Poseidon Resources
34 articles about "Poseidon Resources"
DESALTABLE Vol 12, Issue 11 (November 2011)
Qatar’s national water and electricity offtaker Kahramaa has decided to go for two major desalination expansions instead of one, as the country prepares for a rise in domestic demand and the infrastructure boom provided by the football World Cup (see story p18).
DESAL PROGRESS Vol 12, Issue 7 (July 2011)
Hyflux has closed the financing for its 318,500m3/d Tuaspring desalination project.
DESAL PUZZLES Vol 11, Issue 11 (November 2010)
* The bids came in for the Tuas II desal plant in Singapore soon after we went to press last month. Hyflux was in the lead with a gobsmacking first-year water price of US$0.35/m3, which scarcely seems to be enough to cover the energy costs of seawater desalination.
FUNDING FUN Vol 10, Issue 6 (June 2009)
* The financial environment is also having an impact on desalination.
Poseidon awaits crunch decisions Vol 10, Issue 6 (June 2009)
The Carlsbad project may yet have a second lap of the permitting process to go. Christopher Gasson looks at what the marathon means from an investor perspective. Is the process so bad that it is good?
Who is Poseidon Resources? Vol 10, Issue 6 (June 2009)
It has taken a certain determination to get this far. Not everyone has stayed with it.
SEA GOD Vol 10, Issue 1 (January 2009)
* Across the pond, the scramble to get projects into Obama’s stimulus package is on (see story p25).
Befesa takes a new approach to the US Vol 9, Issue 12 (December 2008)
After struggling to make the numbers add up on Poseidon’s Californian desalination projects, the Spanish company has made an acquisition to fully realise its new strategy.
Mitsui outlines its Mexican ambitions Vol 9, Issue 9 (September 2008)
The Japanese giant is hoping for big results after buying Earth Tech’s Mexican assets. It doesn’t want to rush things.
AT LAST Vol 8, Issue 11 (November 2007)
* Seven years after starting work on its proposal for a desalination plant at Carlsbad, Poseidon Resources cleared the biggest obstacle in the way of getting the project built: the California Coastal Commission.










