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    eröffnet am 09.02.06 12:35:03 von
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      Avatar
      schrieb am 09.02.06 12:35:03
      Beitrag Nr. 1 ()
      http://www.xethanol.com/
      XTHN
      A0H1DP


      Xethanol Featured in February Issue of Fortune Small Business Magazine
      Tuesday January 31, 8:00 am ET
      Use of Candy Waste to Produce Ethanol Highlighted as ``Innovation``


      NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 31, 2006--Xethanol Corporation (OTCBB:XTHN - News), a biotechnology driven ethanol production company, is the lead story in the "Innovations" section of FSB (Fortune Small Business) a sister publication to Fortune Magazine.
      ADVERTISEMENT


      The story, written by Justin Martin, focuses on Xethanol`s plants in Iowa and its development of technologies for becoming a low-cost producer of ethanol from waste products. In addition to highlighting that revenues for Xethanol could hit $15 million this year, up from $2.5 million in 2005, the article also reports on Xethanol`s planned expansion on the eastern seaboard of the U.S.

      Xethanol Chairman and CEO Christopher d`Arnaud-Taylor commented "It is most gratifying for our stockholders and employees that Xethanol has been recognized as an innovator by FORTUNE and for our Blairstown plant to be given such prominence on the cover." Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor added "There are strong legislative and commercial tailwinds driving the future of ethanol and our company. The government`s support for ethanol is likely to receive a further boost in President Bush`s upcoming State of the Union address. Furthermore, the commitment of Ford Motor Company and General Motors to increasing production of ethanol enabled Flexible Fuel Vehicles, indicates that Xethanol is aligned with meeting our Nation`s need for energy independence and the production of a safe, clean-burning fuel.

      About Xethanol Corporation

      Xethanol Corporation`s goal is to be the leader in the emerging biomass-to-ethanol industry. Xethanol`s mission is to optimize the use of biomass in the renewable energy field and convert biomass that is currently being abandoned or land filled into ethanol and other valuable co-products, especially xylitol. Xethanol`s strategy is to deploy proprietary biotechnologies that will extract and ferment the sugars trapped in these biomass waste concentrations. Xethanol`s strategic value proposition is to produce ethanol and valuable co-products cost effectively with ethanol plants located closer to biomass sources. In Iowa, Xethanol owns two ethanol production facilities, where it is deploying these technologies. For more information about Xethanol, please visit its website at http://www.xethanol.com
      Avatar
      schrieb am 09.02.06 12:42:08
      Beitrag Nr. 2 ()
      Dann lieber einen richtigen Ethanol-Wert mit Zukunft.
      PACIFIC ETHANOL INC. REGISTERED SHARES
      ISIN: US69423U1079. Vor ein paar Monaten ist hier Bill Gates eingestiegen.Wenn mich nicht alles täuscht hält er fast 30%.(Kann auch sein das es nur 25% sind). Das ist ein Wert mit extremen Potential!!!:cool::cool::cool:
      Avatar
      schrieb am 09.02.06 12:51:08
      Beitrag Nr. 3 ()
      Ein Vorteil von Xethanol ist dass sie Ethanol aus Abfallprodukten aber auch aus Holz und Grünabfällen herstellen. Das ist deutlich billiger als Mais oder Weizen (wie Pacific Ethanol, die ich auch im Depot habe ;))... Das wichtige ist das Zellulose-Gehalt...


      Xethanol Set to Expand in Southeast; Company Forms CoastalXethanol LLC. Subsidiary
      1/24/2006 8:30:00 AM EST

      Xethanol Corporation (OTCBB:XTHN), a biotechnology driven ethanol production company, announced today that, as part of its growth plans to roll out small footprint ethanol plants regionally, it has organized CoastalXethanol LLC. to develop ethanol plants in the Georgia, South Carolina and Jacksonville, Florida region.

      CoastalXethanol, to be based in Savannah, GA, will focus on a region rich in wood biomass residues from its huge forest products industry. Xethanol expects to open plants utilizing its proprietary technologies. These technologies, acquired from leading universities and U.S. Government agencies such as the U.S. Forestry Products Laboratory in Madison, WI, are designed to enable Xethanol to produce ethanol and valuable co-products using biomass waste feedstocks.

      According to the Atlanta Business Chronicle last week, demand for ethanol in Georgia could skyrocket if a federal court rules that metro Atlanta drivers must use reformulated gasoline to comply with Clean Air Smog standards -- a move experts say could generate overnight demand for 250 million gallons or more of ethanol.

      The Atlanta Business Chronicle further reported that on January 11, Georgia Governor, Sonny Perdue, proposed a state budget that includes $2 million to seed research on developing alternative "biofuels" that convert wood chips, peanut hulls and other organic material into energy. Perdue called for a possible expansion of the Georgia BioRefinery Initiative at The University of Georgia. "As a strong agricultural state, Georgia should be, and will be, a leader in this field. We`ll be able to meet more of our own energy needs, reduce our dependence on foreign oil, and turn a profit," Perdue said.

      Endorsing Gov. Perdue`s enlightened policies, Xethanol Chairman and CEO Christopher d`Arnaud-Taylor commented "We chose this region as our primary growth initiative for two main reasons... first because of rapidly expanding regional demand for ethanol and second for its abundance of biomass feedstocks that are readily available. Our long-term goal for the region is to develop production capacity of 250 million gallons of ethanol per year. We have recently taken decisive steps to enable Xethanol to pursue this valuable regional opportunity. We are also pursuing strategic alliances within the context of Coastal to bring additional value to our stockholders."

      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor further stated "The Coastal initiative provides a framework for expansion into other regions as well. We are currently evaluating similar opportunities nationwide."


      und:

      The production of ethanol from corn is a mature technology that is not likely to see significant reductions in production costs. The ability to produce ethanol from low-cost biomass will be key to making it competitive as a gasoline additive. If Department of Energy goals are met, the cost of producing ethanol could be reduced by as much as 60 cents per gallon by 2015 with cellulosic conversion technology. This paper presents a midterm forecast for biomass ethanol production under three different technology cases for the period 2000 to 2020, based on projections developed from the Energy Information Administration’s National Energy Modeling System. An overview of cellulose conversion technology and various feedstock options and a brief history of ethanol usage in the United States are also presented.

      aus http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/analysispaper/biomass.html
      [/B]
      Avatar
      schrieb am 09.02.06 12:56:27
      Beitrag Nr. 4 ()
      Herstellung des Ethanols aus Zellulose:
      http://lasen.epfl.ch/page40003.html
      Avatar
      schrieb am 09.02.06 13:00:52
      Beitrag Nr. 5 ()
      "...addition to highlighting that revenues for Xethanol could hit $15 million this year, up from $2.5 million in 2005..." :D

      Trading Spotlight

      Anzeige
      Nurexone Biologic
      0,4300EUR +4,62 %
      Die Aktie mit dem “Jesus-Vibe”!mehr zur Aktie »
      Avatar
      schrieb am 09.02.06 13:08:25
      Beitrag Nr. 6 ()
      19.Jan.2006:

      Die Iowa Biofuels Fabrik produziert monatlich 500`000 Gallonen Ethanol pro Monat :D
      CEO möchte eine Steigerung der Produktion auf 1 Mio Gallonen pro Monat! :laugh:

      http://bigcharts.marketwatch.com/news/articles.asp?guid={393…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 09.02.06 18:18:15
      Beitrag Nr. 7 ()
      heute schon +10% :D
      Avatar
      schrieb am 14.02.06 18:09:05
      Beitrag Nr. 8 ()
      NEWS:



      Xethanol Announces Record Ethanol Production in January; Continued Application of Technologies Raises Production


      NEW YORK, Feb 14, 2006 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Xethanol Corporation (XTHN) , a biotechnology driven ethanol production company, announced today that despite downtime over the holiday season, ethanol production at its Iowa BioFuels plant during January 2006 reached a record 502,000 gallons.

      Mr. Christopher d`Arnaud-Taylor, Chairman and CEO of Xethanol, commented: "Since opening our BioFuels plant in July 2005, Iowa management has orchestrated a steady increase in ethanol production. We expect further growth as we install new equipment during the first and second quarters."

      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor further commented: "With the previously announced hiring of Harris Group as Xethanol`s `Owner`s Engineer` we are on a fast track to finalizing plans for expanding the BioFuels plant`s production capacity to over 12 million gallons of ethanol per year. In addition, we are now actively working with Harris to accelerate deployment of our proprietary technologies for producing ethanol from low cost biomass feedstocks."


      http://bigcharts.marketwatch.com/news/articles.asp?guid={837…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 15.02.06 12:53:25
      Beitrag Nr. 9 ()
      Pressemeldung 11.Aug.2005 http://bigcharts.marketwatch.com/news/articles.asp?guid={6B0…

      Iowa Produktion geht Richtung 6 Mio Gallonen pro Jahr


      Pressemeldung 19.Jan 2006
      http://bigcharts.marketwatch.com/news/articles.asp?guid={393…

      Iowa Produktion bei 500`000 Gallonen pro Monat (macht immer noch 6 Mio Gallonen pro Jahr)

      Pressemeldung 14.Feb 2006

      Iowa Produktion bei 502`000 Gallonen pro Monat, macht eine erhöhung um 0.4% aus...

      ziemlich übertrieben deswegen eine pressemitteilung rauszugeben...:rolleyes:
      Avatar
      schrieb am 15.02.06 13:04:45
      Beitrag Nr. 10 ()
      [posting]20.215.574 von emmischmied am 15.02.06 12:53:25[/posting]habe denen mal ein email geschrieben und nachgefragt was das soll...
      Avatar
      schrieb am 16.02.06 21:47:43
      Beitrag Nr. 11 ()
      und hier die freundliche antwort aufs email:


      I checked with the company and here are some things to consider:

      1. the plant`s rated capacity is 460,000 gallons per month.

      2. In January the company announced that they had reached the 500,000 gallon a month capacity.

      3. The latest announcement reflects the record production because it is based on a reduced three-week month due to the closure during the holidays.

      4. The remarks in the rleease reflect that Xethanol is on target to double capacity pretty quickly.

      I hope this sheds light on your concerns. Feel free to get in touch with any other questions you might have.

      Regards,

      Bev Jedynak

      Beverly Jedynak
      President
      Martin E. Janis & Company, Inc.
      Public Relations
      625 North Michigan Avenue, Suite 420
      Chicago, IL 60611
      312-943-1100 ext. 12
      312-943-3583 (fax)
      bjedynak@janispr.com [/]

      :)
      Avatar
      schrieb am 17.02.06 17:04:01
      Beitrag Nr. 12 ()
      news übers ethanol-business:
      http://www.ethanolmarketplace.com/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 21.02.06 17:56:19
      Beitrag Nr. 13 ()
      läuft gar nicht schlecht das ding :cool:
      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.02.06 21:41:08
      Beitrag Nr. 14 ()
      Hallo

      Bin heute eingestiegen !!!:lick:

      Habe "ein verdammt gutes Gefühl" !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

      Gruss T.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 23.02.06 21:52:19
      Beitrag Nr. 15 ()
      [posting]20.352.013 von Tscholle am 23.02.06 21:41:08[/posting]bis jetzt stimmt der aufwärtstrend ;)
      gruss emmi
      Avatar
      schrieb am 25.02.06 11:29:43
      Beitrag Nr. 16 ()
      24.Feb --> in US über 9 % :)

      X ethanol --> Das ist der Weg .....

      http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=XTHN.OB

      Gruss T
      Avatar
      schrieb am 02.03.06 18:33:59
      Beitrag Nr. 17 ()
      hier ein Interview (von heute) mit dem CEO:
      http://www.zangani.com/content/view/113/32/
      Avatar
      schrieb am 02.03.06 18:41:09
      Beitrag Nr. 18 ()
      [posting]20.471.380 von emmischmied am 02.03.06 18:33:59[/posting]lautsprecher einschalten! ;)
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.06 16:12:35
      Beitrag Nr. 19 ()
      http://www.twst.com/ceos/ADM605.htm
      Interview mit dem CEO:

      CHRISTOPHER D`ARNAUD-TAYLOR - XETHANOL CORPORATION (XTHN)
      CEO Interview - published 03/06/2006

      DOCUMENT # ADM605

      CHRISTOPHER D`ARNAUD-TAYLOR, Chairman, President and Chief Executive
      Officer of Xethanol Corporation, has worked with the company since
      August 2000. He became its Chairman, President and Chief Executive
      Officer on February 2, 2005. He is an international merchant banker and
      entrepreneur who gained global senior corporate executive experience
      with multinationals including Unilever, Reed Elsevier, Northrop Grumman
      and TKM Trading. He has directed the strategy, operations and financial
      affairs of companies in the United States, Europe, Africa, the Middle
      East and Asia and managed the development and execution of corporate
      turnarounds and entrepreneurial ventures worldwide. Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor
      has been a Director and President of a private merchant banking firm,
      London Manhattan Securities, Inc., for more than the past five years.
      London Manhattan has worked with entrepreneurs and established companies
      in forging new enterprises and realizing the potential of established
      businesses through mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures and
      strategic alliances. London Manhattan has participated as managing co-
      venturer in special situations where its direct involvement led to
      improving the operating results and strategic focus of an
      underperforming company or new business venture. Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor
      also presently serves as a Director of Metamorphix Global, Inc., a
      developer of advanced precast concrete technology that emulates the
      patterns of natural stone, and Xeminex, Inc., an early-stage producer of
      lead and zinc concentrates. Previously, Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor served as
      CEO of several global trading companies operating primarily throughout
      the developing world, trading in forest products, precision equipment
      and building materials. He has consulted extensively with leading
      defense contractors in the USA and Europe on countertrade and defense
      offset performance. Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor obtained his MBA from the London
      Business School, having completed additional graduate business studies
      as an exchange scholar in International Finance and Development
      Economics at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales in Paris, France,
      and Corporate Finance at New York University`s Stern School of Business.
      He previously studied Economics, Government and Law at the University of
      Exeter, England.

      Sector: ENERGY

      TWST: We would like to begin with a brief historical sketch of the
      company and a picture of the things you are doing at the present time.


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: The company was formed about eight years ago to
      make ethanol. Our ultimate goal was to make ethanol out of waste
      products rather than out of corn. The company started by acquisition of
      an existing plant in the Iowa corn belt, and that company actually had
      been processing candy waste and other discarded foodstuffs. We acquired
      a company that had a technology platform in alternative feedstocks. We
      later acquired a corn-based processing company that will ultimately
      become a waste processing company as well.

      TWST: Are you making ethanol with corn anymore?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: We are using corn right now for two reasons. First
      of all, we have several pieces of technology that will have applications
      within the corn as well as in the non-corn based ethanol business.
      Second, we are using our existing platform so that we can compare the
      productivity from corn and non-corn feedstocks. This is a real benefit
      of our additional technology.

      TWST: How does that new technology that involves waste match up against
      corn?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: We have several different technologies that apply
      at various stages of the production cycle. The main reason why we are
      looking at other feedstocks than corn is that corn is an agricultural
      commodity. It is a feedstock that has, over time, got alternative
      applications (such as for feed). The likelihood is that the price of
      corn will go up. As it stands right now, corn is the principal cost
      component of a gallon of ethanol. Let`s say that under present prices,
      maybe $0.80 to $.088 of a gallon of ethanol`s cost is feedstock cost in
      the form of corn. It is that $0.85 cents that we are trying to attack by
      having lower cost feedstocks. Some of our prospective feedstocks are
      free, some of them we would have to pay a little bit for, and some we
      would in fact get paid for. So the main reason why we are looking at
      alternative feedstocks is the large amount of cash that goes out to pay
      for corn.

      TWST: Are you also looking at other waste sources, both industrial and
      agricultural?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: We are exploring a multitude of waste products.
      Waste products in general, like the products that we have been
      processing, include industrial residues such as candy waste, waste
      cornstarch, marshmallows, Halloween candy and things like that. All
      those are products that are otherwise land-filled. Consequently, there
      is a cost attached to getting rid of them. Our business plan calls for
      us to try and capture the sugars that are in those wastes and ferment
      them into ethanol. Again, the benefit of that is that the actual
      processing cost should be less because the corn processing plant is a
      very expensive plant to run. Sugars are already refined and therefore
      available to process.

      TWST: What stage are you in right now and what is your plan for the next
      couple of years?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: Currently we are producing over 6 million gallons a
      year from our Blairstown plant with current improvements slated to
      double that amount by year end. We also currently have our other plant
      being refurbished as we speak. Our plan for the next couple of years is
      to progressively introduce what is generally called biomass. Biomass is
      the waste streams that are coming from agricultural products like the
      stalk of the corn or the stalk of the sugarcane or oat hulls or rice
      husks and things like that. These products are all what`s called
      cellulosic matter, and they are not the starch that is used in corn to
      create the ethanol. These are the stalks and things. These are also such
      resources as municipal wastes, yard wastes, forestry residues and so on.
      All of these products are what`s called cellulosic, and our medium to
      long-term strategy is to develop the technology platform to process the
      cellulosic matters into ethanol.

      TWST: Is one of the advantages of using the cellulosic matter that you
      can apply it in an area pretty close to the source?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: Absolutely correct. In any given waste stream like
      a cellulosic waste stream ` let`s just take municipal waste, for example
      ` the large amount of cost attached to getting rid of municipal waste is
      the transportation cost from where it is created to where it is dumped
      in a landfill. Now, our strategic plan is to have smaller footprint
      plants that are always located closer to where a waste stream is
      created, thereby escaping the basic cost of transportation and escaping
      the landfill. Landfills are becoming scarce and they are more and more
      expensive. In addition, the cost of transporting, because of the
      increased cost of fuel, is going up and up and up. If you have a
      relatively small plant that you can locate close to where the waste is
      created, you are basically going to be capturing the freight premium and
      the landfill premium. And that means that the tipping fees that would
      otherwise go to somebody else can be paid to us as well as the benefit
      of having a product that is in demand ie: ethanol being made.

      TWST: I guess this means that partnerships and alliances will be very
      important to you.


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: Critically important because the originators of a
      lot of these waste streams would like to participate to a certain extent
      in the monetary value that can be created by turning them into ethanol.
      Also, part of our strategy is what`s called co-location. For example,
      paper mills are prolific and regular creators of this waste. So part of
      our program is to co-locate close to them so you are almost part of
      their production system. They create the waste, you take the waste,
      create the ethanol, and you save money, time and the investment in plant
      because they already have power supplies. They already have wastewater
      treatment and other necessary components. Therefore, all you are doing
      is adding on to the incremental plant that makes the ethanol.

      TWST: Will there be certain situations where nobody really knows who is
      responsible for a given location with waste in it?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: I suspect you will find situations like that but I
      don`t think that those situations would appeal to us. Primarily, we want
      to know who owns the waste stream because the moment that somebody owns
      a waste stream they have to get rid of it, and at the moment that they
      own that waste stream, then you can enter into a contract with them to
      acquire that waste stream. You need to have off-take agreements for
      waste because you need to support a plant.

      TWST: When would you be able to do these things? What will the company
      look like in about three years?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: First of all, the most important thing you have to
      do to make money is make ethanol. You can`t make money without making
      the product. So our whole business model is targeted at identifying
      plant locations and getting them up and running as quick as possible.
      One reason why we are not interested in these very large greenfield
      plants is that they are unlikely to come on stream for several years.
      The reason we look at co-location with the people who are creating the
      waste stream is it accelerates our capacity accumulation and enables us
      to bring capacity on stream more rapidly than other people can. So, if
      you look in terms of what the company is going to look like in three
      year`s time, hopefully you`ll see about 300 million, 400 million gallons
      of capacity in the marketplace.

      TWST: What problems or challenges might loom in front of you?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: The primary problem that we are going to encounter
      is the lack of skilled people because the industry is currently
      concentrated in the corn belt of the Midwest. We are going to be in the
      East Coast, and then maybe in the West Coast. We are going to be in
      locations where historically nobody has ever run an ethanol plant. We
      are going to have to train our own people, which is one reason why we
      like our plant in Iowa because we have got an excellent location in
      which we can train people both as operators and managers. So if I, as
      CEO of the company, have one primary issue here, I have to find good
      people and train them prior to each project opening.

      TWST: Could you be a partial solution to the problem of the Rust Belt
      where so many people have lost factory jobs, etc., and are looking for
      work?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: Absolutely. That leads to the second platform of
      our corporate growth that is not so much co-location but it is to
      identify an industrial property that has outlived its prior use and is
      being closed down. For example, a pharmaceutical plant in Georgia, a
      sewage plant that was never opened in New Jersey, an old textile plant
      or any other existing industrial facility that has all the hook-ups and
      the power supplies. Such places can be retrofitted more cheaply than
      going out and building new facilities and capacity.

      TWST: Is there anything else you can tell us about your business plan?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: Our business plan is actually really very simple.
      It`s about going out and accumulating capacity, and in doing that, as
      you already said, we have to rely on alliances. There are alliances with
      the people who create the feedstock and also regional alliances.
      Especially down in southeast Georgia, Florida and in the Carolinas we
      are developing a regional alliance platform with people who have local
      political access, local real estate knowledge and expertise, and who
      basically can access the local capital market. We see this business as a
      very local business. It`s not a national business, it is local; for
      example, it is only people who live in Savannah who understand how to
      get things done in Savannah.

      TWST: How many employees do you have?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: About 40.

      TWST: Would you tell us about your own background and expertise and the
      same for one or two of your colleagues?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: I come from a trading company background. I have
      run world trading companies primarily in the area of forest products,
      pulp, paper and board, and also in precision printing machinery. I have
      developed small plants around the world, and I have been involved in
      paper conversion projects as well. Part of that background readies me
      for this particular activity because the forest products industry is a
      biomass processing industry, a large-scale biomass processing industry.
      So with experience in that industry, I am less intimidated by biomass
      conversion than the people who come from the agricultural industry. Our
      CFO is Larry Bellone. Larry has extensive banking and accounting
      experience, including 15 years at JPMorgan Chase where he was
      responsible for structuring, originating and executing innovative
      financing and investment transactions for Fortune 100 companies. He
      spent five years with Price Waterhouse prior to that. Robin Buller, our
      Vice President of Operations, spent a number of years in China and other
      places working with a company called Ferrostaal, which is a very large
      German project development company. And Jim Stewart, who runs our plant
      in Iowa, is well known in the industry and has a lot of expertise in
      turning around underperforming ethanol plants and in establishing new
      plants. So we`ve put together a good team and we are very confident that
      we can roll out our plants and execute our business plan. David Kreitzer
      previously ran a 20 million gallon per year ethanol plant.

      TWST: Do you intend to strengthen your balance sheet?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: We are always evaluating our future capital needs,
      as developing ethanol plants is a very capital intensive business.
      Because of the current increasing awareness and greater understanding of
      ethanol in the United States, it is easier to identify pockets of
      uninvested capital to bring into a project. However, it still requires a
      large amount of equity for the development of a project. So we have to
      accumulate more and more equity. This can be done at the mothership
      level, but alternatively we can also do it at the regional level.

      TWST: What would be the two or three best reasons for a long-term
      investor to look very closely at Xethanol?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: There are three drivers that I believe bode well
      for Xethanol. If you consider what is likely to happen over the next 5
      to 10 years to the price of corn, I think everybody would generally
      believe that it is likely to go up. If we look at the second driver,
      which is, what is going to happen to the cost of getting rid of waste
      over the next 10 years, I think everybody will think it`s likely to go
      up. So if we look at those two drivers and then we look at the profit
      line or the revenue line of a company like Xethanol that is capturing
      the cost associated with getting rid of waste as part of its profit
      stream, its revenues and profits are likely to go up. We are at the
      beginning of a fuel cycle that is going to be one of continuous supply
      shortages of petroleum, continual disruption of supply and likely
      increases in the cost of traditional fossil fuels. Ethanol is a home
      produced product. We are going to utilize various wastes, which cost
      money to get rid of, and basically you have a distribution system in
      place nationally to integrate ethanol with gasoline. So we are at the
      right place in the right industry at the right time, and I think we have
      put together the right management team to get the job done.

      TWST: Is there anything you would like to add?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: In summary, I think that the most important
      challenge facing the energy industry is how to adjust for what I
      mentioned earlier, the likely supply problems associated with the
      standard petroleum supply source. contrary to petroleum, we are a local
      business. Our feedstocks are going to be created locally and our product
      is going to be made locally. Our product is going to be improving the
      environment locally. So we are adding value where our plants are. We are
      adding employment and we are adding revenues. We are taking away
      pollution and we are creating a product that is going to be used. So we
      perceive ourselves as a company doing positive things for the community
      while simultaneously making a good profit for our shareholders.

      TWST: Does management personally own a lot of shares?


      Mr. d`Arnaud-Taylor: Yes, we do. In fact, management collectively owns
      approximately 3.85 million shares, making our goals very aligned with
      our shareholders. My family own just shy of 1.1 million shares so I have
      a vested interest along with the rest of our management team in
      continuing to work diligently on building long-term shareholder value.

      TWST: Thank you. (MC)


      CHRISTOPHER D`Arnaud-Taylor
      Chairman, President & CEO
      Xethanol Corporation
      1185 Avenue of the Americas
      20th Floor
      New York, NY 10036
      (646) 723-4000
      (646) 723-4001 ` FAX
      www.xethanol.com
      e-mail: inquiries@xethanol.com
      Avatar
      schrieb am 06.03.06 21:39:50
      Beitrag Nr. 20 ()
      DANKE fürs Einstellen - TOLLER BEITRAG !

      Stimmt mich positiv und bestätigt meinen Einstieg :kiss:

      Gruss T.


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