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CASHED-up agribusiness companies that sold their low...

Author Message
kangarooistan...
Posted: Mon Nov 02, 2009 12:15 am
Guest
Sellers tap back into water well,

once jews get control of the worlds water and carbon trading they
will increase the prices until they control the entire world , exactly
like the salt taxes of old , carbon trading will be more profitable
than the oil industry and GUESS who actually gets to pay in the end

It will take WW3 to force jews to give up control of OUR water and
air , they will use the rivers of GOLD to employ their own private
armies to defend THEIR water and air from the masses
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_British_salt_tax_in_India

Carbon Trading will be run by and for jews as a way of controlling
the entire globe as it tightens its grip on the industry like it has
done to the banking industry , they will decide how much your children
MUST pay them to do anything

they only need control water and carbon trading to fully control the
entire world until WW3 sets us FREE again once the sheeple eventually
work out what they are plotting


Peter Hunt

October 28, 2009

CASHED-up agribusiness companies that sold their low reliability water
to the Federal Government are back in the market to replenish their
supplies.

Mildura's Tandou Limited sold 250,000 megalitres of supplementary
water for $34 million to the NSW and Federal Governments on December 2
last year.

Yet last week the Tandou board announced it wanted to "expand its
water portfolio" as part of its strategy to become a water trading
house.

"We believe the Australian water industry displays characteristics
that are attractive for investment, particularly, strong demand for
water for a range of uses, combined with supply limitations due to
climate change, conservative water management of water allocations and
the buy back of water entitlement by the Commonwealth," the board
announced.

Tandou's counterpart, Twynam, is also rumored to be back in the water
market, with one broker stating it was "well known" the company was
buying temporary water.

Twynam sold 240,000 megalitres of general and supplementary water
entitlements to the Federal Government for $303 million last May.

A search of the NSW Water Access Licence Register shows Twynam sold
its general security shares to the NSW Government for $1309 a
megalitre, but retained its licence on the Murrumbidgee irrigation
system.

Retaining its WAL allows Twynam managers to buy in temporary water to
meet their irrigation needs.

Brokers told The Weekly Times it made far more sense to buy "real"
water on the allocation or temporary market than retain general
security entitlement on the Murrumbidgee that gained miserable
allocations of 21 per cent last season (2008-09), 14 per cent in
2007-08 and 15 per cent in 2006-07 - an average rate of return of $33
to $50 worth of water on an entitlement worth $1309 a megalitre.

In contrast Twynam could buy a full megalitre of allocation water on
the temporary water market for $200 to $300 a megalitre in most of
those seasons.

Twynam executive chairwoman Christine Campbell refused to respond to
The Weekly Times questions on the issue.

Tandou and Twynam's water trading strategies follow moves by US-owned
Summit Water Holdings earlier this year to buy $20 million of
Australian irrigators' water as part of its $500 million global water-
purchasing strategy.

At the time, California-based Summit Global Management chief marketing
officer Matt Dickerson said: "There were few areas where we can
execute our strategy, but Australia is one of them".
http://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/article/2009/10/28/127151_water.html
 
 
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