micky468
- 08 Feb 2007 10:29
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 8 February 2007
Brinkley Mining Plc
("Brinkley Mining" or "the Company")
Agreement signed to source additional Uranium Projects
Brinkley Mining Plc (AIM: BRM), is pleased to announce that it has entered into
an Agreement to source additional uranium projects in South Africa with one of
the Brinkley Group's Economic Empowerment Partners, Blue Nightingale 709
(Proprietary) Limited ("Blue Nightingale").
Under the terms of the Agreement Blue Nightingale will offer a right of first
refusal on any uranium projects in South Africa to the Brinkley Group. In
consideration, Brinkley Mining will issue 6 million fully paid ordinary shares
in the Company to Blue Nightingale. These shares will be subject to a 12 month
lock-in arrangement and will be issued within 20 days after Blue Nightingale
has obtained approval of this arrangement from the Reserve Bank of South Africa.
Blue Nightingale is the Brinkley Group's joint Economic Empowerment Partner over
5 Prospecting Applications in the Karoo region of South Africa and also is a
25% shareholder in Western Uranium (Proprietary) Limited, a subsidiary of
Brinkley Mining. Blue Nightingale has a management team with mining and
commercial expertise and experience. Its principals comprise experienced
practitioners in a wide range of business activities, including mineral-resource
management, corporate finance, project management and the provisioning of legal
and business accounting services.
Gerard Holden, Executive Chairman of Brinkley Mining, commented:
"Brinkley Mining is delighted to have expanded our relationship with Blue
Nightingale. We all view this as an important step in enhancing the Company's
portfolio of uranium properties whilst working together with one of our partners
Blue Nightingale."
micky468
- 08 Mar 2007 15:53
- 32 of 134
fliper did you buy
fliper
- 08 Mar 2007 16:04
- 33 of 134
Yes , missed the 17.5/18 window but got in at 19.5
micky468
- 08 Mar 2007 16:07
- 34 of 134
good buy fliper ............now look at (DCD)it a good buy
fliper
- 08 Mar 2007 16:22
- 35 of 134
It looks like the 34 mil trades the other day were buys , someone knows something .
hlyeo98
- 08 Mar 2007 17:28
- 36 of 134
BRM clearly is a BUY, something is brewing seriously.
micky468
- 08 Mar 2007 17:33
- 37 of 134
i told you 98
hlyeo98
- 08 Mar 2007 19:39
- 38 of 134
Thanks for the tip, micky.
micky468
- 08 Mar 2007 21:03
- 39 of 134
98/fliper...... This will start to full next week come back to 25p and hold i think but if it dose not then it will zoom upwards. 50p+........it was here a year ago; the thing that makes me think this will go up this time is....................................
As part of the above agreement with the CGEA, Brinkley Africa has entered into
an addendum to the original Memorandum of Understanding which provides for the
parties to incorporate a new company in the DRC. This new company is called
Societe d'Inspection des Matieres Nucleaires et des Substances Radioactive
("SOCIMAR"). SOCIMAR is mandated by the CGEA to conduct radiation testing and
certification of export materials with a view to implementing proper controls
and to restrict the illicit export of radioactive material. SOCIMAR will receive
a fee per unit certified.
Brinkley Africa will have board control of SOCIMAR and an approximate 40%
economic interest. A project implementation plan has been agreed with the CGEA
and the first personnel have been recruited. It is SOCIMAR's objective to have
the required controls operational at a number of border crossings in the next
four months.
hlyeo98
- 09 Mar 2007 12:46
- 40 of 134
Micky I think it is a good time to top up now
micky468
- 09 Mar 2007 13:47
- 41 of 134
i think this will come down 98 but here's one to look at (GLA)also it as shaers in......UraMin Inc (UraMin), in which Galahad holds 9.3% (8.4% fully diluted), have a look at the post
hlyeo98
- 09 Mar 2007 17:33
- 42 of 134
There is a 1.4 million buy at the end of the day
fliper
- 09 Mar 2007 18:02
- 44 of 134
Did they force the price down for this buyer ? 1.4 mil
micky468
- 09 Mar 2007 18:23
- 45 of 134
no fliper there a funny lot this will come down fliper also have alook at (GLA) i put a
thread or post wt ever earlier
hlyeo98
- 09 Mar 2007 20:48
- 46 of 134
driver, I think both VML and BRM are both very good shares to keep.
hlyeo98
- 09 Mar 2007 20:51
- 47 of 134
driver, I think both VML and BRM are both very good shares to keep.
fliper
- 11 Mar 2007 17:07
- 49 of 134
I think buyers will come in again if sp starts moving up .
hlyeo98
- 11 Mar 2007 19:26
- 50 of 134
Good chance to pile in at 28p.
The price of uranium can only go higher after this.
http://www.stockinterview.com/News/03092007/Ranger-Flooded-ERA.html
hlyeo98
- 11 Mar 2007 19:52
- 51 of 134
From The Times - March 10, 2007
Europe agrees to embrace nuclear option in battle to save the planetDavid Charter and Rory Watson, Brussels
The role of nuclear power in Europe received an unexpected boost yesterday as EU leaders hailed a landmark climate change deal to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and switch to renewable fuels.
Environmentalists complained that an ambitious headline goal to cut Europes CO emissions by a fifth by 2020 had been weakened by concessions to the main nuclear nations and the biggest polluters in Eastern Europe.
Nonetheless, Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, will use the agreement struck at the spring EU summit in Brussels to put pressure on world leaders to follow suit when she hosts the G8 meeting in June.
China, India and Brazil will join that summit and, like the US, be challenged to accept the principle of binding CO cuts for the first time.
As well as agreeing in principle to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, EU leaders pledged to ensure that 20 per cent of Europes energy will come from renewable sources by 2020. The commitment of all 27 member nations is legally enforceable by the European Court of Justice.
Months of haggling will follow as diplomats argue over targets for individual countries. Each will contribute a different amount, and diplomats made clear that less would be expected of the heaviest-polluting former Communist countries. The Czechs and Slovaks had both complained that they had only just left decades of five-year plans behind them.
In a sop to France and the Czech Republic, a countrys nuclear power capability will be taken into account when calculating national commitments to renewable energy. France produces 80 per cent of its electricity from nuclear power stations and insisted that this noncarbon source of fuel should be taken into consideration. French diplomats believe this will lessen the EU demand for more renewable sources such as wave, wind and solar power.
Jacques Chirac, the outgoing French President, welcomed the deal as one of the top three achievements of the EU during his 12 years in the Elys Palace.
Tony Blair was also pleased with the concession towards the nuclear powers. The outcome will give a boost to his plans to rebuild Britains ageing nuclear power stations which suffered a setback last month when the High Court ruled that the consultation process was seriously flawed. Mr Blair said: There is then the 20 per cent target on renewable energy. In setting that, there will be permission to look at the energy mix that countries have . . . including nuclear technology, which obviously helps the UK as well.
Environmentalists were less enthusiastic. Friends of the Earth said the targets were timid. A spokesman said: Heads of States gave a modest boost to the uptake of renewable energies, but agreed that the EU should aim low on cutting greenhouse gases, and failed again to agree any concrete commitment towards reducing Europes appalling waste of energy.
Mr Blair and Mr Chirac were full of praise for the handling of the summit by Mrs Merkel, who faced strong opposition to her climate change ambitions from several nations, not least in eastern European countries such as Poland, which still rely heavily on fossil fuels.
But she was determined to give herself the best possible leverage on members of the G8 to persuade them to follow suit and prepare a postKyoto global framework for cutting harmful emissions.
President Chirac described the outcome as one of the great moments of European history. He said: It was not easy, but Mrs Merkel achieved it with lots of intelligence and brio.
Key to any new global deal will be the United States, where Congress refused to ratify the Kyoto protocol, but also China, India and Brazil, which were all excused Kyoto targets because they were classed as developing nations in the 1990s.
The EU deal allows Mrs Merkel to challenge other global players to match the EUs commitment with the extra pledge that Europe will go further and cut emissions by up to 30 per cent if others are prepared to follow suit.