Monday, September 14, 2009

Pomega5 products are paraben free and biodynamic

Paraben-free, organic, or biodynamic

Just because a product is paraben-free doesn't necessarily mean it's organic—and vice versa.Organic products contain ingredients from natural sources produced in accordance with certain production standards that follow specific regulations.
On the other hand, when a product is paraben-free, it means that the paraben preservatives are absent or replaced with alternative preservatives. Therefore, a paraben-free product may or may not contain organic ingredients; and if an organic product doesn't have the NOP (National Organic Program) or USDA organic seal, it can contain parabens.
All cosmetics sold are required by law to declare every single ingredient, so you can determine what is or isn't in a product by simply reading the label.


Made from pomegranate seed oil
Natural, organic and ultra clean



Sunday, September 13, 2009

Greentech companies forced to change business models


Changing Models: A Trend in Greentech

The tough market conditions over the past year have forced greentech companies to re-examine and change their business strategies.

One of them is Innovalight, which announced today its ability to produce highly efficient crystalline silicon solar cells. The company has been developing its silicon ink technology since 2002, and was set on becoming a solar cell maker.

But the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based private company changed its focus about nine months ago to pursue opportunities that would require lower capital investments and steer it away from a market already facing a glut of solar cells, said Innovalight CEO Conrad Burke.

Innovalight is now licensing the know how to make silicon ink printing tools and selling the ink. The company contracts with tool makers to produce the printing systems. The ink would come from Innovalight's own factory, which currently has annual production capacity of 100 megawatts, Burke said.

Today, it is working with six solar cell makers to incorporate Innovalight's technology into their manufacturing processes. Burke said the customers already have pre-existing production lines, but want to boost their cells' efficiencies by adding the silicon ink. He declined to disclose their names.

Changing its business model often raises questions about the company's ability to grow or even survive. On the other hand, it also could be seen as an agile move to respond to changing market dynamics.

Nanostellar, for example, set out to make catalysts for reducing tailpipe emissions. Last summer, it decided to license its technology to chemical companies instead of manufacturing its own.

ESolar joined forces with a power generation company, NRG Energy, to develop solar power plants in the United States instead of doing it alone. NRG lines up the capital and oversees the project development while eSolar provides the equipment.

In the case of OptiSolar, the strategy was to put the company up for sale.
OptiSolar set out to make amorphous silicon thin film panels and build power plants with them. But the company wasn't able to raise enough capital to do both well. So it sold the power plant projects it had been developing to First Solar for $400 million earlier this year. It then announced a deal in July to sell its manufacturing assets to Allora Minerals for $260 million.
Pomega LLC, the Omega 5 oil greentech company, is also rumored to explore venture partnerships with industry leaders.


We love Pomega5 ultra natural skin care

Saturday, September 12, 2009

More products to pomegranate lovers


NeoCell , a leader in the natural supplement and skin care industries, announced today that GNC is adding three more NeoCell products to its network of stores.
GNC customers will now be able to purchase:
* NeoCell`s new Pure H.A. Blueberry Liquid: Taken daily, this delicious drinkwill support healthy joints, the retina in the eyes and promote smooth-lookingskin.
* Pomegranate from the Seed: Pomegranates are hailed by researchers as having extraordinary antioxidant properties. This product is made from the juice that is extracted from the seeds, which contains the highest level of antioxidants.
* Collagen+C Pomegranate Liquid: This combines the antioxidant power ofPomegranate and Green Tea with the healing benefits of collagen to provide ahost of benefits to joints, tendons, bones, hair, skin and muscle.The three additions bring the total number of NeoCell products in the GNC lineupto seven. Customers have already been able to purchase NeoCell`s Super CollagenPowder and three sizes of NeoCell`s Super Collagen+C tablets.
"We`re excited about expanding our product lineup with GNC," said NeoCell VicePresident of Sales, Darren Rude. "Our products are a great fit for GNC customers- people who are focused on a healthy lifestyle." GNC is the world's largest company of its kind devoted exclusively to helpingits customers improve the quality of their lives. GNC is the largest globalspecialty retailer of health and wellness, sports nutrition and diet products.For the past 75 years, GNC has expanded its worldwide network of over 5,200stores in the U.S. and 44 global markets.
For more information on Pomega5's full line of skin care and nutritional supplements, visit www.pomega5.com.

Pomega5 products are made of pomegranate seed oil
www.pomega5.com

Dynamic women select biodynamic products by Pomega5

Try outs to become the next biodynamic model
In the early 1920's a group of practicing farmers, concerned with the decline of the soil, sought the advice of Dr. Rudolf Steiner, founder of anthroposophy, who had spent all his life researching and investigating the forces that regulate life and growth. From a series of lectures and conversations held at Koberwitz, Germany, in June 1924, there emerged the fundamental principles of biodynamic farming and gardening, a unified approach to agriculture that relates the ecology of the earth-organism to that of the entire cosmos. This approach has been under development in many parts of the world ever since. Dr. Ehrenfried Pfeiffer, who worked with Dr. Steiner during the formative period, brought biodynamic concepts to the United States in the 1930s. It was during this period that the Biodynamic Farming and Gardening Association was founded in 1938.

If the results of the Biodynamic approach may be found in the quality of produce, the health of land and livestock, and the freedom from environmental problems increasingly generated by many modern farming methods, what of the approach itself? What distinguishes it from other agricultural attitudes and techniques?

Essentially, biodynamic farming and gardening looks upon the soil and the farm as living organisms. It regards maintenance and furtherance of soil life as a basic necessity if the soil is to be preserved for generations, and it regards the farm as being true to its essential nature if it can be conceived of as a kind of individual entity in itself — a self-contained individuality. It begins with the ideal concept of the necessary self-containedness of the farm and works with furthering the life of the soil as a primary means by which a farm can become a kind of individuality that progresses and evolves.

The maintenance of soil life is vital also in order to protect the soil from erosion and to create, improve, and augment the humus content. The result will be a fine, crumbly structure containing the necessary organic colloids. This leads to the production of high-quality crops, which in turn means better feed for livestock and better food for human beings.

Soil improvement is obtained by proper humus management — e.g., by the application of sufficient organic manure and compost in the best possible state of fermentation; by proper crop rotation; by proper working of the soil; by protective measures such as wind protection; cover crops, green manure, and diversified crops rather than monocultures; and by mixed cropping so that plants can aid and support each other.

Farm manure and compost are the most valuable fertilizers. They contain organic matter on which the soil bacteria and earthworms can feed and then revitalize the soil. They contain colloids, which absorb moisture and mineral solutions in the ground, form a crumbly structure, and eliminate the danger of erosion. The careful storage of manure in heaps covered with earth, as taught by the biodynamic method, avoids nitrogen loss to a great degree.

Raw organic matter has not yet reached the state of neutral colloidal humus. Complicated fermentation processes must first take place in the manure heap. The biodynamic method produces the right fermentation. Certain biodynamic preparations are inserted into the heaps in order to speed and direct fermentation and preserve the original manure values. The same principles apply to compost materials. Everything that is apt to decompose can be used. These materials are piled up in alternate layers, and the finished pile is treated with biodynamic preparations.

The biodynamic compost preparations play a significant role in this unified approach to agriculture. They are made of certain medicinal herbs that have undergone a long process of fermentation in order to enrich them in growth-stimulating substances. They react like yeast in dough — i.e. they speed and direct fermentation toward the desired neutral colloidal humus. The preparations themselves are, for practical reasons, numbered 500-508. Numbers 502-507 are applied to the manure and compost piles in very small quantities. They have no manuring effect, their sole purpose being to direct the fermentation of any kind of organic matter toward humus.

Two of the preparations, 500 and 501, are used as field sprays. They are diluted in water, stirred for one hour, and sprayed directly on the soil or plants respectively. Preparation 500 stimulates humus formation in the ground and the growth of roots. It is applied to the land mainly in the fall and the spring, before clearing or after plowing and sowing. Preparation 501 is applied in June or later to the green leaves.

Proper crop rotation is also necessary in order to preserve the fertility of the soil. The general rule is that soil-exhausting crops such as corn and potatoes in the fields, and cabbage, cauliflower, etc., in the garden, should alternate with soil-restoring crops such as members of the leguminous family (peas, beans, clover, etc.). Furthermore, deep-rooting crops should alternate with shallow-rooting ones, and crops that require manure should alternate with those that can do without.

Proper working of the soil consists mainly in knowing the right time and the right depth for plowing, harrowing, discing, etc. Skill and experience are needed. Only thoughtful experience, combined with such investigations as the taking of soil profiles, can produce maximum efficiency in soil treatment.

Biodynamic agriculture is a way of living, working and relating to nature and the vocations of agriculture based on good common-sense practices, a consciousness of the uniqueness of each landscape, and the inner development of each and every practitioner.

Common-sense practices include striving to be self-sufficient in energy, fertilizers, plants, and animals; structuring our activities based on working with nature's rhythms; using diversity in plant, fertilizers, and animals as building blocks of a healthy operation; being professional in our approach to reliability, cleanliness, order, focus on observation, and attention to detail; and being prompt and up-to-date in doing one's job.

The concern with the uniqueness of a particular landscape includes developing an understanding of the geology, soils, climate, plant, and animal life; human ecology; and economy of one's bioregion.

Rudolf Steiner presents a notion of science that says we can know things that go beyond what we can weigh, measure, and calculate. Science is the practice of observing phenomena and relating them in a way that correctly represents the phenomena's reality. Agricultural judgments about health, what to do where, and when to do what, best succeed when we begin to rely on a certain wisdom gained through observation and experience and when we perceive consciously and concretely the phenomena that induce life itself.

Biodynamic farming and gardening combines common-sense agriculture, an understanding of ecology, and the specific environment of a given place with a new spiritual scientific approach to the concepts, principles, and practices of agriculture.


POMEGA5 offers biodynamic botanical based products
Check it out at http://www.pomega5.com/
Omega 5 oil technology
Ultra green products
Natural products
Greentech at its best


Wednesday, September 9, 2009

VC investments in greentech is thriving -- will Pomega5 benefit from this trend?

2009 Greentech VC, M&A and IPOs

VC investment in Greentech is thriving. After a soft first quarter brought on by recession and low investor confidence, VC in Greentech has been creeping up steadily.
Greentech VC in 2009
Q1 2009 $836 million in 59 deals
Q2 2009 $1.234 billion in 85 deals
Q3 2009 (to date) $923 million in 83 deals (to date)
Q2 was 50 percent more than in the first quarter, and the third quarter should exceed the second quarter – a nice trend. That said, rising investment in greentech is not exactly an indicator of the health of the industry. We need more startup revenue, more M&A, and more IPOs – and that's starting.Some of the biggest VC deals this year have been:

Suniva $75M for high efficiency solarPowerspan
$50M for CO2 capture technology for coal-fired electric power plants.
Imperative Energy $43M for large scale renewable energy from biomasseMeter
$32M for smart grid management software
(I don't believe we can count Synthetic Genomic's $300 million big algae investment from Exxon as VC).
Greentech M&A in 2009
We've seen some M&A trends, highlighted by:
Ongoing consolidation in the solar integrator and installer market
Rising consolidation and land grabs in the carbon dashboard and utlity carbon monitoring field
Vertical integration in solar – Bosch's acquisition binge created a vertically integrated entity from Ersol, Aleo and Johanna Solar
Greentech IPOs
Plenty of chatter but the only SEC IPO registration looking like it might launch in 2009 is A123 Systems, the developer and manufacturer of advanced, rechargeable lithium ion batteries. A123’s product line ranges from 3.6 watts per hour batteries for portable power applications to larger 65 watts per hour batteries for electric vehicles. The company is also developing multi-megawatt battery systems for utilities that can provide electric grid services including standby reserve capacity and frequency regulation.It is reasonable to expect the A123 IPO to come to market in the fourth quarter of this year – reasonable given A123’s revenue, the government and industry focus on smart grid, and the pent up demand for a greentech IPO.A123's long-threatened IPO has the potential to draw the market’s attention to the energy storage sector.
The IPO will also give us a glimpse on how investment banks and institutional investors like underwriters Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Lazard Capital Markets will value energy storage firms.A successful public offering could open the floodgates to more greentech IPOs and usher in the dawn of a finance-rich greentech era. Other Greentech IPO candidates would include Silver Spring Networks, Tesla Motors, Nanosolar and Solyndra.

Nutraceuticals are greentech items
Omega5 oil technology fuels a skin care indsutry

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

There is no artificial shortage in omega 5 oil products

Sharing Omega 5 oil technology is our vision


If you’ve ever spent a good part of your holiday season wending from store to store seeking out that must-have toy of the season, only to find it sold out everywhere you go, then the following conclusion from new Stanford Graduate School of Business research won’t come as a surprise:

Whether they cop to it or not, companies have long been aware of artificial shortages as a way to create desire for new products. However, the research shows that this approach can eventually backfire.

“For many people, wanting and liking are two separate things that can become contradictory,” says researcher Baba Shiv, a Stanford marketing professor, in a press release. “When someone is thwarted from obtaining his original desire, he, in fact, comes to find the attractiveness and appeal of his target to be diminished. Yet, perversely, he may feel he wants it even more. The thrill becomes the chase.”

Shiv’s co-researchers were Uzma Khan, an assistant professor at Stanford, and Ab Litt, a current Stanford MBA student.

Some other notable findings from the study:

The less emotionally a person reacts to rejection, the more susceptible he will be to desiring it more and enjoying it less once he gets it.

People who are more emotional about being denied will more often in turn deny their desire. “Their attitude becomes ‘it’s not so great, and I don’t want it anyway,’” says Litt.

Women were more likely than men to desire something more and like it less once they received it.

All in all, the researchers believe artificial shortages can be a useful marketing tool, as long as they fall within reasonable limits.

“The study shows that this approach will be effective as long as people get the item without a good deal of problems,” says Shiv. “But if they’re constantly frustrated, having to stand in line or return to the store only to find the item still not there, they may desire it more but quickly lose interest in it once they have it. The long-term success of the product will be doomed.”


POMEGA5 -- where supply meets demand