Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

stanelco .......a new thread (SEO)     

bosley - 20 Feb 2004 09:34

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=SEO&SiChart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=SEO&Si

for more information about stanelco click on the links.

driver's research page link
http://www.moneyam.com/InvestorsRoom/posts.php?tid=7681#lastread
website link
http://www.stanelco.co.uk/index.htm


paulmasterson1 - 04 Oct 2005 20:16 - 10566 of 27111

Hi All,

I just found a few more uses for the Filter Tow, had a think, and sent my ideas to HQ .... a few more possible biodegradable products to add to the IP collection, not packaging, but likely to be worth a few quid, and the IP could be sold, just like with the Ciggy filters :)

Cheers,
PM

zscrooge - 04 Oct 2005 20:19 - 10567 of 27111

I wonder if HQ have a filter/squelch........

someuwin - 04 Oct 2005 20:46 - 10568 of 27111

Good work PM1 - keep it up!

paulmasterson1 - 04 Oct 2005 21:25 - 10569 of 27111


I wonder how the vote would go now, if it was instead to change to Starch Filter Tow ????


Eastman Chemical Company - EMN
Filed By: Sisters of Mercy Regional Community of Detroit

Date Filed: 3/30/2001
Annual Meeting Date: 5/3/2001
Company Home Page

Proposal Text

Shareowner Sisters of Mercy Regional Community of Detroit, 29000 Eleven Mile Road, Farmington Hills, Michigan 48336, holder of 575 shares of Eastman common stock, has given notice that it intends to submit the following proposal and supporting statement:

WHEREAS Eastman Chemical is a major producer of cellulose acetate tow, which is used in the manufacture of cigarette filters:

- During smoking, cigarette filter fibers become coated with carcinogen-laden deposits from cigarette smoke; - Also cellulose acetate cigarette filter fibers can dislodge from cigarettes and become transported into the lungs of consumers; - Scientists at the Roswell Park Cancer Institute have demonstrated the presence of cigarette filter fibers like the ones this company manufactures in the lungs of smokers; - These scientists have hypothesized that such fibers in the lungs of smokers might serve as reservoirs for carcinogens over a long period of time. This suggests that cellulose acetate filters may contribute to diseases caused by cigarettes in smokers; - If cellulose acetate filters contribute to cigarette-caused disease, Eastman Chemical may be liable for injuries to smokers as the tobacco litigation net gets thrown wider and wider.

RESOLVED: That shareholders request that management conduct a study examining possible health risks posed by our filter tows among consumers who smoke cigarettes with cellulose acetate filters. This study shall include a review of all information known or available to the company on this subject but need not involve any new primary research. The study and any recommendations that emerge from it are to be completed within one year of the 2000 Annual Meeting. Copies of the complete report shall be made available to requesting shareholders.

Supporting Statement of Proponent

Cigarette smoke contains dozens of potent carcinogens. Cellulose acetate fibers that are supposed to trap these poisons can themselves be transported into the lungs, laden with these dangerous substances. We believe this resolution and the study it requests are in the best interests of consumers as well as in the interests of our company and shareholders.

Certainly it is in our interest as management and investors to be fully informed about any and all health risks to smokers to which Eastman Chemical contributes. We need to know, for example, if our products are deemed to contribute to cancer or if we may be faced with legal and financial liabilities. It is only fair to consumers as well that they are fully aware of all of the dangers of smoking.

If you believe that Eastman Chemical and its shareholders should be fully apprised as to whether the cellulose acetate tow the company sells to the cigarette manufacturers is contributing to the various illnesses caused by cigarettes, please vote YES in support of this resolution.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Board Response:
Eastman is committed to protecting health, safety, and the environment. The Company subscribes to the Responsible Care(R) program of the American Chemistry Council, which includes product stewardship principles. Management continually evaluates the opportunities and challenges facing each of the Company's businesses and major products and develops information and plans in view of changing environments. The Board and management are cognizant of the scientific, legal, and business developments relative to acetate tow and its uses. The Board, as elected by the shareowners, and the officers, as the Board's agents, manage the myriad of factors that affect the Company's business and make business policy to conduct the Company's affairs. The report called for by this proposal is clearly within the purview of management. The Board does not believe the expenditure of management time and effort and Company resources required for the preparation of the report requested by the proposal is in the best interests of the Company or its shareowners.

The proposal on its face requests that management conduct a "study" of health issues related to our cellulose acetate tow product line. In fact, the proposal concerns substantially the same subject matter as proposals concerning this product line which have been submitted in past years to the Company by members of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, of which the proponent is also a member. One such proposal, seeking divestiture of the cellulose acetate tow business, also raised litigation, liability, and health issues and received only 2.8% of the votes cast at the 1996 Annual Meeting of Shareowners. Your management's views on the current proposal are essentially the same as those it had concerning that proposal, which views were supported overwhelmingly by the shareowners.

THE COMPANY'S BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "AGAINST" ADOPTION OF THIS PROPOSAL.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Voting Results
Votes For: 4,487,129
Votes Against: 51,749,446
Abstentions: 3,287,453
Total Votes: 65,822,975



paulmasterson1 - 04 Oct 2005 22:17 - 10570 of 27111



http://roswell.tobaccodocuments.org/



paulmasterson1 - 04 Oct 2005 22:24 - 10571 of 27111



Looks like Stanelco took extracts from this research to use in the RNS and Business Wire :)



Cigarettes with defective filters marketed for 40 years: what Philip Morris never told smokers

J L Pauly1, A B Mepani3, J D Lesses1, K M Cummings2 and R J Streck1
1 Department of Immunology, Roswell Park Cancer Institute, New York State Department of Health, Buffalo, New York 14263, USA
2 Department of Cancer Prevention, Epidemiology & Biostatistics, Roswell Park Cancer Institute
3 Cornell University, School of Arts and Sciences, Ithaca, New York 14850, USA



Full Text here ...

Full PDF here ....




Before learning of the fall-out studies of Phillip Morris,
Inc, we published the results of comprehensive tests
documenting that cellulose acetate filter fibres were released
from modern day cigarettes. Specifically, filter fibres were
released from 12 different US cigarette brands; two brands
from each of six different US companies. All cigarettes tested
were purchased from local vendors.97 98 Cellulose acetate filter
fibres were implanted in mice for six months. The fibres withstood
degradation and retained the tobacco brown colour and
bright fluorescence of the tobacco tar that had been adsorbed
from cigarette smoke. We reported also the presence of cellulose
acetate cigarette filter fibres in human lung tissue. In his
critique of this study, tobacco spokesperson Professor Dr F
Adlkofer noted that: With high probability, the fibres which
were seen by the authors in the lungs of smokers with lung
cancer are in fact cellulose acetate fibres.15

Results of studies presented in this report have been
confirmed and extended in investigations of consenting adult
smokers. The participant smoked a popular US filter cigarette
in his/her usual manner, but was instructed not to inhale the
smoke. Mouth washes of water were collected before
smoking, at different intervals during smoking, and after
smoking. The results showed that washes collected from all
subjects and for all cigarettes smoked contained cellulose
acetate cigarette filter fibres (range 225 fibres). In contrast,
mouth washes obtained before smoking had no fibres.Notable
is that most of the filter fibres harvested from the mouth were
coated with tobacco tar.

This paper discloses that Philip Morris, Inc has known
and concealed for approximately 40 years that fibres and
particles fall-out of the filter of cigarettes during smoking.
Other companies have assessed also the discharge of filter
fibres. In addressing this filter defect, the tobacco
industrys response has been variable, ranging from denial
of the discharge of filter fibres to the development of innovative
technologies for correcting and preventing the
problem. Consumers have not been informed of the filter
defect. Further, there is no indication that existing
corrective technologies and invention have been uniformly
implemented. Summarily, the tobacco industry has been:
(a) derelict in concealing information of filter defects; (b)
negligent in implementing technologies available to
prevent or reduce the emission of filter elements; and (c)
wrongful in not investigating the toxicology and harm
associated with defective filters of todays cigarettes that
are being marketed worldwide.



Phart68 - 04 Oct 2005 22:35 - 10572 of 27111

Mean anything to anyone here?

------

"Warm Glow,

Turkish delight? to add to pols.

For Delivery And then go. Swop the balloon, heat shield required. Stripes and pattern as one.

b2 done, b3 but first be very organised in purchasing.

A wise man is no fool, he sticks with what he knows."


:-s

paulmasterson1 - 04 Oct 2005 22:55 - 10573 of 27111


Phart Hi,

Poster radioactiveman .... "Warm Glow"

Turkish Delight is like jelly, added to Starpol ? nah !, maybe SEO have seen a Turkish company to add to Biotec ? .... "Turkish delight? to add to pols."

Selling of the Cigarette Filter IP, and sticking with packaging .... "A wise man is no fool, he sticks with what he knows."

FDA is in caps .... "For Delivery And then go" .... that would be either Starpol 2000, or the capsules passing FDA regulations, then it's all systems go.

No idea about the rest ....

Cheers,
PM



shamona - 05 Oct 2005 00:35 - 10574 of 27111

LOL !!

Truly pissing myself laughing at Mastersons ineptitude, the code is from disgraced council worker gmanhi!!!!!!!!!!! lol!

Must have another word with his admin leader boss, I know some people who pay council tax in the Southampton vicinity are peeved that he spends all day on the computer when he should be helping out taxpayers.

bosley - 05 Oct 2005 07:55 - 10575 of 27111

morning all. lovely views this morning.
pm1, while i agree with you that cig butts are a litter problem, to try to state that tobacco companies actually give a shit about the health of people is a joke. i cannot see the ip going for much, if only because one is patent pending. but, as always, nobody really knows how much the ip will go for. might as well wait until some are announced.

Biscuit - 05 Oct 2005 07:57 - 10576 of 27111

I think it will be the 30-50% cost saving that makes the IP so valuable Bos.

qc - 05 Oct 2005 08:09 - 10577 of 27111

While flange(poster on FYB) may be talking nonsense PM, he constantly makes reference to the USA. Watch out for 'stars' 'stripes' etc etc in his comments.

He normally seems to manage a post within 3-4 days before a RNS announcement so watch out tomorrow perhaps....

shamona - 05 Oct 2005 08:21 - 10578 of 27111

jeez guys if the ip was worth anything they wouldn't be getting rid of it.

My bet is we'll never hear anymore about it, just another useless idea with no benefits to anyone.

ps Don't believe every word they say about cost savings, as with Greenseal their is no independant data to suggest it's cheaper than the present technology.

pps Starch would go mushy if coming in contact with saliva!


ppps What is with you lot and guru's? Captain guide and now flange(who's already been exposed as a phoney)!!!!!!!!!

DYOR

shamona - 05 Oct 2005 08:22 - 10579 of 27111

QC

Their is an rns every 3 or 4 days, thats why he manages to predict them!

qc - 05 Oct 2005 08:33 - 10580 of 27111

lol, I suppose if you mention it often enough then the USA may come up on one RNS!

bhunt1910 - 05 Oct 2005 08:46 - 10581 of 27111

...........but we all know that there will be further announcements - cos howard White said so in his last communique.

Almost certainly we will get something over next few days, but definitely before the conference in Phili - but its anyones guess as to the content - although they must be fairly confident themselves - otherwise they would not have pre announced it.

Baza

Phart68 - 05 Oct 2005 10:03 - 10582 of 27111

Thanks for the (constructive) feedback guys.

paulmasterson1 - 05 Oct 2005 11:08 - 10583 of 27111

Bos Hi,

You say "pm1, while i agree with you that cig butts are a litter problem, to try to state that tobacco companies actually give a shit about the health of people is a joke. i cannot see the ip going for much, if only because one is patent pending. but, as always, nobody really knows how much the ip will go for. might as well wait until some are announced."

As biscuit said, it's the cost saving that makes it worth millions, read my posts again, because I have posted that Celenese, the biggest in the world for Cellulose Acetate, are LOSING MONEY on producing it, they need that cost saving, so they can turn a profit, and if they (the biggest producer !) aren't making a profit, that means you can assume all other producers are not making any profit on it either.

Cheers,
PM

greekman - 05 Oct 2005 11:25 - 10584 of 27111

shamona,

You say if the ip was worth anything they would'nt get rid of it. Everything has its price, its as simple as that.

paulmasterson1 - 05 Oct 2005 11:44 - 10585 of 27111


Greekman Hi,

Sham still talking bollocks I see.

Trying to spin the facts again, when anyone reading the announcement KNOWS that the IP is being sold because Stanelco an SP Metals do not want to be involved in the tobacco/cigarette industry, and that Biotec created the products and technologies starting way back in 1998, well before Stanelco and SP Metals got involved, and now that they are involved, the direction for biotec is PACKAGING, not smoking related products.

Cheers,
PM
Register now or login to post to this thread.