RE:while a few await the Q'ly release....s2000duck,
Ah yes. graphene.
Pray tell. Do you know whether company management are even speaking with a well recognized chemicals company, a company I've called the "industrial titan" for more years that I care to recall?
Why wouldn't Ford Motor Company just adopt "Graphene BlackTM" as it's go to powder for all it's graphite comprising automotive parts and components?
Why wouldn't Ford executives provide NanoXplore with the very long term bonafide and bankable offtake purchase agreement for the acquisition of most of the first "dry process" graphene manufacturing module production?
Is it because NanoXplore simply has not yet managed to secure enough longer term sustainable annual volumes of the very lower cost and entirely recyclable waste by-product graphite material remaining following the process step manufacturing of "mechanical process" produced CSPG anode component material?
Were NanoXplore truly ready in said respect, Tesla executives, Elon Musk in particular, would be ready to adopt NanoXplore graphene enhanced battery chemistries comprised battery cells and also NanoXplore "Graphene BlackTM" enhanced automotive parts and components technologies in manufacturing parts and components for it's own growing vehicles product offerings.
Note: I believe Graphex Technologies Ltd, a CSPG anode manufacturing company which was attempting a merger with a Nasdaq listed SPAC, does employ the specifically mechanical process manufacturing step that produces abundant amounts of NanoXplore required very lower cost and entirely recyclable waste by-product graphite material.
Amongst others, Syrah Resources Limited would perhaps also utilize said specifically mechanical CSPG anode process manufacturing step.
Do you know whether the CSPG anode process manufacturing step technologies, which Nouveau Monde Graphite is currently employing at it's 2,000 tpa pilot scale manufacturing facility and would be employing at it's proposed Becancour situated 42,000 tpa CSPG anode manufacturing facility, actually does produce the recyclable and lower costs waste by-product graphite material that NanoXplore's "dry process" graphene manufacturing modules rely on as a primary feedstock input?