From: Willie.Mookie on 6 Oct 2007 22:03 On Oct 6, 10:50 am, John Larkin <jjlar...(a)highNOTlandTHIStechnologyPART.com> wrote: > On Sat, 06 Oct 2007 06:19:34 -0000, Willie.Moo...(a)gmail.com wrote: > >On Oct 5, 9:34 pm, John Larkin > ><jjlar...(a)highNOTlandTHIStechnologyPART.com> wrote: > >> On Fri, 05 Oct 2007 23:12:49 -0000, Willie.Moo...(a)gmail.com wrote: > >> >I am not selling equipment. I sell on forward contracts commodities. > >> >The people who buy the commodities don't care about where they get > >> >them. They just need them by a certain date. But they pay me today > >> >for a discounted price. And they accept the execution risk. Which is > >> >equivalent to discovery risk in developing resources. There are of > >> >course no market risk since these are commodities. > > >> >With this money I build own and operate facilities that use solar > >> >hydrogen to make gasoline from coal by direct hydrogenation, > >> >facilities that make fresh water and salt crystals from sea water > >> >using solar heat in a multi-stage flash evaporator, and facilities > >> >that upgrade residual oil to gasoline using hydrogen in a direct > >> >hydrogenation process. > > >> Show us some links to some such facilities. Nothing like that could be > >> done off the public record. > > >> John > > >Haha.. actually that's what I thought. But it appears that the US > >media has a few blind spots in their unflinching eye. lol. > > >A five page article appeared in Trust Magazine in Jakarta August 2006, > >when we signed the deal. And there is a strong continuing interest in > >Asian press. But there seems to be a disconnect between Asian and > >Western press. I was invited to New York City and was interviewed by > >reporters for the New York Times and Wall Street Journal. And > >articles were written. However, editors wouldn't run them. In time, > >the reporters moved on seeking to get their name in print. > > >I did get a copy of A GAME AS OLD AS EMPIRE by Hiatt, from one of the > >reporters which describes in one of the sections how stories get > >canned from time to time > > >http://www.mitrais.com/mining/miningNews060818.asp#7 > >http://www.bni.co.id/Portals/0/Document/Coal.pdf > > >Page 5 of the .pdf file describes briefly what I'm doing under COAL > >LIQUEFACTION PRODUCTION INDONESIA. > > 20 million barrels of solar-powered coal-oil conversion per day, by > 2011? I'll check back and see how you're doing. > > > > > > >Now, I had a few websites and thought I could put information out > >there. But upon review I decided to drop the whole marketing thing > >when the project financing approach worked so well. After all, I'm > >not selling equipment or facilities. I'm selling commodities. How I > >make them doesn't really interest those who are buying them. > > >Now, the risks involved are important to evaluate, but as long as > >excution risk is equal to or less than discovery risk in a more > >conventional development, that's acceptable to the investors I'm > >working with. > > >At present I'm dealing with people who are willing to make rather > >large bets to solve some big resource problems and this technology > >looks interesting to them since it has the potential to do that and > >provide for the needs they've outlined for themselves. > > >As far as the other programs are concerned, UAE is even less > >forthcoming and less connected to the Western media engine than > >Indonesia! lol. The Palms and similar developments > >notwithstanding. > > >But in all cases as I mentioned folks are interested in solving major > >resource problems and are willing to make big bets to do that. > > >Indonesia is an OPEC country, and the very first OPEC country to run > >out of oil. They entered secondary -that is declining - production in > >2004 and those folks who invest in oil field exploration and > >development for OPEC nations were willing to do something out of the > >box to increase the oil reserves of Indonesia. This is one of many > >solutions they're working on, though I think mine the best. > > >Australia is in the grip of a drought and is spending billions on > >increasing their water supplies. I was asked by an Aussie who read > >the articles in the Asian press could I do something about making > >water with sunlight. As a result I designed a thermal version of my > >system. And I proposed to a group of investors a method of using > >solar energy to drive a multi-stage flash evaporator that delivers not > >only fresh water, but salt also. These investors agreed to my build- > >own-operate facilities model. They pre-purchased the entire output of > >a facility I am now building in Australia at a discount, and agreed to > >pay a small continuing fee for water as its produced. > > >I'll be in Sydney in a few weeks, you'll likely see more in the press > >at that time. > > Can't wait. Please post the links. > > John- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - I already posted a few of the ones that appear in English. There are lots in Indonesian and Chinese and Japanese. Bottom line I have the investors I need and I'm fixed for projects and money now. The only reason I'm talking about it at all, is that you are asking the questions. Recall this started out as a description of where I thought the solar energy market was going. You really couldn't say anything against the technical descriptions I've offered, so you are now going out of your way, after enlisting help from your buddy here, to attack me personally. haha. comparing me to crooks you have known and making similar outlandish statements - for no damn good reason. One must wonder what motivates you to do all this. This is all due to the fact that you don't want to admit that I'm right about the costs and limitatoins of direct connect solar to the power grid? haha.. What a weak person you must be.
From: John Larkin on 6 Oct 2007 22:13 On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 01:38:30 -0000, Willie.Mookie(a)gmail.com wrote: >> >Page 5 of the .pdf file describes briefly what I'm doing under COAL >> >LIQUEFACTION PRODUCTION INDONESIA. >> >> 20 million barrels of solar-powered coal-oil conversion per day, by >> 2011? I'll check back and see how you're doing. >> > >That was a typo - it was 20 million barrels per quarter. Hey, what's a couple of orders of magnitude between friends? John
From: John Larkin on 6 Oct 2007 22:53 On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 01:48:42 -0000, Willie.Mookie(a)gmail.com wrote: >On Oct 6, 6:26 pm, Rich Grise <r...(a)example.net> wrote: >> On Fri, 05 Oct 2007 23:12:49 +0000, Willie.Mookie wrote: >> > I am not selling equipment. I sell on forward contracts commodities. >> > The people who buy the commodities don't care about where they get >> > them. They just need them by a certain date. But they pay me today >> > for a discounted price. And they accept the execution risk. Which is >> > equivalent to discovery risk in developing resources. There are of >> > course no market risk since these are commodities. >> >> So, in other words, you're a swindler? > >No. > >> I was once a paralegal assistant > >Really? > >> in a litigation based on almost the exact same scam. > >So, you've seen my financing documents have you? You are publicly and >categorically making statements about my business practices based on a >careful legal review of my financing documents? > >> They lost. > >Haha.. Did they now? > >> Thanks, >> Rich > >http://www.emfi.biz/oil_gas_financing.asp > >I would suggest that anyone interested read up on how oil and gas >fields get financed. Basically if you have rights to the property, >have a geology report that says there might be oil or gas on that >property,and an engineering report from qualified vendors that give an >estimate of production cost, you can sell a portion of the potential >output to build up productive capacity on that property. > >In similar fashion, I have rights to 1.5 billion tons of coal. I have >rights to 36,000 hectares of sunny land. I have independent >confirmation that I can make 7 bbls/ gasoline for each ton of coal, >and I have vendor reports that give precise costs and time frames. >Why shouldn't I sell a poriton of the potential output to build up >this productive capacity on that property? Fact is, I can. Well, it's just fairly seldom that our little electronic circuit design group is graced by billionaires who will soon be in control of most of the energy market of the world. Frankly, circuit design sounds like more fun. John
From: Robert Adsett on 6 Oct 2007 23:19 In article <e4ggg3hml9cqdfn29u9akime696us7ltar(a)4ax.com>, John Larkin says... > On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 01:38:30 -0000, Willie.Mookie(a)gmail.com wrote: > > > >> >Page 5 of the .pdf file describes briefly what I'm doing under COAL > >> >LIQUEFACTION PRODUCTION INDONESIA. > >> > >> 20 million barrels of solar-powered coal-oil conversion per day, by > >> 2011? I'll check back and see how you're doing. > >> > > > >That was a typo - it was 20 million barrels per quarter. > > Hey, what's a couple of orders of magnitude between friends? I hadn't figured you for an astronomer John. That phrase figured prominently in my introductory astronomy course as an undergrad. Robert -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
From: Willie.Mookie on 7 Oct 2007 06:37
On Oct 6, 10:53 pm, John Larkin <jjlar...(a)highNOTlandTHIStechnologyPART.com> wrote: > On Sun, 07 Oct 2007 01:48:42 -0000, Willie.Moo...(a)gmail.com wrote: > >On Oct 6, 6:26 pm, Rich Grise <r...(a)example.net> wrote: > >> On Fri, 05 Oct 2007 23:12:49 +0000, Willie.Mookie wrote: > >> > I am not selling equipment. I sell on forward contracts commodities. > >> > The people who buy the commodities don't care about where they get > >> > them. They just need them by a certain date. But they pay me today > >> > for a discounted price. And they accept the execution risk. Which is > >> > equivalent to discovery risk in developing resources. There are of > >> > course no market risk since these are commodities. > > >> So, in other words, you're a swindler? > > >No. > > >> I was once a paralegal assistant > > >Really? > > >> in a litigation based on almost the exact same scam. > > >So, you've seen my financing documents have you? You are publicly and > >categorically making statements about my business practices based on a > >careful legal review of my financing documents? > > >> They lost. > > >Haha.. Did they now? > > >> Thanks, > >> Rich > > >http://www.emfi.biz/oil_gas_financing.asp > > >I would suggest that anyone interested read up on how oil and gas > >fields get financed. Basically if you have rights to the property, > >have a geology report that says there might be oil or gas on that > >property,and an engineering report from qualified vendors that give an > >estimate of production cost, you can sell a portion of the potential > >output to build up productive capacity on that property. > > >In similar fashion, I have rights to 1.5 billion tons of coal. I have > >rights to 36,000 hectares of sunny land. I have independent > >confirmation that I can make 7 bbls/ gasoline for each ton of coal, > >and I have vendor reports that give precise costs and time frames. > >Why shouldn't I sell a poriton of the potential output to build up > >this productive capacity on that property? Fact is, I can. > > Well, it's just fairly seldom that our little electronic circuit > design group is graced by billionaires who will soon be in control of > most of the energy market of the world. > > Frankly, circuit design sounds like more fun. > > John- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - I understand. But please understand I have a daughter who's mom and whom are Swiss citizens, and since I'm eligible and there are advantages in it for me, I'm getting my residency papers and with those will buy a couple of houses in Geneva and a chalet in the Rhone valley. One house is for my daughter and her mum, and the other for me, and the chalet is to create an income neutral situation - the townhouse I bought for them 4 years ago may be rented as well. The rent brings in enough every season to cover recurring costs on all households. Which the accountants like. Meanwhile Swiss real- estate is very stable - a good inestment - so,its well worth the money - I'm obviously not carrying any debt. But I have to sit in Geneva for a certain period of time. So, I'm spending time with my daughter, and schmoozing the UN folks who issue carbon credits, cause that's going to be worth something.. when they're issued. and between that and taking day trips into France Germany and Italy, and yelling at vendors on the phone - I have some time to check these usenet postings and make a few comments. I will be disappearing shortly. I have a BBJ being outfitted by Pnnafiarina in Italy with a new interior - an old GE plane that sold recently. With that I will gather my tech teams and keep in touch and more imprtantly - be productive in transit. A fractional ownership company is managing the plane, and leases it out for me when I'm not using it, and I can use the rest of that network at a discounted price. Since there are few large long range bizjets flying between Asia and the west, - and since the Chinese olympics are coming up, I was told I'd actually make money with the plane in 2008. We'll see. haha.. I'll be leaving for Sydney in about two weeks. Then you'll see me disappear. But I didn't want me personally to become the point of my posts. I was merely giving you folks the benefit of my thoughts on the subject of solar energy. .. |