Friday, May 05, 2006

GreenShift to Withdraw Business Development Company Election ...

GreenShift to Withdraw Business Development Company Election ...
Business Wire (press release) - San Francisco,CA,USA
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 5, 2006--GreenShift Corporation (OTC Bulletin Board: GSHF) today announced its intention to withdraw its election to be ...
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 GreenShift to Withdraw Business Development Company Election; Withdrawal Changes GreenShift from Investment Company to Operating Company with Current Operations Generating More Than $30 Million in Annualized Revenues

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 5, 2006--GreenShift Corporation (OTC Bulletin Board: GSHF) today announced its intention to withdraw its election to be regulated as a business development company ("BDC") under the Investment Company Act of 1940.

The withdrawal is in part due to GreenShift's decision to change its business focus from an investment company to an operating company. GreenShift currently holds majority and minority stakes in a number of operating companies with current revenues exceeding $30 million per year. With its change in focus to an operating company, GreenShift intends to focus on the increased revenue and earnings growth of these and other pre-revenue companies owned by GreenShift.

"We are excited by this change," said Kevin Kreisler, GreenShift's chairman and chief executive officer. "In addition to reducing our overhead and our administrative complexity, we believe that this move is timely given our growth during the past year and the recent surge in interest for green companies and clean technologies. We hold sizeable stakes in a number of exciting companies and we are very much looking forward to actively driving their growth. We believe that this change will favorably impact our efforts."

GreenShift also today announced its intention to realign its operations, as soon as possible, according to the following core operating activities:

-- AgriFuels: production and sales of biodiesel and ethanol.

-- Energy: production and sales of energy from distributed clean power generation facilities including solar, wind, wave and hydro power facilities, as well as sales of renewable energy and conservation credits.

-- Clean Technology: provision of clean technology engineering services and applied clean technologies designed to help companies and people use natural resources more efficiently.

-- Environmental Services: provision of diversified environmental engineering and management services, including site remediation services, regulated materials and hazardous waste management services, and environmental engineering services.

-- Advanced Applications: development and licensing of commercially viable applications of critical new clean technologies that have been demonstrated to be cost-effective on a bench scale.

About GreenShift Corporation

GreenShift Corporation (OTC Bulletin Board: GSHF) is a publicly traded company whose mission is to develop and support clean technologies and companies that facilitate the efficient use of natural resources and catalyze transformational environmental gains. Additional information regarding GreenShift is available online at www.greenshift.com.

Safe Harbor Statement

This press release contains statements, which may constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Those statements include statements regarding the intent, belief or current expectations of GreenShift Corporation, and members of their management as well as the assumptions on which such statements are based. Prospective investors are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties, and that actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by such forward-looking statements. Important factors currently known to management that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in forward-statements include fluctuation of operating results, the ability to compete successfully and the ability to complete before-mentioned transactions. The company undertakes no obligation to update or revise forward-looking statements to reflect changed assumptions, the occurrence of unanticipated events or changes to future operating results.

 

ADM Breaks Ground on 85 Million Gallon Biodiesel Plant in North ...

ADM Breaks Ground on 85 Million Gallon Biodiesel Plant in North ...
RenewableEnergyAccess.com - Peterborough,NH,USA
Velva, North Dakota [RenewableEnergyAccess.com] Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) broke ground for a new 85 million gallon biodiesel plant adjacent to its oil ...


1% coco-biodiesel blend can save 95-m liters of diesel fuel yearly ..., Biofuels: A user’s guide, Biodiesel could help solve oil crisis

1% coco-biodiesel blend can save 95-m liters of diesel fuel yearly ...
Philippine Information Agency - Philippines
... he reiterated the exploration of indigenous sources of energy and development of alternative fuels like coco-methyl ester and other biodiesel, fuel ethanol and ...
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Biofuels: A user’s guide
Mail & Guardian Online - Johannesburg,South Africa
Biofuels such as ethanol and biodiesel have been touted as the future of energy. Cleaner, home-grown and potentially cheaper than ...

Biofuels such as ethanol and biodiesel have been touted as the future of energy. Cleaner, home-grown and potentially cheaper than petroleum, countries such as Brazil and Britain have already made biofuels a major part of their energy consumption with many others expected to follow.

For South Africa to integrate bio-fuels into its economy, the country will have to dramatically expand the production of the crops from which they are derived. The government is expected to roll out a plan for integrating ethanol into the economy by the end of the year, which will determine which feedstocks get used and in what quantities.

Several factors determine what makes a good biofuel feedstock, including the crop’s content of starch (for ethanol production) or vegetable oil (for biodiesel), its potential for agricultural expansion, its suitability to the South African climate and its cost.

Maize: Maize and grain sorghum may have the best potential as ethanol feedstocks, according to some experts. Both have a high content of starch. Maize is also among the most efficient potential feedstocks in terms of crop yield. But production has been slashed to 1920s levels in the past few decades, said Fanie Brink, manager of industry services for Grain SA. Production, expected to reach about six million tonnes this year according to the Department of Agriculture, would have to be expanded considerably.

Grain sorghum: Grain sorghum has a starch content of about 75%, which is very high. The crop is suited to the climates of the Free State and Mpumalanga, where hundreds of thousands of tonnes are already produced for food. There is a great deal of room for expansion of the crop’s production in North West province, Brink said.

Wheat: About 1,9-million tonnes of wheat are expected to be harvested this year, according to the agriculture department. But the starch content is too low and the cost too high to make it economical for agriculture production, Brink said. “Wheat is for bread, and I think farmers are going to find the prices a bit too high on wheat.”

Triticale: This wheat-rye hybrid is still in its experi-mental phases. Potentially more drought-resistant than wheat, its starch content is uncertain when produced on a larger scale. It is produced in small quantities in the Western Cape, and varieties are being grown and tested at the University of Stellenbosch.

Sugarcane has highest yield and could be the cheapest of all potential ethanol feedstocks, said Adrian Wynne, deputy director of industrial affairs at SA Cane Growers, at a bio-fuels conference last month. South Africa is among the top 10 producers of sugarcane, Wynne said, but half of the crop is exported. A fuel with a 4% ethanol blend could be developed right away if the exports were diverted to ethanol production, he said.

Soyabeans: Several experts believe that soya-beans and sunflower seeds hold the most promise as feedstocks for biodiesel in South Africa. While soyabean oil content — about 18% — is lower than in other feedstocks, it has potential for expansion in South Africa, especially in the wetter provinces. In addition, its biggest byproduct, protein, can be sold by farmers.

Sunflower seeds: Already a major crop in South Africa, sunflower seeds have an oil content of about 40%, making it well-suited for biodiesel production. In addition, both soyabeans and sunflowers can be rotated on farms with maize. About 600 000 tonnes are expected to be harvested this year, but this figure could be doubled depending on government policy, Brink said.

Jatropha: There is debate about whether jatropha, a tree alien to South Africa whose seeds are toxic to humans, will be useful as a feedstock. While jatropha can grow on otherwise unfavourable land and may require less water than other feedstocks, according to Brian Tait, manager of the alternative energy group at Sasol, its environmental impact assessments are pending and it may not be suitable for growth in South Africa.

Biodiesel could help solve oil crisis
Jackson Sun - Jackson,TN,USA
... and Panther Energy, Inc have been running on a mixture of soy-based biodiesel and petroleum diesel. After four months of using biodiesel ...


There is a couplet in one of my favorite poems that says: "What is that which I should turn to, lighting upon days like these? Every door is barred with gold, and opens but to golden keys?"

Although Lord Tennyson was expressing his frustration with his love life in this poem, I believe his well-chosen words could easily be applied to the extreme frustration that we are all experiencing with the high energy prices that we are paying this year and the utter helplessness that we feel against the relentless climb of fuel prices. To add insult to injury, we are also painfully aware as we stand before the fuel pump and watch the meter digits spin in a wallet-emptying blur that a large part of the money that we are paying for gasoline or diesel fuel is going to a country somewhere in the world wherein we as a nation are reviled and cursed.

Yet, in this dark season of frustration, there is a very significant reason for hope. High fuel prices have given us the incentive to turn to other forms of energy to power our vehicles. Even better, it has driven us to look at what we can provide for ourselves, in our own country, and at what can be replaced year after year. Renewable fuels have long been a dream for us but the cheap price of fossil fuels effectively prevented any serious research much less attempts at the use of renewable fuels.

The time for serious, disciplined research arrived with $50 a barrel crude oil! In fact, one could say even more emphatically that the time for action on fuel independence from Middle Eastern sources arrived on 9/11.

One of the bright spots in the energy darkness of the past couple of years has been the growing availability of a renewable fuel for diesel engines, made from the oil of grains and vegetable products such as soybeans. A historical note: The diesel engine was invented by a German engineer named Adolph Diesel and was originally designed to run on peanut oil.

Since March 2005, our fleet of diesel-powered trucks at Panther Oil , Inc. and Panther Energy, Inc have been running on a mixture of soy-based biodiesel and petroleum diesel. After four months of using biodiesel in our own fleet of trucks with outstanding results, we offered the product for sale through Panther Energy to other fleet customers and to farmers throughout West Tennessee. At that time, we made the commitment to our customers that we would sell biodiesel in a mixture of 20 percent biodiesel to 80 percent petroleum diesel at the same price that we were selling 100 percent petroleum diesel. (We have often regretted that commitment since biodiesel is sometimes more expensive than regular diesel fuel). Since that time, we have sold many thousands of gallons of biodiesel to our farm and fleet customers.

Biodiesel not only has a higher cetane rating (the rating of how well the fuel burns in the combustion chambers of an engine) than petroleum diesel, it also provides greater lubricity to lessen engine wear. Best of all, though, biodiesel has a much lower emission of pollutants into the environment as it is exhausted through the smoke stacks of diesel trucks, buses and construction equipment.

Good logic would dictate that the entities with the greatest interest in getting biodiesel into their fleets are the municipalities and counties that operate transit buses, school buses, public highway construction equipment and a plethora of other pieces of equipment powered by diesel engines. I suppose that's the difference between good logic and local government. To my knowledge, only the city of Knoxville has converted their diesel-powered trucks and equipment to biodiesel. (With the high level of air pollution in the Great Smoky Mountains, the government of Knox County is attempting in a very serious way to limit the amount of combustion engine emissions there). The city of Nashville conducted a small-scale test on biodiesel last year in a few city buses but have yet to follow up with a degree of real-world usage of biodiesel.

Panther Energy is currently involved in a 24-bus test with Memphis Area Transit Authority that is measuring both emissions and engine performance that will end in another 60 days. Whether they will convert to this renewable fuel is only speculative at this point.

Is biodiesel a golden key to turn a lock made of gold? I think the answer to that question is a resounding yes. It makes our environment cleaner, it is renewable with each new crop year, it provides income for our farmers, and it lessens our dependence on foreign oil thereby making us more economically secure. It is not the total answer to our energy problem, but it is definitely a step in the right direction.

Bob Campbell is president of Panther Oil Co., Inc. and Panther Energy, Inc. Both companies are based in Jackson. He is a veteran of 28 years in the petroleum industry. Readers can write to him at 396 Airways Blvd., Jackson, TN 38301.

Thursday, May 04, 2006

AUSTRALIA: Axiom to build biodiesel facility

Axiom to build biodiesel facility
The Age - Melbourne,Victoria,Australia
Renewable energy producer Axiom Energy Ltd plans to build a 150 million litre per annum biodiesel manufacturing facility at the Geelong Port in Victoria. ...


The new Mississippi oil boom, Green Star Notes Banner Week for Biodiesel, Biodiesel to lift CPO prices, Oil firms in Malaysia must supply Envo Diesel

The new Mississippi oil boom
Laurel Leader Call - Laurel,MS,USA
With all of the recent talk of record-high gas prices affecting the economy, more information is now being released about biodiesel as an alternative fuel. ...
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Green Star Notes Banner Week for Biodiesel
E-Wire (press release) - Dallas,TX,USA
4 -/E-Wire/-- Green Star Products, Inc. (OTC:GSPI), a company engaged in the engineering, construction and operation of biodiesel production facilities ...

Biodiesel to lift CPO prices
Malaysia Star - Malaysia
PUTRAJAYA: Malaysian crude palm oil prices are likely to inch closer to RM1,600 a tonne this year as the start of biodiesel production cuts domestic stocks ...
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Oil firms in Malaysia must supply Envo Diesel next year
Business Times - Malaysia - Malaysia

... oil) and 95 per cent diesel. In March, the Government launched the made-in-Malaysia biodiesel. Since then, Kuala Lumpur City Hall ...
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Interest in cooking oil grows as gas prices rise
Anchorage Daily News - Anchorage,AK,USA
... "If they don't want to pay for it, then backyard biodiesel folks will come pick it up," Harun said. After being filtered, used cooking ...
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Green Star Notes Banner Week for Biodiesel; President Bush Calls ...

Green Star Notes Banner Week for Biodiesel; President Bush Calls ...
Business Wire (press release) - San Francisco,CA,USA
(OTC:GSPI), a company engaged in the engineering, construction and operation of biodiesel production facilities, announced that last week had been a very ...


Mission Biofuels makes fine ASX debut

Mission Biofuels makes fine ASX debut
The Age - Melbourne,Victoria,Australia
Biodiesel producer Mission Biofuels Ltd has ended its first day on the stock exchange at an impressive 39 per cent premium on its issue price, ahead of ...
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Yum, Biodiesel!, Biodiesel price beats diesel

Yum, Biodiesel!
AlterNet - San Francisco,CA,USA
The former "Splash"-er is so committed to promoting sustainable living that she's willing to drink biodiesel to prove her point. ...
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Darryl Hannah: very tall person, actor, and eco-star. The former "Splash"-er is so committed to promoting sustainable living that she's willing to drink biodiesel to prove her point. Yep, in her new video blog, the environmentally-obsessed actor (who once claimed to live part-time in a teepee) downs a nice, big green glass of the oily -- but edible -- fluid.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Hannah's weekly-updated vlog chronicles "Hannah's personal explorations of the latest in green living. Topics have included green building, vegan diet, gorillas in Rwanda and biodiesel."

Hannah's no newbie to the green scene. She has been espousing the benefits and importance of earth-friendly living for years now. Apparently she's been vegetarian since childhood, and her two houses ("one in the Rockies and one in Southern California") have been off the grid for a dozen years. But she just started speaking out about her convictions a few years ago. As the Chronicle notes, "on the first anniversary of Sept. 11 she went on Fox's 'O'Reilly Factor' "to talk about our biofuel options -- that we don't have to go to war for oil."

Hannah is currently hosting the Sierra Club's new tv show, Sierra Club Chronicles (check out Matthew Wheeland's AlterNet piece about the show from back in January).

VIEWS & REVIEWS
Financial Express.bd - Bangladesh
... per cent of diesel consumption in five years. "We have found that we can produce biodiesel from it. If we can keep the price down ...
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Biodiesel price beats diesel
The Olympian - Olympia,WA,USA
By John Dodge. At least for now, environmentally friendly biodiesel is cheaper at the pump in South Sound than petroleum-based diesel. ...


Biodiesel gets a leg up, Enterprise Car Rental Offering BioDiesel

Biodiesel gets a leg up
Rocky Mountain News - Denver,CO,USA
... energy sources have gotten a boost from lawmakers who recently approved bills requiring as many as 300 state-owned vehicles to use biodiesel - a fuel ...

Enterprise Car Rental Offering BioDiesel
Triple Pundit - San Francisco,CA,USA
Now this is just too cool - Enterprise car rental will now offer cars that run on biodiesel in the Portland, OR market. It's a mere ...


Maroa man fuels own solution to gas prices with homemade biodiesel, Iowa lawmakers pass sweeping renewable fuels initiative

Maroa man fuels own solution to gas prices with homemade biodiesel
Herald & Review - Decatur,IL,USA
... gasoline. It's biodiesel homebrew. The cost: about 70 cents a gallon. ... His cost when using biodiesel homebrew is about $15 a week. Consulting ...

MAROA - Dayton Keyes has the alternative answer to the high cost of gasoline. It's biodiesel homebrew. The cost: about 70 cents a gallon.

The Maroa man is a Capitol police investigator for the Illinois Secretary of State in Springfield. He drives an average of 600 miles a week round-trip. His cost when using biodiesel homebrew is about $15 a week.

Consulting a book, "Biodiesel Homebrew Guide," Keyes built a reactor in his garage to convert vegetable oil into fuel for his 2002 Golf model Volkswagen. The $18 book, by Maria Alovert, contains comprehensive instructions for making, washing and testing homebrew biodiesel and some plans for building biodiesel-making equipment.

Biodiesel is a natural and renewable domestic fuel alternative for diesel engines that is made from vegetable oils, mostly soy and corn.

Keyes' reactor is based on a 50-gallon electric water heater. Methanol and potassium hydrochloride are added to the vegetable oil. The mixture is then heated to 130 degrees. The brewing takes about 3½ hours. After a washing process, the fuel, about 28 to 30 gallons in a batch, goes into a 55-gallon drying tank for two days. The fuel is nontoxic and biodegradable.

"This is the Cadillac version of the reactor," Keyes said. "You can make one for $250. My cost was about $1,000. Anyone can do this. It's as easy as baking a cake or pie. I get free vegetable oil from Maroa, from Springfield and from restaurants all around, as far away as Litchfield."

David Wetzel of Decatur advised Keyes about the vegetable oil process. Wetzel has a 1985 Volkswagen Golf diesel car that runs on straight vegetable oil instead of gasoline. His wife, Eileen, calls it the "Veggie Mobile."

"I have enough vegetable oil stocked up so that I won't have to pay a penny for gasoline until next winter," Wetzel said. "I'm also trying to get a Mercedes running. And I have a couple of 1980s Volkswagens waiting in the driveway."

"People are brainwashed into thinking we can't make our own fuel, that we have to depend on the gas station," Keyes said. "I'm writing a book on renewable resources. I'd like to get a biodiesel plant built in this area. I've talked to people who say, 'You'll never succeed.' Somebody has to try.

"One of the problems is finding a diesel car. It will run as fast as a conventional car, no problem. The engine also has fewer emissions." Keyes also has a Jeep Liberty with a diesel engine.

Keyes emphasizes: "I want people to wake up and do something instead of just complaining about the high gasoline prices. You don't need a permit to do this. I want to get the word out to everybody," he said.

Keyes put the finishing touches on his reactor in December and pumped 12 gallons of fuel in his car for the first time Dec. 21.

On Monday, Ron Ziegler came to see Keyes' reactor. Ziegler has led a group picketing two Clinton service stations.

"I'm going to build a reactor, that's for sure," Ziegler said.

Iowa lawmakers pass sweeping renewable fuels initiative
Agri News - MN,USA
... for the incentives. The state has 22 ethanol plants and three biodiesel plants with dozens on the drawing board. Nationwide, 97 ...

Biodiesel to lift palm oil prices

Biodiesel to lift palm oil prices
The Edge Daily - Malaysia
Malaysian crude palm oil prices are likely to inch closer to RM1,600 a tonne this year as the start of biodiesel production cuts domestic stocks, the country's ...


Wednesday, May 03, 2006

Manila welcomes Asia’s first big biodiesel plant, Daryl Hannah Speaks Out

Manila welcomes Asia’s first big biodiesel plant
Financial Times - London,England,UK
The Philippines yesterday inaugurated Asia’s first large-scale biodiesel plant, which can produce up to 60m litres a year of the alternative fuel from ...
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Daryl Hannah Speaks Out
San Francisco Chronicle - CA, USA
... She slugs it back without a moment's hesitation. "It's kind of gnarly to drink oil," she told me later, recalling the taste of biodiesel. ...


A matte-black El Camino roars into a filling station, dust billowing as crashing guitar chords compete with the sound of squealing tires. Out steps Daryl Hannah. She flips open the gas cap and starts fueling up. Then she pours herself a tall glass of the viscous green fuel, straight from the pump. She slugs it back without a moment's hesitation.

"It's kind of gnarly to drink oil," she told me later, recalling the taste of biodiesel. "But it's not going to kill you -- that's the point."

This arresting scene -- from a short film about biodiesel featured on her video blog -- is part of Hannah's new identity. Best known as a movie star for her roles in megahits like "Blade Runner" and "Splash," Hannah has long been committed to environmental living. But she's only recently started sharing her passion with the world.

"I want to be the good news," Hannah told me over the phone from the set of her latest movie, filming in Vancouver. "I want to show inspiring people and inspiring solutions."

So between takes on the set, Hannah retreats to her trailer with her dog Toto and video editor Katie Flint. There, they edit segments for Hannah's video blog -- the latest addition to her growing advocacy portfolio. The vlog, which features a new segment every week, chronicles Hannah's personal explorations of the latest in green living. Topics have included green building, vegan diet, gorillas in Rwanda and biodiesel -- one of Hannah's favorite topics.

"I haven't been to a gas station in years," she said. "It feels so good not to be a slave to gas, playing the whole game of war for oil."

Her vlog entries have a fun-but-serious tone that conveys the importance of making sustainable choices -- while underscoring the fact that such choices don't have to be sacrifices. On the contrary: Green choices enrich Hannah's life.

The past year has seen a mini-boom in green celebrity: Cameron Diaz, Leonardo di Caprio, Ed Norton, Matt Damon and others have lately joined the eco-celeb pantheon that has long included a handful of activist-actors like Woody Harrelson and Ed Begley.

But Hannah's commitment is longstanding. She's been a vegetarian since she was a kid. Her two houses -- one in the Rockies and one in Southern California -- have been off the grid for a dozen years, relying on solar panels and graywater systems. She buys carbon offsets for all her travel.
"I've carbon neutralized myself so many times," she said, "that I've got a carbon surplus. But I still continue to do it."

That kind of personal, lived environmentalism has always made intuitive sense to Hannah. "One wouldn't think that you would have to become an environmentalist or a humanitarian," she said. "It's just natural to treat people and other creatures on the planet with respect."

But in spite of her strong conviction, for most of her life Hannah did not advocate publicly for environmental causes.

"I never had come up with a really profound and strong gesture -- nothing like Julia Butterfly's," she told me. "So I figured the best thing I could do was live by my beliefs. That's probably the most profound thing that anybody can do."

But in the wake of Sept. 11, Hannah realized that simply tending her own garden wasn't enough. As the nation tumbled headlong into an ill-conceived petroleum war, Hannah was driven to speak out. On the first anniversary of Sept. 11 she went on Fox's "O'Reilly Factor" "to talk about our biofuel options -- that we don't have to go to war for oil."

Hannah said she is at heart a very private person and she found it difficult to speak out. With a natural aversion to telling people what to do, Hannah prefers to use her platform to lay out the facts.
"People have to know that there are options available to us today," she said. "There is another way, and it is practical and applicable now."

Hannah's message has been resonating -- she even got Bill O'Reilly to agree that biodiesel sounds like a good idea. Now she says she's glad she was moved to speak out.

"I had no will of my own -- I just went and did it," she said. "It just felt right to take the opportunity when it arose, and ever since then I've felt compelled to speak out."

Despite her 40-plus roles in Hollywood movies, including one in a film coming out next week which she never even mentioned to me, Hannah is most passionate about her green pursuits. "I've been thinking less and less about Hollywood," she added. "This other work seems to be taking much more of my energy now."

Hannah is a great example of someone with strong environmental convictions who does not happen to be a full-time activist. She has been making a difference on a individual level while tending to all the rigors of a full-time career. And now that she's speaking out more, she's showing the way for the vast majority of Americans who think there are better ways for the country to address its appetite for energy, yet so far haven't raised their voices.

Hannah's focus on solutions reaches people in a way that confrontation can't.

"Especially when I talk to people who don't really know what's going on, the unconverted," she said, "I really try to stay focused on the positive and fun. The more we show the world the way we want it to be, the more likely it is we'll get there."

All she wants is for people to give it a try.

"Basically, anything you do sustainably feels so good that you're a full-on addict as soon as you try it," she said. "If you eat only vegetables and fruits that you grow yourself from your garden, or organic food, it tastes so much better and is so much better for you, you can't really go back."
Hannah sees those kinds of lifestyle choices as a gateway to much bigger issues.

"It's really important to me to show the interconnectedness of things," she said. "I always try to illustrate how environmentalism, humanitarianism, animal rights -- all those things -- are one and the same."

But for Hannah, speaking out means moving beyond simply using her celebrity status to spread the word.

"I've never been a fan of celebrity," she said. "I know most of the other people who would be considered environmentally conscious celebrities, but unfortunately there are a lot fewer of them than you would think. Most actors are so self-involved they don't really look outside themselves."
Hannah said the problem suffuses Hollywood. "They make hundreds of movies every year, yet there's only a handful with environmental themes. It's unfortunate, because you would think they would want to use their voice and the power that they have to do something positive."

"But Hollywood has never tried to make films to change people's minds or hearts," she added with a shrewdness clearly drawn from decades of experience. "It's loyal only to the bottom line."

So instead, Hannah has been exerting her efforts on hard-hitting environmental storytelling outside Hollywood. She's currently hosting "Sierra Club Chronicles," a documentary series produced by the Sierra Club for LinkTV that tells the stories of ordinary people fighting for environmental justice.
"I saw their proposal and I just thought it sounded incredible," said Hannah.

She said she found the first episode particularly moving: a look at Sept. 11 first responders struggling with chronic health problems, thanks to government lies about conditions at ground zero. "It's unbelievable when you see those big guys who are just so proud and strong and they break down," she said. "Oh, it just kills me."

These kinds of personal stories are so moving, said Hannah, because people can relate to them intuitively -- they get beyond what Hannah calls environmentalism's messaging problem. "There's no really good word for 'environmentalist' or even the things I'm talking about right now. What is my blog about? Is it about 'green lifestyle?' What the hell is that?"

"'Environmentalist,' 'environmentalism' -- they're bad words. They've been marginalized," she continued. "That's something that we really have to fight against -- it diffuses our ability to do the work that we need to do."

Hannah believes that this cumbersome language makes it difficult to tell stories that are, at their core, affectingly human.

"It's been very distressing," she said. "The fact that there's not any really progressive green show on television right now is bizarre. There are a lot of people in the TV industry who are interested in the field, but when I approach them about doing something, everyone's like, 'Oh, it's a niche market.' Well that's bull--."

So Hannah is taking matters into her own hands. Through her production company, she is developing a series of full-length documentaries about what she calls "extreme activists."
The first episode, which she's nearly finished shooting, is about people who go undercover to disrupt human trafficking networks around the world.

"I went with them on a bunch of missions to rescue sex slaves," she said, clearly in awe of their selfless dedication. "It's the more hard-core side: These are people who got to that point where they just can't take these really upsetting issues anymore. They just have to do something about it."
Which sounds like a good description of Hannah herself.

"When I hear about all of the terrible things that are going on," she said, "it makes me want to fight. I don't have a choice."

Mission Biofuels to invest RM100m in biodiesel plant, Biodiesel's lower cost benefits new service station,

Mission Biofuels to invest RM100m in biodiesel plant
Business Times - Malaysia - Malaysia
MISSION Biofuels Ltd, a Malaysian-controlled firm listed on the Australian Stock Exchange, will invest RM100 million to set up a biodiesel and glycerine ...

Biodiesel's lower cost benefits new service station
Newswatch 50 - Watertown,NY,USA
Eugene (KMTR) – As diesel prices continue climb, biodiesel is looks more attractive on the buyers' market. That's good news for ...
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MOUND CITY MONEY
St. Louis Post-Dispatch - MO, United States
... “If it’s ethanol and biodiesel, we have to look at the hierarchy of value for agriculture land use: food first, then feed and last fuel,” Staley told the ...
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More coco-biodiesel exports eyed, Pestorious says lawmakers, Bush understand energy problem, Running on cooking oil

More coco-biodiesel exports eyed
Manila Standard Today - Philippines
The Philippines is looking at increasing its exports of coco-biodiesel after yesterday’s inauguration of Chemrez Inc.’s P650-million plant, the biggest and ...

Pestorious says lawmakers, Bush understand energy problem
Agri News - MN,USA
Pestorious farms near Albert Lea with his family and is the SoyMor Biodiesel LLC board chairman and board chairman of EXOL, both of Albert Lea. ...
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Running on cooking oil
Monterey County Herald - Monterey,CA,USA
... For diesel engine drivers not quite ready to get greasy like the Professors Two, there is a baby step: Using biodiesel. Biodiesel ...

Alternative fuel bill, Plantation stocks up, IOI Corp at historic high, Half of US Ag Producers Now Using Soy Biodiesel

Alternative fuel bill
KATC - Lafayette,LA,USA
... a bill Tuesday to beef up Louisiana's production of plant-based fuels and require a portion of gasoline sales in the state to include ethanol and biodiesel. ...
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Plantation stocks up, IOI Corp at historic high
The Edge Daily - Malaysia
... Analysts attributed the bullish outlook of the sector partly to the expected rising demand for biodiesel as an alternative source of fuel given the soaring ...

Half of US Ag Producers Now Using Soy Biodiesel
Wisconsin Ag Connection - Marshfield,WI,USA
The soybean industry is halfway home in its efforts to get every soybean farmer to use soy biodiesel on their farm. A recent producer ...


Digimarc's deal with Microsoft boosts its stocks, Mukilteo biodiesel may return

Digimarc's deal with Microsoft boosts its stocks
OregonLive.com - Portland,OR,USA
... Stock Market. -- While soaring fuel costs are the bane of most businesses, Oregon makers of biodiesel are celebrating. Their product ...

Mukilteo biodiesel may return
The Herald - Everett,WA,USA
... City Councilman Marko Liias said he's pushing for the city to legalize the storage and distribution of biodiesel fuel within the city limits. ...

Amadeus hits the right note in Texas

Amadeus hits the right note in Texas
WA Business News - Northbridge,Western Australia,Australia
... The company recently opened its first 45 million-litres-a-year biodiesel plant at Largs Bay in South Australia, with a similar facility at Picton near Bunbury ...

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

Germany Sets Quotas for Biofuel in Fuel from 2007

Germany Sets Quotas for Biofuel in Fuel from 2007
Planet Ark - New York,NY,USA
... Democrat government's plan would compel German oil refineries to blend two percent biofuel content in petrol until 2009, and 4.4 percent biodiesel content in ...


TIF District Set Up For Biodiesel Plant, House backs alternative fuel bill

TIF District Set Up For Biodiesel Plant
Warsaw Times Union - Warsaw,IN,USA
By Teresa Smith, Times-Union Staff Writer. Four county boards convened in the old courtroom Monday to approve the Louis-Dreyfus request ...

House backs alternative fuel bill
KATC - Lafayette,LA,USA
... backed a bill today to beef up Louisiana's production of plant-based fuels and require a portion of gasoline sales in the state to include ethanol and biodiesel ...


UPDATE 4-ADM shares rise as oilseeds, biodiesel lift profit, Planters await biodiesel bill

UPDATE 4-ADM shares rise as oilseeds, biodiesel lift profit
Reuters - USA
... part of the 29 percent growth in earnings came from better profit margins from turning soybeans and rapeseed into animal feed, vegetable oils and biodiesel fuel ...
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Planters await biodiesel bill
Malaysia Star - Malaysia
LOCAL plantation companies, particularly those with huge investments in palm-based biodiesel projects, are eagerly awaiting the biodiesel bill to be passed by ...
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Dynoil to Build 1.5 bgy Biodiesel Refinery in Houston

Dynoil to Build 1.5 bgy Biodiesel Refinery in Houston
RenewableEnergyAccess.com - Peterborough,NH,USA
... under way with its plan to build a 1.5 billion gallon per year (bgy) refinery that will process vegetable oil feedstock into environmentally friendly biodiesel ...


Business Posts: Greenshift

Greenshift Corporation News:

Veridium Enters into License Agreement with General Ultrasonics ... Wednesday, March 22, 2006
Veridium Receives Order to Convert Animal Fat into Biodiesel ... Monday, March 20, 2006
BUSINESS: GreenShift Invests in General Hydrogen Thursday, March 09, 2006
BUSINESS: GreenShift Invests in General Hydrogen, INSEQ Announces ... Monday, March 06, 2006
BUSINESS: Greenshift - BioFuels Heating Up Thursday, March 09, 2006
BUSINESS: GreenShift Issues Shareholder Letter; Current Operations ... Wednesday, March 08, 2006
BUSINESS: GreenShift to Showcase Clean Energy Technologies Friday, March 03, 2006
BUSINESS: GreenShift Forms General Ultrasonics Corporation to ... Wednesday, March 01, 2006
BUSINESS: Veridium Patents Yellowstone Algae-Fed Bioreactor to ... Thursday, March 02, 2006
BUSINESS: Sterling Planet Supplies Renewable Energy to US Air Force Thursday, March 16, 2006
BUSINESS: Sterling Planet Appoints GreenShift CEO to Board of ... Wednesday, March 15, 2006
BUSINESS: Veridium Issues Shareholder Letter Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Find out more about Greenshift:

Biodiesel plant given green light, Biodiesel Plant Planned For Volga

Here are a few links on new facilities coming online in the near future. This industry is growing at an impressive rate!

Biodiesel plant given green light
Monticello Herald Journal - Monticello,IN,USA
The potential for a biodiesel production plant still exists at Liberty Landfill in eastern White County, but it’s not contingent on the status of a woodland ...

Biodiesel Plant Planned For Volga
KELOLAND TV - Sioux Falls,SD,USA
One of the nation's largest Biodiesel refineries could be up and running in Volga in 2008. That's according to South Dakota Soybean ...


Biodiesel now cheaper than regular diesel, D1 Oils Grants Refinery Franchise In Australia, NZ

This is excellent news! It looks like the industry is on the right track!

Biodiesel now cheaper than regular diesel
OregonLive.com - Portland,OR,USA
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — While soaring fuel costs are the bane of most businesses, Oregon makers of biodiesel are celebrating. Their ...
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D1 Oils Grants Refinery Franchise In Australia, NZ
Yahoo! News - USA
LONDON (Dow Jones)--D1 Oils, a producer of biodiesel, said Tuesday that it has signed an exclusive franchise agreement which involves the supply of 16 D1 20 ...
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Biodiesel refinery planned for Volga

More new locations popping up all over the country!

Biodiesel refinery planned for Volga
Rapid City Journal - Rapid City,SD,USA
VOLGA (AP) - Plans have been announced to build one of the nation's largest biodiesel refineries at Volga, according to South Dakota Soybean Processors. ...

Monday, May 01, 2006

New Zealand Dollar's 6.7 Percent Drop Spurs Cheaper Biofuels

Another instance of Biefuel becoming cheaper than fossil fuels...


New Zealand Dollar's 6.7 Percent Drop Spurs Cheaper Biofuels
Bloomberg - USA
... The rally in petroleum-based fuels may speed the adoption of ethanol and biodiesel, a truck fuel made from vegetable oils or animal fat, in New Zealand before ...


Senate Hears On Key Policy For Biodiesel Growth, Man fuels up vehicle with home brew, Soybean Futures Climb As Funds Flock, California Energy Commissi

CybeRelease: Senate Hears On Key Policy For Biodiesel Growth
TMCnet - USA
(CybeRelease, May 1, 2006) - Lake Harmony – If the United States someday replaced just 5 percent of its on-road diesel fuel with biodiesel, it would equal ...

Man fuels up vehicle with home brew
Scripps Howard News Service - Washington,DC,USA
... satellite and aerial-imaging software. As a hobby, Orrey turns used vegetable oil into biodiesel in his Boulder garage. He makes it in ...

Soybean Futures Climb As Funds Flock
Houston Chronicle - United States
... With crude oil prices at record highs, fuels such as ethanol and biodiesel have gained favor as alternatives. The buzz has driven ...

California Energy Commission to investigate gas markets
Los Angeles Business - CA
... move comes as Schwarzenegger signed an executive order establishing targets for the use and production of bioenergy, including ethanol and biodiesel fuels made ...


FRANCE: Technip Awarded Contract for a New Biodiesel Unit in France

Technip Awarded Contract for a New Biodiesel Unit in France
Construction and Maintenance News - Minsk,Belarus
Technip has been awarded by Diester Industrie a turnkey contract for a new biodiesel unit, based on the Axens process, to be built in Montoir-de-Bretagne, near ...
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State test-driving biodiesel fuel for trucks

State test-driving biodiesel fuel for trucks
Salem News - MA, USA
CONCORD, NH (AP) — The state Department of Transportation is looking to test-drive biodiesel fuel this summer. The department
...

As many States are becoming more concious of biofuels, the more they are switching their county and state owned vehicles to the alternative fuels. This is a good sign that bie-fuels are taking root in our country.

"Pulse On America" Show to Feature Mean Green BioFuels

“Pulse On America” Show to Feature Mean Green BioFuels
PR Web (press release) - Ferndale,WA,USA
... Mean Green™ is a development stage GreenShift portfolio company. GreenShift Corporation (OTC Bulletin Board: GSHF) is a publicly ...


University needs to adopt biodiesel, ADM Breaks Ground on 85 Million Gallon Biodiesel Plant in North ...

University needs to adopt biodiesel
Red and Black - Athens,GA,USA
... So, after reading about the University planning for its buses to run on biodiesel, I was thrilled at this necessary, wise leap into a more environmentally safe ...

ADM Breaks Ground on 85 Million Gallon Biodiesel Plant in North ...
Expansion Management - Cleveland,OH,USA
Archer Daniels Midland recently broke ground for the company’s new 85 million gallon biodiesel plant adjacent to its oil crushing plant at Velva, ND It will ...



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