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EQUITORIAL PALM OIL (PAL)     

halifax - 08 Sep 2010 16:04

sp reacting to to RNS confirming funding available to develop their palm oil concession in Liberia.

aldwickk - 21 Jan 2011 13:19 - 82 of 132

Bought a few more @29.05

aldwickk - 27 Jan 2011 17:55 - 83 of 132

http://www.liberianobserver.com/node/10322

aldwickk - 28 Jan 2011 12:13 - 84 of 132

http://www.palmoilhq.com/

aldwickk - 02 Feb 2011 14:40 - 86 of 132

26.25 +1.50 (+6.06%) live: 2:39PM GMT
Bid price 26.00 Open price 25.00
Ask price 26.25 Prev close 24.75
High price 26.46 Spread 0.95%
Low price 24.57 Volume 538,152

aldwickk - 03 Feb 2011 08:58 - 87 of 132

Up again this morning with good volume

aldwickk - 04 Feb 2011 21:01 - 89 of 132

Equatorial Palm Oil JV with Indias Siva Group is now set up

Friday, February 04, 2011 by Andre Lamberti

In Liberia, EPO plans to develop 50,000 hectares in oil palm plantations within 10 years, and the strategic plan targets a 250,000 tonnes per annum crude palm oil operation

Equatorial Palm Oil PLC (LON:PAL) (EPO) said the joint venture agreement with Indian conglomerate, the Siva Group, has been fully implemented. The deal was initially flagged in September 2010.

The JV company has now received US$22.5 million in cash from Biopalm Energy, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Siva Ventures. EPO itself is investing US$7.5 million into the JV.

The deal also includes a US$30m loan facility to accelerate the development of EPOs palm oil operations in Liberia.

The 50:50 JV controls EPOs entire 169,000 hectare land position at Palm Bay, Butaw and River Cess in Liberia.

BioPalm is already the EPOs largest shareholder with a 29 percent stake in the company, after the Indian investor subscribed for 5 million in new equity (33.3m shares) back in May 2010.

In Liberia, EPO plans to develop 50,000 hectares in oil palm plantations within 10 years, the strategic plan targets a 250,000 tonnes per annum (tpa) crude palm oil (CPO) operation.

Initial CPO production is slated for Q4 2010, and the first palm oil processing mill is already under construction.

EPO joined the AIM market in February following a 6.5 million IPO. The company aim is to become a sustainable, low-cost producer of crude palm oil in Africa through the reactivation and development of existing plantations and its agricultural land bank in Liberia.

According to EPO, palm oil is the most important and widely produced edible oil in the world, and demand is projected to grow at 5-6 percent per annum over the next five years.

Palm oil is to food production what iron ore is to heavy industry.

It is an ingredient found in everything from Galaxy chocolate to Goodfellas pizza.

It even crops up in Persil soap powder. And in common with many basic minerals and hard commodities, demand for palm oil is buoyant and expanding all the time.

Liberia is a politically stable country and is becoming a fast growing investment destination for multi-national corporations, EPO said. Furthermore, the oil palm is indigenous to West Africa and cultivating it in this region avoids the adverse environmental impact the plant has on countries across Southeast Asia, where large areas are affected by a significantly lowered water table as a result of oil palm growing.

EPO believes the application of South-East Asian techniques and the latest seed genetics may enable Africa to become a key player in the world palm oil market again.

http://www.proactiveinvestors.co.uk/companies/news/25241/equatorial-palm-oil-jv-with-indias-siva-group-is-now-set-up--25241.html

aldwickk - 09 Feb 2011 18:15 - 90 of 132

2/11/2011

Indian bounce for EPO

Another pick from Shore Capital in the food sector is Liberia-focused palm oil developer Equatorial Palm Oil (PAL).
Analyst Phil Carroll draws attention to the joint venture agreement with Indian conglomerate Siva Group, which was approved by shareholders at the end of last year.

The agreement sees BioPalm, a subsidiary of Siva, provide $22.5 million in equity investment in return for a $7.5 million equity investment from EPO and its 169,000-hectare Liberian land position. EPO plans to use the cash to double its previous planting targets, with Shore enthusing that the outlook for the company is positive.

aldwickk - 14 Feb 2011 13:51 - 91 of 132

from iii article out today

We have written extensively on the progress being made on the joint venture agreement with BioPalm Energy, which provides for an equity investment in Palm Developments, the joint venture company, of which $7.5 million was due to come from PAL (via its Guernsey subsidiary) and $22.5 million from BioPalm Energy (which holds approximately 28.5% of the issued share capital of PAL).

Last week, the board announced the full implementation of the JV and that monies amounting to $22.5 million have been received from BioPalm Energy, which should help develop its c.169,000 hectare position at Palm Bay, Butaw and River Cess in Liberia.

We remain optimistic about the company's ability to make the most of the opportunity and look forward to operational updates in the near future.

aldwickk - 16 Feb 2011 18:20 - 93 of 132

two delayed trades 125,000 and 200,000 at mid price , i would say.

aldwickk - 16 Feb 2011 18:41 - 94 of 132

up 8.6% today

just read this on another bb , Palm oil price has hit a new high and there has been flooding in Malaysia. This could be why we have gone up while other Asian co's like NBPO have fallen back.

aldwickk - 23 Feb 2011 07:03 - 95 of 132

Equatorial Palm Oil plc ('EPO' or the 'Company')



Investor subscription update



Equatorial Palm Oil plc, the AIM listed Liberian focussed sustainable oil palm plantation developer, is pleased to announce that Andrew Milne has, under the Investor Subscription Letter (the 'ISL', as described in the Company's AIM Admission Document dated 26 February 2010), subscribed for an additional 400,000 new ordinary shares. Mr Milne has now completed the entire subscription of 6,857,143 shares at 17.5p to raise 1.2 million under the ISL. Mr Milne said, "As an active private investor, I am pleased to have completed my subscription for new shares in the Company which represents a substantial investment in EPO and this palm oil project."



Application has been made for the new ordinary shares to be admitted to trading on AIM and the new ordinary shares are expected to commence trading on 28 February 2011.

aldwickk - 23 Feb 2011 19:01 - 97 of 132

In Liberia, EPO plans to develop 50,000 hectares in oil palm plantations within 10 years, the strategic plan targets a 250,000 tonnes per annum (tpa) crude palm oil (CPO) operation.

According to EPO, palm oil is the most important and widely produced edible oil in the world, and demand is projected to grow at 5-6 percent per annum over the next five years.

Palm oil is to food production what iron ore is to heavy industry. It is an ingredient found in everything from Galaxy chocolate to Goodfellas pizza. It even crops up in Persil soap powder. And in common with many basic minerals and hard commodities, demand for palm oil is buoyant and expanding all the time.

Liberia is a politically stable country and is becoming a fast growing investment destination for multi-national corporations, EPO said. Furthermore, the oil palm is indigenous to West Africa and cultivating it in this region avoids the adverse environmental impact the plant has on countries across Southeast Asia, where large areas are affected by a significantly lowered water table as a result of oil palm growing.

EPO believes the application of South-East Asian techniques and the latest seed genetics may enable Africa to become a key player in the world palm oil market again.

aldwickk - 28 Feb 2011 08:16 - 98 of 132

Sime Darby eyes palm oil expansion in Africa - Plans for a 300,000 hectare plantation in
Cameroon FT article today.

aldwickk - 28 Feb 2011 12:59 - 99 of 132

Sime Darby eyes palm oil expansion in Africa

By Kevin Brown in Kuala Lumpur

Published: February 27 2011 20:17 | Last updated: February 27 2011 20:17

Sime Darby, the worlds biggest listed palm oil producer, is considering plans for a 300,000 hectare plantation in Cameroon as the industry rushes to expand in Africa in response to rising demand and near-record prices.

Mohd Bakke Salleh, Simes chief executive, said the M$7.5bn ($2.5bn) project was the Malaysian groups best prospect for expanding its 640,000ha land bank after a 220,000ha concession was granted in Liberia last year.

We are actively looking. We have been shown potential areas in Cameroon, and the development formula is to work with the local communities, he said in an interview in Kuala Lumpur.

Mr Bakke stressed that discussions had so far led to nothing conclusive, while the plantation would take many years to develop, with planting beginning at about 5,000ha a year and peaking at no more than 15,000ha.

Long-term demand for palm oil is rising as a result of population growth and changing dietary preferences in Asia, while supply is constrained by limits on plantation development in Malaysia and Indonesia, the two biggest producer nations.

Indonesia, which accounts for almost half the worlds palm oil production, implemented a two-year moratorium on commercial development of forests and peat lands in January as part of an effort to conserve the countrys remaining rainforests.

Mr Bakke said it was essential for Sime to find further land to defend its market leadership in the face of active prospecting in Africa by other big producers such as Singapore-based Wilmar International and Olam International. We cannot just sit back and do nothing, he said, noting that other plantation players were looking at potential projects in Ghana, Ivory Coast and Cameroon.

Simes Liberia deal was part of a wave of proposed development projects by the industry last year, which included a $1.6bn agreement between Liberia and Golden Agri of Indonesia, and a 300,000ha joint venture in Gabon announced by Olam. Equatorial Palm Oil, a UK-listed palm oil developer, has 169,000ha in Liberia.

Palm oil, although down from the 28-month highs reached last year, was trading at about $1,100 a tonne last week. Before a 2008 spike in food prices that pushed the commodity above $1,000 a tonne, palm oil traded at an average price of about $500 a tonne in the preceding two decades.

Plantation groups do not expect significant local opposition to expansion in Africa, where governments are keen to create jobs and increase export revenues. Sime said its Liberian and Cameroon prospects could create 30,000 jobs each.

Sime also stressed that the land involved was agricultural or degraded forest, reflecting the impact of sustained campaigns against the industry by western environmental lobbying groups such as Greenpeace.

aldwickk - 02 Mar 2011 13:01 - 100 of 132

sia palm oil groups go back to future in Africa
By Kevin Brown
Published: March 1 2011 22:58 | Last updated: March 1 2011 22:58
Blackguarded by the green movement and devoid of pricing power, the palm oil business has one thing going for it: the sparkling prospects of the liquid gold it extracts from millions of squat green trees.
With demand soaring, the listed Asian plantation groups that dominate the sector are running out of land. And that is pushing them back to the industrys roots literally in a risky competition for space in equatorial Africa. If the gamble pays off, the rewards will be huge. If it doesnt, the planters could lose their shirts.
For the moment, they are in a sweet spot. With crude palm oil trading this week in Kuala Lumpur at about M$3,500 ($1,150) a tonne, the plantation groups are making at least M$2,000 a tonne more than their costs of production.
That is translating into a big surge in profits. Singapore listed Golden Agri-Resources, Indonesias biggest palm oil producer, has just announced a 147 per cent rise in net profit to $1.4bn for 2010, despite being blacklisted last year by Unilever, Nestland Kraft Foods, the consumer products groups, following Greenpeace claims that it destroyed rainforest areas to plant oil palm trees. Golden Agri denies the claims.
Sime Darby, a Malaysian conglomerate that is the worlds biggest listed producer, last week disclosed a 104 per cent increase in second quarter net profit to M$877m, driven mainly by its palm oil operations.
The price of crude palm oil is currently more than double the long term average of about $500 a tonne, and it looks like staying high, for two reasons. The first is strong demand for edible oils, driven by rising exports to India and China, where prosperity is triggering dietary changes that are raising demand for processed foods. Many of these contain palm oil, including pastries, chocolate and ice-cream. No one sees that trend reversing.
The second driver is palm oils use as an energy source. This accounts for less than 10 per cent of production, but the link to crude oil helps to put a floor under palm prices, as does its role as a replacement for other vegetable oils, such as rapeseed, which are in greater demand as fuels.
Ken Arieff Wong, who researches the industry for Nomura in Kuala Lumpur, estimates that consumption rose by 5.2 per cent last year, while production was up 1 per cent. Consumption growth may fall a little this year, says Mr Wong, but all the experience of development points to a sustained long term increase in demand.
Supply, though, is sharply constrained. Malaysia, responsible for about 40 per cent of production, has very little plantable land left, for a mixture of reasons including infrastructure problems and restrictions on land use. Indonesia, which produces more than 45 per cent of global supplies, has plenty of land, but most of it is virgin forest which it has belatedly promised to maintain. A two-year moratorium on development implemented in January will not put an instant stop to planting, but is a clear sign that land is going to be harder to acquire in future.
Most of the big companies have land banks that will keep them going for a few years. Production can also be increased by raising yields: lifting the average annual yield of 4 tonnes of oil per hectare to the 6 tonnes produced by the best trees would make a big difference. Research is being conducted into genetic modifications that enthusiasts say could eventually raise yields to as much as 8 tonnes. But all that is far in the future, and plantations work on 25-year cycles the lifetime of the trees. So if the planters want to expand later, they have to start the process now.
Hence the focus on equatorial Africa, one of the few places in the world outside south-east Asia where the oil palm tree will grow. This is not surprising, since the Asian industry got its start by importing plants from Africa in the 1960s. Now the plant
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