/2015
08:42
pierre...ive got a separate battery..if i want to run my lap top too off it i add bigger wattage panels..eventually i will cover the roof with panels and buy larger efficient lithium batteries...who knows i might be able to drive my camper on electricity if i buy a big electric Modec type van..in fact you could cover the entire van in flexible solar panels..time to wise up mate!
temmujin
06/4/2015
07:48
In fact, are you certain that even the tiny amount of energy your lights need actually comes fron solar? Do you have a dedicated battery connected to your solar panels, or the more usual and obvious case where the battery is charged also by the engine as you drive along?
pierre oreilly
06/4/2015
07:29
Temm, great, your camper van lights work on solar energy. What does the other 99.99pc of your campervan energy needs run on?
pierre oreilly
06/4/2015
07:05
intermale. Finite fuel sources mate you'll have to move with the times at some point ;)
tidy 2
05/4/2015
19:15
intermale...sorry ya wrong...my campervan runs its lighting on free energy from the sun..alternative energy is worrying the money obsessed control freaks who will try every trick in the book to regulate and steer this free energy where they want it..and thats out of the peoples hands
temmujin
05/4/2015
12:17
I reckon a market cap of 0.9mil is dead cheap? Hmmm this gets interesting! Will research abit!
makday
05/4/2015
11:11
Britain in need of turbines twice as big as Big Ben claim energy expertsBRITAIN should welcome "super" wind turbines more than double the height of Big Ben, says a wind industry task force.Councils should no longer concentrate on visual blight but take more heed of the need to meet climate change targets, it says.The new turbines would be up to 656ft from base to blade tip, compared with an average of 299ft for those built here last year.Taller turbines would take advantage of stronger wind at higher altitudes.The task force claims relaxing planning rules would help onshore wind to become "the most cost-effective new electricity source by 2020".The average height of turbines in Britain has increased from 243ft in 2000 to 299ft last year.Almost all planning authorities restrict the height to 410ft.The task force says height restrictions in Britain are barriers to efficient use of the latest technology.But John Constable, director of the Renewable Energy Foundation, said the report failed to take account of extra costs.He added: "This study suggests making life easier for developers by preventing communities from objecting to ever-larger turbines.That is neither good engineering nor good politics."
tidy 2
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