Monday, June 17, 2013

Mention iv

See Here

SkunK

20 comments:

Anonymous said...

https://www.otcdynamics.com/gers-greenshift-corp-promotional-campaign-starting-jun-17-2013-833-am-cst/#.UcA8K5yUUmg

Anonymous said...

Lot of mention, lot of dilution!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Go Cheerleaders!!!!!!!!!!!!!KK taking us down the same old path!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Will we ever learn??????????????????????????

Abe said...

Anon 5:59,
If you don't like the direction this is heading then get out.

I have noticed a lot of new posters on various boards that are all claiming to be long time GERS owners that are telling us that the sky continues to fall. This has been occurring over the past 3-4 weeks. It coincided with the lawsuit against PEIX. My guess is that these new "old timers" are posers from the infringers, like PEIX. Pay them no mind. The lawsuits will end - they know that. If they truly weren't worried why would they be posting.
Abe L.

Anonymous said...

pix- down again

Anonymous said...

GGGGGGGGGGGGRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEENNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN

Anonymous said...

33 days and counting. Go greeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeennnnnnnnnnnnn. !!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

WHAT? This thing will be trip zeroes, require another reverse split before any one will see a dime a share!

Anonymous said...

How's peix reverse split doing?
Shiiiitty

Anonymous said...

What does peix have to do with he fortunes of GERS? NOTHING!

Anonymous said...

pix- slips lower

Anonymous said...

By TSN Communications | June 19, 2013


Some of the nation’s top alternative fuel experts have joined forces to form the Alternative Fuel Training Network, launched this month on the new website AFVtraining.net.

Thanks to a surge in the rise of alternative fuels, the federal government predicts U.S. energy production will continue to boom in the coming decades. That means more alternative fuel vehicles and biofuels on America’s roadways, creating a need for professional alternative fuel fleet training.

“For the first time, America is experiencing a meaningful shift in our energy supply,” said Greg Zilberfarb, a nationally recognized alternative fuels expert who led the formation of the consortium. “We’re on the cusp of a quantum leap as a nation, which creates a need for fleets to learn how to effectively implement alternative fuels such as hydrogen, natural gas, propane and biodiesel.”
[ ].
- See more at: http://www.biodieselmagazine.com/articles/9162/rise-in-alternative-fuels-prompts-launch-of-training-network#sthash.PX7m9U8W.dpuf

Anonymous said...

http://stockpromoters.com/view-stock-promotions-by-symbol.aspx?symbol=gers&ctl00%24ContentPlaceHolderyy%24Footer1%24Image2.x=0&ctl00%24ContentPlaceHolderyy%24Footer1%24Image2.y=0

"6/17/2013: Compensation: StockMister.com will disclose HOW many and what type of shares we have been compensated if we do receive shares or buy shares of a profiled company. StockMister.com has not been compensated for any marketing efforts regarding GERS."

Anonymous said...

What is up with this? How come we have to read about this major change in compliant against PEIX on the PEIX web site?

"GS CleanTech Corporation Litigation

On May 24, 2013, GS CleanTech Corporation (“GS CleanTech”) filed suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California, Sacramento Division (Case No.: 2:13-CV-01042-JAM-AC), naming the Company as a defendant. The suit alleges patent infringement by virtue of certain corn oil separation technology in use at one or more of the Company’s ethanol production facilities, including the plant located in Stockton, California. The complaint seeks preliminary and permanent injunctions prohibiting future infringement on the patent owned by GS CleanTech and damages in an unspecified amount adequate to compensate GS CleanTech for the alleged patent infringement, but in any event no less than a reasonable royalty for the use made of the inventions of the patent, plus attorneys fees. The Company strongly disagrees that its use of corn oil separation technology infringes the patent owned by GS CleanTech and intends to vigorously defend against GS CeanTech’s claims. As of the date of this report, discovery has not commenced and a trial date has not been set. In addition, GS CleanTech has advised the Company that it is in the process of amending its complaint."


Anonymous said...

What change?

Anonymous said...

"...In addition, GS CleanTech has advised the Company that it is in the process of amending its complaint."

Anonymous said...

Adding other patents. hardly major change.

Anonymous said...

Since there have been no new patents issues in the interim, this means that the first complaint filing was rushed, or botched. Neither of those sound like a good thing. If rushed, why? If botched, how and at what cost to us?

Anonymous said...

pix- slips 2 all time low

Anonymous said...

n0b0dy posting anony ^

Anonymous said...

looks like things are doubling this year:

By Gene Lucht Iowa Farmer Today | 0 comments
What a difference a year or two makes when it comes to the biodiesel industry.
“Overall, in the industry it is much better than last year,” says Steve Nogel, vice president of the renewable fuels group at AGP in Omaha.
It’s a sentiment echoed by others in the biodiesel industry. While few plants are being built this year, many that were closed are reopening and the ones that remained open are increasing production.
“Iowa biodiesel producers are primed to have a record year this year,” says Randy Olson, executive director of the Iowa Biodiesel Board.
There are several reasons.
First and foremost is the fact the renewable fuels standard (RFS) considers biodiesel an advanced biofuel and includes a target of 1.28 billion gallons for 2013, Olson says.
He adds it is possible the industry could produce as much as 1.5 billion or 1.6 billion gal. in 2013. That would be an increase of roughly 50 percent from 2012.
Second, the federal tax credit is in effect. That credit was allowed to expire in 2010 and again in 2012. When it was renewed at the end of this past year, the renewal was made retro-active to 2012.
That credit could expire again, and Olson says the industry supports a renewal of it, but he says because of the RFS, biodiesel producers are in a better position to weather the loss of a tax credit than they were in 2010.
“We’re just looking for stability right now,” he says of government policies.
A third factor helping today’s biodiesel producers is the basic economic fact that oil prices are comparatively high, and soybean prices have come down from the record highs they reached in recent years.
The end result is fuel blenders are using more biodiesel than they did a year or two ago. Some are using biodiesel for the first time while others are mixing it in higher blends, sometimes moving from a B5 (5 percent biodiesel) to a B10, 15 or 20.
“We’re very competitive with diesel fuel today,” he says.
Nationwide, a majority of biodiesel is still made using soybean oil as a feedstock. Nogel estimates 55 percent of the biodiesel is made using soy oil.
Corn oil is probably next on the list while canola oil and animal fats also are used by some biodiesel production facilities. The percentages vary from state to state and plant to plant.
Politically, Olson and Nogel agree the No. 1 issue for biodiesel producers is protecting the RFS from elimination or dramatic changes.
“The RFS is our key issue,” Olson says.
“There is no question it’s under attack right now. . . . The good news is that we’ve got some very strong supporters.”
Support for the RFS is stronger in the U.S. Senate than it is in the House of Representatives, Olson adds. But, he says biodiesel industry leaders remain confident they can retain support for the RFS and allow their industry to continue to grow in the near future.[ ].

 
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