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5N Plus Inc T.VNP

Alternate Symbol(s):  FPLSF

5N Plus Inc. is a global producer of specialty semiconductors and performance materials. The Company deploys a range of technologies to develop and manufacture its products. The Company operates through two segments: Specialty Semiconductors and Performance Materials. Operating in North America and Europe, the Specialty Semiconductors segment manufactures and sells products used in several applications, such as renewable energy, space satellites and imaging. Its end markets include photovoltaics (terrestrial and spatial solar energy), medical imaging, infrared imaging, optoelectronics, and advanced electronics. The Performance Materials segment operates in North America, Europe and Asia and manufactures and sells products that are used in several applications in pharmaceutical and healthcare, and industrial. The main products are sold as active pharmaceutical ingredients, animal feed additives, specialized chemicals, commercial grade metals, alloys, and engineered powders.


TSX:VNP - Post by User

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Comment by Enersolon Jun 06, 2008 8:50am
133 Views
Post# 15152883

RE: Not to worry...

RE: Not to worry...I don't think any solar company with a viable product and good management will do anything except go up in value big time in the near future and VNP certainly has those attributes. We are at the Model T level of the automobile industry and can you imagine if you held Ford then.

I do believe the recent article re FSLR and cadmium had an effect on the SP albeit much less than I anticipated. The dilution has also effected the SP but all companies go through dilution as they require the capital to move forward. That is called growth and short time pain will be long time gain. Without it, this company and others wouldn't be worth holding.

An article from the G&M this morning indicates what is going to happen and solar including VNP will certainly be a part of the solution. Solar will be around until the Sun is gone and then who will care?


IEA urges $45-trillion “energy revolution”

Reuters

TOKYO — World governments must quickly start a $45-trillion “energy technology revolution” that could drive up the cost of producing carbon ten-fold, or risk emissions surging by 2050, the West's energy watchdog warned on Friday.

The world would need to build dozens of nuclear power plants a year and bury carbon emitted from dozens more gas and coal plants, plus cutting the carbon intensity of cars, trucks, buses and planes eightfold, to halve emissions by mid-century, the International Energy Agency said in a new report.

Without taking action on government policy, emissions would surge by 130 per cent and oil demand would rise by 70 per cent by 2050, the IEA said, far beyond the level that many experts believe the world is capable of sustainably producing.

The report, commissioned by the Group of Eight three years ago, lays down the gauntlet for G8 leaders gathering in northern Japan next month, where Tokyo is expected to urge them to agree on a target of chopping greenhouse gases in half by 2050.

“There should be no doubt – meeting the target of a 50 per cent cut in emissions represents a formidable target. We would require immediate policy action and technological transition on an unprecedented scale,” Nobuo Tanaka, Executive Director of the IEA, said in a statement.

“It will essentially require a new global energy revolution which would completely transform the way we produce and use energy... We need to act now.”

The IEA said halving emissions by 2050 would require “all options up to a cost of $200 per tonne of CO2” – and in the worst case $500 a tonne – giving a rare long-term forecast that suggests a sharp rise from the 27 euro ($42) a tonne price for carbon emissions rights trading in Europe.

“You would have to see one of the biggest rises in a commodity price in history to get $500 a tonne,” said Tom Luckock, a lawyer with international law firm Norton Rose.

Scientists say that the world must brake and reverse annual increases in greenhouse gas emissions to avoid catastrophic climate change including rising seas and more extreme weather.

But governments are at odds over how to split the costs of funding cleaner energy technology, particularly in the developing world. The IEA said the $45 trillion is equal to 1.1 per cent of average annual global gross domestic product over the period.

“Carbon emissions must be cut. Costs of about 1 per cent of GDP are not outrageous, so this target is realistic,” said Go Hibino, a senior manager at Mizuho Information & Research Institute.

About 190 nations are racing to craft a framework by the end of 2009 to succeed the Kyoto Protocol, which binds 37 advanced nations to cut emissions by an average of 5 per cent below 1990 levels by 2008-12.

The report, which comes just ahead of a G8 energy ministers meeting this weekend in Japan, highlighted the security benefits of cracking down on carbon.

“Oil demand by 2050 would be 27 per cent below the level of 2005. Yet massive investments in remaining reserves will be needed to make up for the shortfall as low-reserve provinces are exhausted,” Mr. Tanaka said.

A massive research and development effort will be needed in the next 15 years costing about $10-billion to $100-billion per year to develop technology to cut CO2 emissions, the IEA said in the Energy Technology Perspectives report.

It said the power sector would need to be “decarbonized” by installing CO2 capture and storage at 35 coal- and 20 gas-fired power plants a year from 2010 to 2050 at a cost of $1.5-billion each. The sector would also need to build 32 new nuclear plants and install 17,500 wind turbines a year.

Germany's RWE Supply and Trading said on Wednesday that CCS, often regarded as commercially impossible, could be viable with carbon prices of less than 100 euros.

The report comes ahead of a weekend meeting of G8 energy ministers and their China, India and South Korea peers in Aomori in northern Japan, where they will try to agree on the role of consumer nations in stemming oil's five-year price rally.

Mr. Tanaka said non-IEA members such as China, India and other developing countries must conserve energy to achieve the target as they are already big emitters and are likely to emit more.

“Some kind of financial facility or some scheme is needed to help developing countries participate more easily,” Mizuho's Hibino said. “It would be hard for the IEA to achieve the goal without the participation of developing countries.”




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