ON its US assets alone, Amadeus Energy has been valued at a trading price at least double its usual 10-14 cent range.
ON its US assets alone, Amadeus Energy has been valued at a trading price at least double its usual 10-14 cent range.
Supported with consistent cashflow from its oil interests in Texas, Oklahama and Louisiana, the company has been gearing up with projects that look set to gain plenty of attention closer to home.
Through wholly owned subsidiaries Australian Renewable Fuels and Virtual Control Systems, Amadeus is in pole position for Australia’s biodiesel industry and at the forefront of providing remote and grid energy system and supply solutions.
One investment group has taken up Australian Renewable Fuels’ offer of a stake in a biodiesel plant at Picton, and other potential investors are now negotiating for a share.
The $12 million plant, expected to commence production next year, will produce Australia’s first commercial biodiesel using proven processes in use in Europe and the United States.
Six WA groups are trialing the intended product in a range of heavier vehicles, and Australian Renewable Fuels, confident of a quick return from bulk sales to fleets, is talking of up to five plants across Australia.
Virtual Control Systems is hoping to offer companies a way into WA’s changing electricity system, using its technology to monitor and balance grid input and output in real-time.
A contract for remote energy monitoring in a multiple internet service provider environment is in place with Worsley Alumina, and a high-profile indigenous communities trial by the Murdoch University-based Australian Cooperative Research Centre for Renewable Energy (ACRE) is under way.
ACRE is looking at the provision of reliable, functional renewable energy to remote areas, using the virtual control room technology to monitor output and diagnose the health of energy systems in extreme situations.
Virtual Control Systems chairman and Amadeus executive director finance Anthony Short says the technology has implications for services such as Internet banking in remote Australia, and the security sector, as well as those wishing to enter the energy market.
Power producers in two other States are expressing interest in the technology, as are some national industrial large-scale users seeking to address maintenance and upkeep issues.
Supported with consistent cashflow from its oil interests in Texas, Oklahama and Louisiana, the company has been gearing up with projects that look set to gain plenty of attention closer to home.
Through wholly owned subsidiaries Australian Renewable Fuels and Virtual Control Systems, Amadeus is in pole position for Australia’s biodiesel industry and at the forefront of providing remote and grid energy system and supply solutions.
One investment group has taken up Australian Renewable Fuels’ offer of a stake in a biodiesel plant at Picton, and other potential investors are now negotiating for a share.
The $12 million plant, expected to commence production next year, will produce Australia’s first commercial biodiesel using proven processes in use in Europe and the United States.
Six WA groups are trialing the intended product in a range of heavier vehicles, and Australian Renewable Fuels, confident of a quick return from bulk sales to fleets, is talking of up to five plants across Australia.
Virtual Control Systems is hoping to offer companies a way into WA’s changing electricity system, using its technology to monitor and balance grid input and output in real-time.
A contract for remote energy monitoring in a multiple internet service provider environment is in place with Worsley Alumina, and a high-profile indigenous communities trial by the Murdoch University-based Australian Cooperative Research Centre for Renewable Energy (ACRE) is under way.
ACRE is looking at the provision of reliable, functional renewable energy to remote areas, using the virtual control room technology to monitor output and diagnose the health of energy systems in extreme situations.
Virtual Control Systems chairman and Amadeus executive director finance Anthony Short says the technology has implications for services such as Internet banking in remote Australia, and the security sector, as well as those wishing to enter the energy market.
Power producers in two other States are expressing interest in the technology, as are some national industrial large-scale users seeking to address maintenance and upkeep issues.