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Eguana Technologies Inc V.EGT

Alternate Symbol(s):  EGTYF

Eguana Technologies Inc. designs, markets, manufactures and sells fully integrated energy storage solutions, based on its power electronics platform, for global residential and commercial markets. The Company connects utilities with consumers, through its commercial and residential energy storage solutions. The Company also markets and sells a suite of micro inverter products, which are integrated with its energy storage platform, providing consumers with a full solar + storage system architecture for residential and commercial applications. The Company’s product lines are based on a patented, software-driven, advanced power control technology platform. Its products include Evolve and Elevate. Its Evolve is a storage solution for homes large and small, which provides a fully automated backup solution for multi-day power outages. Its Elevate is engineered to reduce peak loads and reduce demand charges for small commercial and industrial applications.


TSXV:EGT - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Comment by 1969Enigmaon Oct 04, 2016 11:55pm
191 Views
Post# 25310055

RE:RE:EGT in a nutshell updated.

RE:RE:EGT in a nutshell updated.As requested....Updated again with a couple of relevant posts at the beginning:

https://www.pdfdevices.com/world-energy-storage-systems-market-is-expected-to-grow-at-a-cagr-of-6-4-to-reach-264953-million-by-2022-acute-market-reports/

https://new-techeurope.com/2016/10/02/electric-mobility-mercedes-benz-flips-switch-generation-eq-mobility-revisited/

1969Enigma wrote: Friday 07 Oct 16 2:00pm 3:00pm

Cleantech and innovation are a key component to the continued diversification of Albertas economy as part of the Climate Leadership Plan. Albertas universities are producing pioneering new technologies and energy companies and other investors are partnering with researchers to ensure that the future of energy can make it from the laboratory to the market. This session moderated by Mark Summers, Director, Renewable Energy, Alberta Innovates Energy and Environment Solutions and featuring panelists: Brent Harris, Chief Technology Officer, Eguana Technologies; Kyle Kasawski, Managing Director, SOLARMAX Power Inc; and John Paul Morgan, Chief Technology Officer, Morgan Solar will explore this topic by addressing questions"

https://solarwestconference.ca/wp-content/uploads/SolarWest16-program-web-v7.pdf





1969Enigma wrote:
https://media.daimler.com/marsMediaSite/en/instance/ko/Worlds-largest-2nd-use-battery-storage-is-starting-up.xhtml?oid=13634457&ls=L2VuL2luc3RhbmNlL2tvLnhodG1sP29pZD00ODM2MjU4JnJlbElkPTYwODI5JmZyb21PaWQ9NDgzNjI1OCZib3JkZXJzPXRydWUmcmVzdWx0SW5mb1R5cGVJZD00MDYyNiZ2aWV3VHlwZT10aHVtYnM!&rs=0



1969Enigma wrote:
The plan is for the company to sell the batteries to customers as a package with rooftop solar the cost per 2.5kWh battery unit has not yet been released through an as-yet unnamed electricity retailer partner.

1969Enigma wrote: Solar innovation will truly be a technological "disruption". Things are about to get really interesting...

GLTA & DYODD

ShinyCrow wrote:

Own the Startup That Beat Tesla
Alex Koyfman Photo By Alex Koyfman
Written Thursday, September 8, 2016

We've all had experiences where you just know something is right the moment you see it.

Whether it's your dream home, where everything is already perfect and in the right place; or a car, or a job, or a significant other... sometimes you just don't need further investigation beyond that first glance to decide you like something.

In our day-to-day lives, love at first sight can happen at any moment, but it rarely, if ever, happens when it comes to investing.

There are no perfect stocks or companies out there; definitely nothing that can be called perfect after just a cursory look.

Every investment, no matter how apparently prospective, needs to be vetted down to the smallest detail before decisions are made.

I know this to be true, as does any rational human... which made the conversation I had with the CEO of a small tech company all the more bizarre.

You see, I talk to a lot of these guys. They all have something to sell, which makes it necessary for me to be on guard all the time and know how to separate fact from fiction.

So when this guy told me he had a product that was going to dominate the distributed energy storage industry, I had an immediate doubt.

A big one.

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"You guys are competing with Tesla's Powerwall?" I asked.

Of course they were. Distributed energy storage was exactly the niche that Tesla founder Elon Musk had created — at least as far as most people knew — when he made headlines announcing the groundbreaking new product last year.

The Powerwall revolutionized domestic energy management in a few ways.

powerwall

It allowed homeowners to store power — meaning they could buy it from power companies at certain times to take advantage of lower rates for on-demand use, as well as store the power they generated using solar panels or other forms of domestic power generation.

With wide adoption, such a system would take enormous pressure off the power grid, as well immunize homeowners from power outages.

Clues foretelling that wide adoption, thanks in no small part to Elon Musk's famous knack for promotion, became evident almost immediately.

In its first week, Musk boasted more than $800 million in pre-orders for the domestic power storage system.

A few weeks later, he stated that the demand for the product had become so huge that it would gobble up the entire production capacity of his equally famous Gigafactory — the world's biggest battery production facility — even though it had been built to supply the growing demand for lithium batteries stemming from expanded Tesla auto sales.

It was the right thing at the right time, and the trajectory seemed all but guaranteed.

Thanks for the Hype, Elon. Now Step Aside

And yet the guy on the phone was calmly telling me that he was going to dominate this industry. Musk's industry.

"The Powerwall has its problems," he started to respond. "Your average house needs two of them. Takes a team of guys a whole day to install. They're pretty, but the cost of two will buy you a pool, so you're not going to have millions of customers no matter what."

"You'll have enough. Just like their cars. Then they'll build a cheap one to sell to the masses."

He talked for a few more moments about how his batteries were smaller, cheaper, with a higher capacity... How they could be installed by two inexperienced people in just a few hours.

It all sounded great, but I've seen plenty of examples of small companies that supposedly make more efficient, cheaper products in order to compete with major brands.

They usually fail anyway, just because those big brands will out-market, out-sell, and eventually drive the upstarts out of business.

"Our batteries are better, without a doubt, but that's not where our advantage lies," he continued. "It's our power control that make the difference. The brains behind the hardware. What Musk doesn't tell you when he talks about Powerwall is that it's only a battery. You still need a control system to use it. They don't build those. A third party does."

"So you build the whole package, then, battery and power control system?"

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Scalable Profits, Major Clients, Universal Compatibility

"We do, but we don't necessarily sell the whole package every time. Our biggest clients make their own batteries and use our power controls to manage them."

Ok, now this was getting interesting. Clients.

Like I said a moment ago, I've seen plenty of supposedly "better" products from startups. They usually disappear.

They usually disappear because of a lack of commercial acceptance — a lack of clients.

"How big are your clients?"

"I'm not allowed to disclose the identity of the largest one, but I can say that it's a major German automotive company."

I was at my computer when he said those words, so I Googled "German automaker" and "batteries," and what did I see?

Third or fourth in the results was an article, dated just this past March, about how Daimler AG, owner of the Mercedes-Benz brand, just told Tesla that it would no longer be needing an external source of batteries for its electric car line.

edrive

Could this be the major client this CEO was talking about?

The Clues Are Everywhere, Once You Know What to Look For

I listened to him talk as I did a second search, this time using the ticker symbol of the company whose CEO was on the phone.

Scrolling down the March news, there it was: dated March 11, an announcement of a development contract with a "German automotive subsidiary."

Chills ran up my back at this point because I felt almost as if I was privy to secret information.

A tiny company, with shares trading in the $0.20 range, with a market capitalization of less than 0.2% of Tesla, sealing contracts with massive, globally renown brands for a product that Tesla itself needs.

It seemed too good to be true — essentially a venture-stage company with fewer than 40 employees, and yet its product was about to become a common feature in some of the most recognizable vehicles on the road.

I got off the phone with him and got down to thinking. Is it really this good? Could this company really have $50 million in revenue potential next year — a sum bigger than the firm's entire current value?

The CEO told me to expect more news flow in the coming weeks, but what happened the very next day was what sealed the deal for me.

I received a frantic phone call from one of my business contacts, a venture capitalist who calls periodically with new ideas.

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The Dominoes Begin to Fall

"They halted trading," he said. "News is pending, but I can tell you right now that it's about a financing. A major fund is getting behind them."

I flipped over to my finance page and immediately confirmed that he was right.

The financing was a major step for this company, which was still in its pre-profit stages, to get its products to full-scale commercialization.

At this point, I was sold. Moreover, I was getting antsy... the way I usually get when I start to feel like I'm going to be late for something important.

The smart money was already talking... meaning this boat would leave without me if I took too much longer.

The next day, a Saturday, the company made another news release. Its first commercial power control units had been delivered.

The recipient: the very same German car company which had just told Tesla and Elon Musk to take a hike.

The name of the company was still not mentioned due to a confidentiality agreement, but there it was. Plain as day.

The press release stated that this first batch would be followed by large-volume deliveries starting in the second half of the year.

The CEO hadn't been lying. With news like this making the wires on a regular basis, it wouldn't be long before the stock took off on organic trading momentum alone.

Once earnings started to catch up to the headlines, this stock, now on the cusp of $0.30, would head for the dollar mark.

And that would still only be scratching the surface.

On a Multi-Year Timetable, This Company Could Be Worth Billions

This market, anticipated to reach $16.5 billion within the next eight years, could very well come to rely on this company's power control system the same way the PC universe once relied on Microsoft.

This sub-$40 million company could grow to 20 times its size well before that happened.

I Had a Feeling

I started this recounting by talking about how sometimes you just know when something is right.

When it comes to stocks, having that gut instinct is valuable, just as long as you take the time to make sure that it's more than just a first impression.

Talking to the guy who had everything to gain from this company's success, I knew I had to be diligent, no matter how convincing this CEO may have been.

Today, I can say with confidence that my first knee-jerk response was right on the money.

This may well go down as one of my best discoveries yet... and the fact that it's already up close to 50% since I first picked up the phone only adds to my confidence.

This really is venture-level investing for the everyday trader.

Get the name of the stock by clicking here, and please, use this information wisely.

Fortune favors the bold,







1969Enigma wrote: Watch it.... 9 minutes
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OceeL7i1Qec



1969Enigma wrote: 30 Minutes
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnAYeVOUlOQ



1969Enigma wrote: This video is so worth the viewing time. If you have any doubts about the space you are investing in when considering EGT... you should have absolutely no doubts after viewing this.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kxryv2XrnqM&feature=youtu.be



1969Enigma wrote:
Classic pullback and cup and handles chart formation. Two weeks pullback and formation of the handle with news on the horizon. The continuation pattern remains bullish, and while the pullback is predictable, the break out timeline is not.... but it is coming. I'm really excited for this quarter !

We are now into Q4 so for a recap: The following information I've consolidated into one post as someone had suggested doing so for newcomers to the board. There is a lot of info to pour over and I have not included at the EGT news releases which can be reviewed at the top of the stockhouse board or on SEDAR:

A worthwhile read:

https://seekingalpha.com/instablog/14040502-tom-collins/4424576-lg-chem-sunedison-just-leapfrogged-tesla-solarcity-distributed-battery-energystorage

Then read this one:

https://www.wealthdaily.com/articles/musks-promises-appear-sour-as-tesla-sales-disappoint/8252

And this:

https://www.eguanatech.com/_resources/news/2016-05-09_Eguana_Enters_Australian_Market_and_Expands_AC_Battery_Applications.pdf

And of course this:

Adapt2Survive wrote:
It's a long one.....
This is my 1st post and its not likely to be followed by another, even though I do appreciate all the links and articles everyone posts. Cheers:-)
The Biggest reason, discussions always go off on tangents, or personal attacks which have no substance.
A stupid post doesn't even deserve a reply. And if you didn't have anything good to say, say nothing, you might actually learn something.
Full disclosure No background in trading, Tech educated. Spent over 5 years in Japan. Taught English like most, but did an even better job of meeting good people from all industries, and all continents.
One being a fellow Canadian who happened to be working for the Canadian Embassy over in Tokyo.
.... Don't drift off... There's a point to this...
His role was to introduce visiting Canadian companies to Japanese execs at Gala events and or conferences. The theme of that technical conference being "Ubiquity"
This is back in 2007
At that time for those who don't know, Sustainable Energy Technologies was trying to penetrate the solar market with a simplified , more efficient , parallel wired solar system. Partnering with installers they expanded their footprint around Europe & more, focusing on countries with some incentives to do so... Like...Greece, Spain, and Japan and others.
The big tech players in Japan were very very interested .
As crazy as it sounds , I do believe that we were not ready to meet the demand.
I've been following since then...
A good Canadian company doing their thing and making steps to change the world. In an infant and somewhat untapped ndustry for which many costly components have made it difficult to get to where we are today. But costs have dropped...Which has is at the point of inertia and we are strapped in for the ride , with strategic partnerships all over the world.

They foresaw this point and were smart to rebrand themselves, and get behind their answer to the puzzle.
I'm a believer in the company and their vision. They have adapted well and have strategically and methodically positioned themselves quite well. IMO , somewhat of the pole position. Yet, the race has not begun, but our car is German and I like the sound of that. lol
Look at it from the other angle...
Other BIG PLAYERS don't even include an inverter and are limiting themselves to a certain system with certain output and cycle limits on batteries, but some legislation states... Batteries need to be used a minimum period and clicking thru cycles at a certain rate to qualify for their tax credit.
Other players are awaiting patent approvals and or certifications. While we are certified for almost everywhere.
The Germans believe we are the benchmark, and I forget how many awards we have won individually and with our partners and their products.
On the advice of Mr. WB. "If you believe in the company and their products and services , buy high & buy low, sell 10-15 years from now"
I've been with STG.v since 2009, and just keep averaging down.
Even after the 10-1 reverse split.
Some older links below that show how we got to the pole position. Thought some might like to take a read.
I'm not 100% but I believe "Swell" is out their selling and promoting 2 complete systems and both of them have us inside. Thought that was funny.
The race will begin soon
I do believe it has already been shared on this board who the deal with a " subsidiary of a major or German automaker" is with.
Google is a pretty good search engine!
Team Eguana
Released....June 13, 2016

"The completed PCS is on schedule for certification and on target for general availability through our partner in late 2016. Volume order negotiations have begun and the Company expects orders to begin shipping in the fall."

“With a general product availability target within 2016 the development teams were under significant pressure to deliver a custom product in less than 90 days” commented Justin Holland, CEO of Eguana. “Through a very tight collaboration this goal was achieved, functional testing was a success and the product will now be certified through the regulatory process and available this calendar year.”Md

"The entrance of automotive manufacturers into the stationary storage market signals a transition from the early integrators toward mainstream suppliers,” said Martin Duerr, Director of Business Development at Eguana Technologies. The collaboration is underway, and it is already apparent that the outcome will set a new standard for energy storage products,”
And somebody German is saying....
"For use in the private sector, up to eight battery modules can be combined to produce an energy storage plant with a capacity of 20 kilowatt hours. The systems are fully scalable to requirements for commercial and industrial use. The ???? energy storage plants will be available for ordering as of June, with deliveries scheduled to begin this autumn."
Still not sure??
Ummmm yeah, it's kinda public knowledge..
And the Daimler walk from Tesla might have something to with them investing in a $500 million battery plant of their own. Keeping the production in Germany. Maybe they are concerned Trump might win. lol
I do think LG Chem will get VW knocking at our door:-)
But that's for another day...
The team in Calgary has been at this game for quite sometime now, and along the way, has custom developed to the needs of their clients and their respective markets, partnered with some of the best technologies, and will continue to do so.
I believe they can provide the PCS for any voltage in or out with any battery technology at any capacity, coming from any source, being 100% available or intermittent, with the highest efficiencies.
Just because they haven't made a product for a specific market , does not mean they can't or won't. They can and will. Nobody has asked them to do it yet. And it would be my guess that several big players in current markets and new markets are knocking at the door.
What I'm curious about is...
Is it better for our SP to reach $20 or more, or get purchased by a someone much much bigger before we reach $10?
Do we want to be bought out? And at what point?
Peace

Oldies but goodies :-)
New CEO
2009. "Parralex"
03/2010
Silicon investor
Global certification achieved for Sunergy & Paralex systems.
2010
Sunergy ordered for Germany .
2013
Units first shipped to potential channels of distribution in USA & Germany





And this:

risktakers wrote:
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Eguana Technologies CEO Targets Profitability In 2016

Written By: James West

|

November 27, 2015

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Posted In:

Eguana Technologies CEO Targets Profitability in 2016

Eguana Technologies Inc. (TSX.V:EGT) (OTCMKTS:STGYF) (FRA:S2K1) CEO Justin Holland discusses partnership with battery manufacturer LG Chem Ltd.(KRX:051910), and how that relationship is key to the company’s anticipated profitability in H2 2016.

Midas-Letter-financial-radio-podcast-thumb

Listen to the interview with Justin Holland:

Audio Player
00:00
00:00

James West: Justin, thanks for joining us today.

Justin Holland: Good to be with you, James.

James West: Justin, last time we talked, Eguana was making headway through sales of your units in Germany. That arrangement has come to an end, and you’ve basically pivoted in another direction. Give us an update on what is happening withEguana Technologies.

Justin Holland: So what we wanted to do is, we wanted to broaden out our customer base, and we knew for quite some time that the US market was going to be the big market. There were competitive issues unfolding in Europe with our AC battery, and the Sonnenbatterie Eco which was our primary customer then, and we had some decisions to make going forward as to, do you stick with the one, or do you go to the many? And given the customer profiles and the pipeline we had to capture the US, we’ve gone with the many.

We’ve divided that marketplace in the US into four primary verticals, those verticals being the equipment aggregators, the solar installers, the utilities, and the electrical distributors. We have put primary customers in each one of those verticals already, and it’s that positioning that’s got us excited right now as to when the US market expands, we’re perfectly positioned to move more product than anybody else.

So we had those decisions to make, and we feel we made the right one.

James West: Okay. So that’s kind of reflected in your share price, which seems to be recovering quite nicely. So geographically, where does that put most of your product sales going out in the future?

Justin Holland: Very interesting question, James. We do see product going back into Europe by the end of 2016; we’re working with a couple of players over there through the integration process, so we do expect recovery. But in the short term, between now and second half of calendar 2016, primary targets will be moving into Hawaii and California, with a little bit of product moving into the northeast. Again, what you’ll see is, you’ll see new customer names coming out of the company, and those new customers will start moving higher volumes of product. I think everyone realizes the early mover will be Hawaii; they have just changed their net metering policies, or abolished might be a better word. That should kick-start the energy storage movement. We’re partnered today with E-Gear Energy Solutions, the number one solar installer on the islands, quite happy with that relationship, and we expect them to do big things this year.

James West: Okay. So you’ve made several announcements in regards to partnerships, where you’re selling product through other vendors. What kind of numbers are we looking at for the year?

Justin Holland: The numbers throughout the year, it’s really a wide range right now. We’re looking at customer forecasts that would triple current year; we’ve cut that back somewhat. It’s really dependent on what happens starting in Hawaii in the spring. If they roll out through the utility RFP that’s out there, you could be moving anywhere between 3,000 and 5,000 systems. There’s a solar installation backlog in Hawaii right now, 3,000 to 4,000 systems. If all of those went in, you would be looking at somewhere upwards of 20 million in revenue. It really becomes a discount exercise from that point to say what’s your best guess as to what will happen.

The growth opportunity is very, very significant right now. The actual guidance that we would give, we kind of keep close to our chest, because the answer is, you don’t know how many systems will go in. we see numbers ranging anywhere from 3,000 systems all the way up into the 12,000 and 13,000 system range.

James West: Wow, okay. So the top 10 states in the United States are California, North Carolina, Nevada, Massachusetts, Arizona, New Jersey, New York, Texas, Hawaii and New Mexico. Do you have presence in all of those states?

Justin Holland: Let’s see. You went through them pretty quick, but I would say most of them. Certainly California, Arizona, New York, New Jersey, again in through Maryland, Arizona we’re looking at, Colorado…I don’t believe we’re doing anything yet in North Carolina. I think that might be the only one I heard there, James, that we’re not in.

James West: Okay, well, that’s comforting. So then in terms of growing your market share, is the model going forward through partnerships with existing installers?

Justin Holland: Keep in mind, I’ll take you back to the verticals that we designed, and we’re looking to grow 3 to 5, 5 to 7 percent market share with each one of the customers in each vertical. Our target market share is significantly higher, because we want the accumulation or the sum of the market share that each partner gets. So if you look at the system aggregator vertical that we put together, and working with and shipping product to Sun Edison / Vivint if you will, in today’s world, we expect them to take a pretty significant share of the market. That will give us a significant share of that vertical.

When we look at the solar installer vertical, we talked the hottest market out there in the US is going to be Hawaii. We’re partnered with the number one solar installer in Hawaii. We expect them to take a large chunk of that market, which then gives us a large chunk of it. Combine the equipment aggregator plus the solar installer, where the company takes the benefit through the model that we’ve put together, and we start looking at the major player in the power controls for the storage market in 2016.

James West: okay. So then in terms of residential power versus industrial or community sort of base load power plants, what kind of penetration will you see into those larger scale applications?

Justin Holland: So we’re not targeting large scale applications at all; it’s not really the sweet spot of our technology. Our technology is really geared towards residential and small commercial. If you look at the Navigant Research, where they’re talking 16 billion by 2024, the large slice of that 16 billion, and the fastest-growing slice of that 16 billion, is the residential and small commercial space. That’s where you’ll see the explosion. The utility scale installations, we don’t expect to see a lot happening there. We expect it to be in the smaller system sizes. So from a penetration standpoint, the fastest-growing part of the market is in our wheelhouse.

James West: Interesting. All right, so then, you mentioned that you’re going to be making headway in Europe, and what’s the timeline on that?

Justin Holland: So right now, we’re looking at integration projects with a number of players. All three players have indicated the magical June InterSolar in Munichtimeline. Our expectation is to complete integration at that timeline with a product launch with increasing volumes throughout the summer of 2016.

James West: And what about Canada?

Justin Holland: Canada, we’re working with a couple of different partners in Canada. We’re doing a commercial product in Alberta; it was part of the Alberta Innovates global competition to see which companies could develop technologies to have the biggest impact on the Alberta grid. We won that competition. They were one of five to get that grant. It’s a 15 kilowatt, 30-kilowatt hour demand shaving product. That will also be available commercially next year for the small commercial markets in the United States, and further into Japan. So we will be doing some stuff in Canada; we do have a partner called Sunwave in Ontario that is linked in with our LG Chem AC battery. We’ll do some product with them, and we’re just recently working with a couple of utilities in Ontario who are looking to get into storage.

We didn’t really have Canada on the map, albeit the home country, but there are some early developments now, and we’re very much engaged with them.

James West: Okay. Making reference to that research report by Navigant, they say that 2015 is going to be the year of solar. How much of that is driven by government subsidies?

Justin Holland: On the solar side?

James West: Yeah, on residential solar adoption.

Justin Holland: Right. So if you look at what’s happening with the adoption, it was certainly started with subsidies in mind. It was kind of a German model; the Germany model started with the tariffs, and those tariffs were reduced each year until the market was driving itself. We’re going to see the same thing here in North America. They are talking about the reduction of the ITC [Solar Investment Tax Credit –ed]coming up next year; the general thought out there is, you might see a small dip in the number of installations, which will rebound within a year. So from a grand scheme of things, on the storage side, we don’t see that that’s going to have much of an impact, because the growth of storage will just be hitting that apex when the solar installations ramp right back up after the ITC removal or reduction.

James West: Okay. So Justin, tell me: when does Eguana become a profitable company?

Justin Holland: What we’re looking at right now is, the base model plan, or kind of our discounted customer plan, we would be looking at profitability in June, in the June quarter. We’re pretty comfortable with that. We do believe we’ve positioned the company properly for that, we do have the right partners to move equipment, and as they move equipment, of course our revenues will climb accordingly.

We are moving the AC battery to most of those players, which is a very good product for us. So when I look at all of those things combined, James, we’re looking at the June timeframe for profitability.

James West: Great. Well, that’s good news. So finally, Justin, has anything new emerged in your competitive landscape where you feel you’ve got somebody breathing down your back?

Justin Holland: We have not, and interestingly enough, it is something that we discuss. We brought the full team into the headquarter office in Calgary two weeks ago to have a brainstorming session amongst our engineers and development guys, our sales and marketing guys, ops and finance, and we brainstormed that exact subject: what’s out there, what are we missing, what are we not thinking about, what’s going to come out of the woodwork that we’re not ready for, and we’re still feeling very, very comfortable with where we’re sitting. We’re happy with the technology, we do have cost reduction and development activities underway which should help us maintain that leadership. But the competitive landscape is still a small handful of players that can manage low-voltage power at high efficiency, and we certainly have a development pathway that we feel will keep us at the forefront and the cutting edge.

I can’t say enough about the development guys. I’m fortunate enough that I get to see what they’re working on every day, and there’s some real ground-breaking stuff happening there. We’re going to be happy to start rolling that out in 2016.

James West: Justin, than you for your time today.

Justin Holland: James, I really appreciate it. Anytime.






Eguana Then & now:

https://makenafoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Why-Tesla-Has-Already-Lost-The-Storage-Market.pdf

Historical press releases for EGT:

https://www.firmenpresse.de/directory/488127/eguana-technologies-inc.html

Combination post:

1969Enigma wrote:

jerrio78 wrote:
Itochu Targets Australian Residential Storage Market with Eguana's AC Battery

CALGARY, ALBERTA--(Marketwired - Aug. 18, 2016) - Eguana Technologies Inc. (TSX VENTURE:EGT)(OTCQB:EGTYF) announced today that its partner Itochu Corporation has placed the first order for its integrated AC Battery energy storage solution. The order represents initial traction into the fast growing Australian residential market and will be distributed through an existing Itochu partner. The partner, who will remain unnamed at this time for competitive purposes, has existing distribution, installation and service coverage throughout Australia.

"We are very pleased that Itochu has been able to execute so quickly into the Australian market and with a market leader that has the distribution and installation infrastructure in place to manage the projected growth rates of the Australian market" said Justin Holland, CEO of Eguana. "This demonstrates Itochu's true global reach and we look forward to expanding our relationship in Australia, Japan, and other regions for residential and commercial applications."

"The reception of the AC Battery product in the Australian market has been very positive," said Hiroaki Murase, Manager at Itochu. "The Australian residential energy storage market is expected to reach 62MW in 2017 and our partners are looking for proven, flexible solutions like the AC Battery to deliver performance across a range of applications. We are very optimistic with the business growth opportunities in 2017."

About Itochu

With approximately 130 bases in 65 countries, ITOCHU, one of the leading sogo shosha, is engaging in domestic trading, import/export, and overseas trading of various products such as textile, machinery, metals, minerals, energy, chemicals, food, information and communications technology, realty, general products, insurance, logistics services, construction, and finance, as well as business investment in Japan and overseas.

About The AC Battery:

The Eguana AC Battery™ is a certified, grid ready power control solution pre-integrated with industry leading Li-Ion batteries. Our solution can be seamlessly integrated with a local energy management system or a distributed fleet control network using open communication protocols to provide a fully functional energy storage installation. The AC Battery provides maximum flexibility for system aggregators which want to deploy it as a standalone product, as part of new solar storage installations, or as a retrofit to solar PV installations already in place.

About Eguana Technologies Inc.

Eguana Technologies Inc. (TSX VENTURE:EGT) designs and manufactures high performance power controls for residential and commercial energy storage systems. Eguana has more than 15 years' experience delivering grid edge power electronics for fuel cell, photovoltaic and battery applications and delivers proven, durable, high quality solutions from its high capacity manufacturing facilities in Europe and North America.

With thousands of its proprietary energy storage inverters deployed in the European and North American markets, Eguana is the leading supplier of power controls for solar self-consumption, grid services and demand charge applications at the grid edge.

To learn more, visit www.EguanaTech.com or follow us on Twitter @EguanaTech.

Forward Looking Information

The reader is advised that some of the information herein may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning assigned by National Instruments 51-102 and other relevant securities legislation. In particular, we include: statements pertaining to the value of our power controls to the energy storage market and statements concerning the use of proceeds and the Company's ability to obtain necessary approvals from the TSX Venture Exchange.

Forward-looking information is not a guarantee of future performance and involves a number of risks and uncertainties. Many factors could cause the Company's actual results, performance or achievements, or future events or developments, to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking information. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking information, which speaks only as of the date hereof. Readers are also directed to the Risk Factors section of the Company's most recent audited Financial Statements which may be found on its website or at sedar.com The Company does not undertake any obligation to release publicly any revisions to forward-looking information contained herein to reflect events or circumstances that occur after the date hereof or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events, except as may be required under applicable securities laws.

Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

Company Inquiries
Eguana Technologies Inc.
Justin Holland
CEO
+1.416.728.7635
Justin.Holland@EguanaTech.com

Product Inquiries
Eguana Technologies Inc.
Vishwas Ganesan
Director of Business Development, USA
+1.408.685.2670
Vishwas.Ganesan@EguanaTech.com





Check out the links. Itochu has relationship with Daimler through partner Enerdel.

https://www.fleetsandfuels.com/fuels/evs/2016/07/daimlers-mercedes-benz-urban-etruck/





Be sure to review the links at the bottom of this post:

1969Enigma wrote:

LEOTHELION wrote: In case anyone was wondering what Itochu's foothold was like in Australia... the following link proves their presence in the land down under. Itochu is an international gorilla... wouldn't surprise me in the slightest that when the AC Battery begins to win Australian and Asian market share, that Itochu simply buys Eguana. https://www.itochu.co.jp/en/about/network/oceania/







First check out this older but relevant article on Itochu. https://www.kwrintl.com/library/2010/enerdelinterview.html



Then check out this article on Daimler. Do you see the connection?



https://www.fleetsandfuels.com/fuels/evs/2016/07/daimlers-mercedes-benz-urban-etruck/



DYODD & GLTA



If you've read this far and want to get a little more pumped up:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4Js0dLgnQs&feature=youtu.be

And of course Mackie:

https://www.cantechletter.com/2016/08/catalysts-around-corner-eguana-technologies-says-mackie/

Most if not all of the preceding info led to this post:

1969Enigma wrote: My earliest thoughts on this question was that VW was a strong candidate. I will admit that line of thought shifted with the allusion to the German Auto "subsidiary". With the keyword "subsidiary" .... I've taken pains to identify a big 3 German Auto company that had a subsidiary involved with home energy storage systems. While both BMW and VW have communicated plans to expand into this market, Daimler already is and had a market presence .... through their "subsidiary" deutz accumotive, including targeted marketing in Australia as one of my earlier media posts identifies. Similarly Daimler had a market presence at the time of the earlier EGT media releases. We know that Daimler has a relationship with SMA, however media releases for Daimler through June / July alluded to an electrical partner yet to be identified which begs the question, Why be evasive when they already have an SMA partnership? With all the competitive secrecy remarked to in EGT's media releases It ties in nicely with a Daimler partnership. Recent media coverage has VW in discussions with SMA as well. BMW is high voltage vs EGTs low voltage bidirectional inverters and PCS.

There are several coincidental timelines between the companies and EGT. Eguana's partner LG Chem also has a history with VW and recently won one of VW's awards.

If if we look at Itochu, they are part owners of Enerdel which coincidentally were the battery providers of Daimler's electric trucks. One of my earlier posts identifies that relationship.

IMO the partnership will be with Daimler, however I am happy to be wrong considering the peer companies we are discussing. EGT will do well with any of them. I won't be surprised to see future relationships with all of them.


GLTA









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