bosley
- 20 Feb 2004 09:34
hewittalan6
- 29 Aug 2006 10:23
- 19481 of 27111
Nice find, barney.
Agree it would be fantastic. Lets see.
Alan
Tonyrelaxes
- 29 Aug 2006 11:48
- 19482 of 27111
Nice find.
Unfortunately recently the Indy was totally wrong in what it had "heard" on another share I follow.
What I do not understand is why the US organic food movement is worrying over Wal-Mart raising it's own organic game.
I thought Wal-Marts involvement in anything is for the good, except possibly margins. A Movement should be forwarding the idea, not worrying about profits.
Wal-Marts involvement is what most here are looking forward to.
barney12345
- 29 Aug 2006 11:57
- 19483 of 27111
Tony
this again from the Indy
"Ronnie Cummins, of the Organic Consumers Association, a US lobby group, is among those who are concerned Wal-Mart will destroy the ethical ideals of the movement, which is more devoted to eco-friendly practices than the bottom lines of the world's biggest retailers."
Bloody liberals - they get the largest retailer in the world to adopt their muesli crunching guardian reading tosh and they still moan.
hewittalan6
- 29 Aug 2006 12:11
- 19484 of 27111
Over 2 months ago, my imaginary friend was telling me that biodegradability was only part of the story WM needed to launch something like this. This shows why. The bloody treehuggers will leap on anything in their pursuit of us all wandering to the woods to collect wild berries, rather than nipping to the shops in our cars.
WM, and Asda, need to be certain about sources, transport, energy requirements, ethical employment and much else before they can trumpet it. To do other wise could leave them with egg on their faces.
He highlighted GM and transportation. Can you imagine WM launching this in a blaze of publicity only for Mr Cummins to point out that more oil than ever before was actually being used because of the transportation and energy costs!!!!
Its starting to fit.
Alan
tweenie
- 29 Aug 2006 13:33
- 19485 of 27111
IF.... everything comes to fruition, Given that biotec will probably increase production of s/pol 2k/3k/4k?etc
Am I right in thinking all this will be reliant on natureworks producing enough PLA and selling to seo?
garyble
- 29 Aug 2006 20:11
- 19486 of 27111
Starpol 2000 {Bioplast 2189} uses 60% PLA
Satrpol 2055 uses 30% PLA
Starpol 2063 uses 20% PLA
Naturework's annual production of PLA is @140,000 tonnes. Therefore could be a significant percentage of NW's current capacity if one of the posible deals comes off.
hewittalan6
- 29 Aug 2006 21:21
- 19487 of 27111
Any idea what Starpol 3000 uses as a % PLA?
I don't think Starpol 2000 cuts the mustard for fresh food packaging, as it is not available in clear form.
Alan
garyble
- 29 Aug 2006 22:41
- 19488 of 27111
Alan,
Can't find any direct info on Starpol 3000 composition as yet, but would hazard a guess that it would have a similar PLA content to Starpol 2000, but simply made from PLA 3001D or PLA 3051D rather than PLA 2002D, hence the imaginitve name.
hewittalan6
- 30 Aug 2006 06:49
- 19489 of 27111
Thanks, garyble.
I didn't even realise there were so many PLA variants!! You are right, though. 2 MMU's would take about 15% of Natureworks annual production, so if things go to plan, NW better have the capacity.
Alan
hewittalan6
- 30 Aug 2006 06:59
- 19490 of 27111
LONDON (AFX) - Andy Bond will today present himself as the green ambassador of the British supermarket industry when he announces plans to host a sustainability conference later in the year, the Financial Times reported.
In a thinly veiled attack on arch-rival Tesco PLC, which has been running a high-profile green campaign over the past few months, the chief executive of Asda -- owned by US giant Wal-Mart Stores Inc -- told the newspaper that he was concerned that sustainability had become a 'flag-waving exercise' rather than a genuine attempt to help customers and the environment.
Bond said he was planning to write to all grocery chief executives to invite them to the Asda Sustainability conference to share expertise on packaging and renewable energy.
'It will be a better conference if Tesco comes along and acts in a pro-active manner,' he said.
'We don't want to quash competition but I do think that the current issues go beyond just competitive advantage. This is a moral issue and I think we should do more than just what is best for the Asda shopper,' he added.
Tesco and Wal-Mart-owned Asda have had a number of small spats about green issues, with Asda angered recently when Tesco made a big play about moving goods off the roads and on to rail.
hewittalan6
- 30 Aug 2006 07:33
- 19491 of 27111
Opinions on this one please.
Does it mean that Asda are looking to pick the brains of other supermarkets? Or could it be that Starpol / GS needs other supermarkets to follow suit to increase volume and thereby reduce costs. Could it be that Asda cannot maximise its use of GS /Starpol unless production lines that are shared by many supermarkets use it? Or is it simply that Asda want to play a game of oneupmanship, and announce to the world how hard they are working and how little other supermarkets are doing?
Answers on a five pound note to my usual address.
Alan
greekman
- 30 Aug 2006 07:53
- 19492 of 27111
I think it's Asda playing a game of oneupmanship.
What we want is a nice little Eco green type supermarket war.
What better to get things moving Seo's way. Such a war will put immense pressure on all, to get new environmentally friendly products on the shelves.
I don't think any of the supermarkets care about such environmental issues, but if it means profits increase they will worship the issues like it's a new religion (the green god).
aldwickk
- 30 Aug 2006 09:11
- 19493 of 27111
Posted on AD..FN,
It should be remembered that many of the staff have been paid off; where is the severance money coming from for the top execs?
Sharesure
- 30 Aug 2006 09:41
- 19494 of 27111
Bit rich, Asda saying that they want the environmental issue to transcend competitive one up manship; their stipulation on a one year exclusivity deal has been one of the main contributing factors in the slow take up of Greenseal and therefore the reason that SEO is now so strapped for cash. I believe they should be prepared to bankroll SEO until some orders are received. How likely is that???!!!
garyble
- 30 Aug 2006 09:44
- 19495 of 27111
SEO apparently recently shed 10 employees, of which only one was from the board {Terry Robins}, who is now involved as a consultant. Two other "interim" execs have been taken on to push forward with commercialisation.
I doubt the severance package for the non-execs would amount to a great deal.
Mad Pad
- 31 Aug 2006 08:04
- 19496 of 27111
TodaysFT."Waitrose and JSainsbury yesterday backed the effort by Andy Bond,Asda chief executive,to create a single voice within the supermarket industry on sustainability.............This is not an area where we should compete.....We can effect change and it should be together ,rather than just one industry operator running accross the line and grabbing the glory.................Asda hosted ..conference to share expertise on packaging renewable energy,soucing and other green issues." Exciting things ahead?Bought back in myself yesterday.
tweenie
- 31 Aug 2006 09:46
- 19497 of 27111
nice one MP.
I'm genuinely trying to stay level headed about this share.
It's been too much of a rollercoaster ove past 3 years.
That promised 'JAM' looks like it's been processed, packaged and on the way to the stores.
keeping everything crossed.
Paperbackwriter
- 31 Aug 2006 10:39
- 19498 of 27111
The future looks bright for all of us serious investors in SEO
Fred1new
- 31 Aug 2006 11:47
- 19499 of 27111
It depends on your life expectancy!
8-)
jimward9
- 31 Aug 2006 13:32
- 19500 of 27111
http://www.foodproductiondaily.com/news/ng.asp?n=70239-stanelco-asda-greenseal-radio-frequency