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Costs, impacts of incentive deals » Mississippi Business Journal - 0 views

  • ncentives make sense when there is a good probability that the objectives of the one offering the incentives will be achieved
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New plant to impact timber industry most | The Natchez Democrat - 0 views

  • plants to turn wood chips into cellulosic sugars that can be used in fuel, pet foods, cosmetics, lubricants and other products.
  • When the Natchez HCL Cleantech plant opens, Russ said, it will use 1 million tons of pine or softwoo
  • To put the figure into perspective, Russ said International Paper’s Natchez plant was using 1.2 million tons of wood a year at its peak before it closed.
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  • “That’s very substantial — 1 million tons of wood (a year),” Ulmer said.
  • And since timber industries usually work 200 days a year, Ulmer said, hauling HCL Cleantech’s projected demand would mean 185 truckloads would be hauled a day.
  • “We have a vast resources of timber,” Ulmer said.
  • He said the supply of timber was constantly replenishing itself when IP was in town.“We have never cut our growth,” Ulmer said.
  • Sen. Kelvin Butler, D-Magnolia, said the area’s abundance of timber helped land the new company.“We’re just excited that they picked our area because they’ll be using pine, and that’s one of the resources we have right here in southwest Mississippi,” Butler said.
  • Johnson said the company has received more than $10 million in federal grants, some coming from the U.S. Department of Energy.
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HCL Clean Tech Finds Sugar for Ethanol in Mississippi Woods | Green Prophet - 0 views

  • Interesting article but, let me shed some light with a few points of fact that nobody in the company will offer. One, at the time this article was posted, Eran was no longer CEO. Eran was deposed and a new CEO was hired in June of 2011. Two, the pilot in Durham was no longer operational (they’re trying to move it elsewhere) and proved nothing along the lines of this process being commercially viable. In actuality, far more was proven to the contrary. Three, the company is woefully behind on researching and proving their proprietary solvent extraction process which is the lynchpin to their success. The reality is they haven’t proven they can reliably make ANY sugar from wood on a pilot level, much less extract the acid THEN recover the acid and solvent. Bottom line, if you’re expecting sugars to be made from wood in Grenada in 2012, and most likely ever, don’t hold your breath. Unfortunately for Khosla, the DOE and the state of Mississippi, they will be forced to realize this in due time.
  • No problem, Karin. Happy to bring a touch of veritas to the table. Additionally, you could check the HCL CleanTech company website to verify the legitimate CEO is Philippe Lavielle and contact him for comment. You could also reach out to Steve Piccot, Director at Southern Research Institute in Durham, NC, and ask him who authored a certain $9 million DOE grant proposal.
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Monroe360.com - Miss lawmakers approve 3 job creation proposals - 0 views

  • Miss. lawmakers approve 3 job-creation proposals
  • Gov. Phil Bryant,
  • "The reason we're coming here, and I'm going to be frank, is the Mississippi farm boys and the farm girls," Correnti said. "I wouldn't trade a Mississippi farm boy or farm girl for any Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Mexican, South American."
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  • to make silicon metal for use in automotive parts, consumer electronics and energy products, including solar panels. Developers said the Calisolar project — sought by Ohio, among others — should create 951 jobs with an average annual salary of $45,000, plus benefits.
  • Calisolar, based in Sunnyvale, Calif.
  • lawmakers approved just over $175 million in bonds
  • $75.25 million for the Calisolar project
  • MDA executives said the bond request for the Calisolar project includes a $59.5 million loan for equipment and a building that would be owned by Lowndes County and leased by the company. The package also has an $11.25 million grant for infrastructure such as roads and utility lines and $4.5 million to help train employees at the plant.
  • MDA said the rebates will cost the state $15 million over 10 years.
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Bond authorization clears way to bring HCL ClearTech to Olive Branch » The Co... - 0 views

  • uthorizing the bonds clears the way for HCL ClearTech, an Israeli company, to establish its U.S. headquarters in Olive Branch.
  • HCL ClearTech expects to invest $1 billion to create 800 jobs at an average salary of $67,000 a year.
  • HCL ClearTech's manufacturing process converts biomass to sugars that are used in industry. The company uses pine trees, among other things, to obtain cellulosic sugars which can be used in producing animal nutrition, cosmetics, lubricants and fuel, among other things. "We were drawn to Mississippi because the wood stocks are substantial," Cuneo said.
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  • Calisolar's project would create 951 jobs with an average salary of $45,000 a year.
  • After an afternoon of committee meetings, House members finally approved the Senate version of the bonds bill on a vote of 109-4.
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djournal.com - Amory project among top 15 in country - 0 views

  • Amory project among top 15 in country* Steel Development Corp. is building a $200 million plant that will employ 150 workers.By CHRIS WILSONMonroe Journal
  • Trade amp& Industry Development magazine has named Amory's steel mill project one of the top 15 projects in the country.
  • community-transforming
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  • "But the current situation has not cooled our enthusiasm- or that of our equity capital investors - for our business model
  • Amory Mayor Howard Boozer has said "I don't think people have begun to fathom the impact this project will have on Amory, Mississippi."
  • Boozer said getting the steel mill project in Amory was the result of a lot of "blood, sweat and tears" from a lot of people. "I said then that failure was not an option.
  •  
    Dashed Hopes
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djournal.com - Barbours moving out of Miss Governor s Mansion - 0 views

  • Barbours moving out of Miss. Governor's Mansion
  • ncoming Gov. Phil Bryant, says there was no word yet on when Bryant and his wife, Deborah, will move into the mansion in the center of downtown Jackson.
  •  
    Incoming Gov. Phil Bryant, says there was no word yet on when Bryant and his wife, Deborah, will move into the mansion in the center of downtown Jackson. Read more: djournal.com - Barbours moving out of Miss Governor s Mansion
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The big questions for 2012 - FT.com - 0 views

  • With America gazing inward, some will look to China for money and leadership. This began visibly to happen in 2011, when European officials ended an EU summit by jetting straight off to Beijing, in a humiliatingly unsuccessful effort to drum up Chinese interest in buying more European debt.
  • But the leadership of China’s Communist party will also spend much of the year jostling for position. While the identities of the new president and prime minister are widely assumed to be known – with Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang slated respectively for those positions – the slots just below the top two are up for grabs. China’s urge to concentrate on domestic affairs will be accentuated by a growing nervousness about political and economic instability at home.
  • and growing social unrest in China’s manufacturing heartlands
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  • But it will also ensure China has little energy to devote to elaborate international co-operation.
  • Economic inequality: Peaceful acceptance of deep differentials is coming to an end
  • The big debate of 2012 will be over the role of government in the economy,
  • Public v private: The state starts to run out of time on how big it should be
  • Although this sounds like an economic issue, it is really about politics.
  • Headlines such as this recent one in the Los Angeles Times – “Six Walmart heirs are wealthier than US’ entire bottom 30 per cent” – epitomise the new mood. Such scrutiny of the lives and deeds of the “1 per cent” will become obsessive.
  • Yet there is compelling evidence that high inequality is also bad for a nation’s health: it leads to higher political instability and more violence and it hurts competitiveness and growth.
  • Social unrest: Technology to power rolling disruption to outright revolution
  • In Russia, shame among educated classes that Vladimir Putin is just the latest tsar, combined with growing economic desperation and corruption in rural areas, makes another Russian Revolution plausible if not probable. And I would not be surprised to see mass protests in several central Asian countries, in Pakistan, again in Iran, in Algeria, Mexico, Venezuela or Cuba.
  • The difference from traditional technology is speed, scale and resilience. The immediacy, apparent veracity and emotional power of words and images that are instantly transmitted to thousands and then millions of people can transform existing currents of dissent into a raging flood
  • This year, elections will take place in the US, France, Russia, Taiwan, Mexico, Egypt and South Korea. China will also change leadership.
  • Energy: Fuel’s decisive shift in supply will boost security – at a price
  • Energy efficiency in the advanced countries has risen sharply, implying that their demand has peaked, and vast, commercially exploitable discoveries of oil and gas – especially gas – have been made in politically stable areas, including in the US. This suggests that in future gas will account for a much larger proportion of world energy supply. While these developments are positive for geopolitical stability, they may pose difficulties for the climate.
  • This is positive because gas is much cleaner than coal.
  • This means it will reclaim its role as the world’s biggest energy producer and, incredibly, become a net energy exporter.
  • Even in 2040, respected forecasts now envision that fossil fuels will still supply 80 per cent of the world’s energy needs.
  • However, energy security and national security for much of the world will be improved, as the influence of rogue oil states diminishes.
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Steel companies braced for price falls - FT.com - 0 views

  • October 9, 2011 2:46 pm
  • The steel industry faces tough times with companies braced for falling prices as buyers delay orders because of extreme nervousness about global economic weakness.
  • China. The country has been the chief locomotive in driving up the expansion of the global industry.
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  • aid he foresaw the turbulence spilling over into 2012 – a year he said was likely to be marked by “short-term economic and financial issues impacting long-term economic sustainability”.
  • According to a survey for the Financial Times by six industry experts, growth in world steel shipments is set to slow to 4.9 per cent next year after a likely 6.6 per cent this year.
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China and France chase US shale assets - FT.com - 0 views

  • Sinopec, China’s second-largest oil company by market capitalisation, unveiled a $2.5bn deal with Oklahoma-based Devon Energy to invest in five new development areas from Ohio to Alabama.
  • International groups are still keen to increase their exposure to unconventional US energy resources despite the environmental controversy over “fracking”, the injection of water, sand and chemicals into wells to crack rocks and release oil and gas.
  • Foreign companies have been shifting their focus from gas, prices for which have plunged, to oil. Devon’s deal with Sinopec also reflects Chinese companies’ hopes that techniques pioneered in the US could be used to develop China’s own resources.
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Steel chief hits out at US-China plant critics - FT.com - 0 views

  • plan to build a steel plant in the US partly funded by one of China’s biggest steel companies has hit out at his critics, saying that objections to the scheme are a “ploy” by established US companies to block fair competition.
  • John Correnti, chief executive and part owner of Steel Development, which intends to construct a $168m plant in Amory, Mississippi, with the aid of investment by state-owned Anshan Iron & Steel, dismissed as “ludicrous” a claim by a group of US congressmen that the involvement of a Chinese company could potentially damage US national security.
  • Mr Correnti’s project in Mississippi – which he says is part of a bigger $2bn scheme to build a total of four steel plants in undisclosed locations US-wide – comes at a difficult time for the country’s steel industry which was severely affected by the 2008-09 economic crisis and is recovering only slowly.
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  • It also exacerbates tensions between the US and China.
  • Parts of the US business community are concerned at what they regard as a “mercantilist” approach to industry by Beijing, under which the country is said to use levers such as the undervalued renminbi to help Chinese companies.
  • Tom Danjczek, president of the Steel Manufacturers Association, a trade group, which represents most of the large mini-mill companies, said his members “particularly objected” to the presence in Mr Correnti’s investment group of Anshan. That was on the grounds that the company benefited from Beijing’s assistance, in the form “of easy access to government loans and an artificially low currency”. State-owned Anshan benefited from such government help in a way that was denied to its competitors in the US, he said. In a letter sent in July to Tim Geithner, US Treasury secretary, a group of Congressmen representing steel producing districts claimed the planned involvement of Anshan in the Amory project could threaten US national security.
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