Joe:
News release: Looks like Vanteck has now control of the Pinnacle Board.
Regards
Dan
Vanteck to acquire interest in Pinnacle VRB Vanteck (VRB) Technology Corp VRB Shares issued 19,770,445 Jan 12 close $1.20 Mon 22 Jan 2001 News Release Mr. Rodney Duncan reports Vanteck (VRB) Technology's major shareholder Federation Group Limited, an Australian Stock Exchange-listed company, which holds approximately 50 per cent of the company's share capital, has become the largest shareholder of Pinnacle VRB Limited, which is also an ASX listed company following Federation's share exchange takeover bid for Pinnacle. Pinnacle is at arm's length to Vanteck. As a result, Pinnacle, on Jan. 19, 2001, appointed four Federation/Vanteck nominees to the board of Pinnacle. In this respect, John Fraser and David Lenigas of Federation and Dr. John Hawkins and Rodney Duncan of Vanteck were appointed as directors of Pinnacle. John Fraser is also a director of Vanteck. Pinnacle will retain four board positions. Pinnacle holds all of the intellectual property and patent rights to the Vanadium Redox Battery (VRB)/Vanadium Energy Storage System (VESS) technology subject to licences with Sumitomo Electric Industries, Mitsubishi Chemical Corporation/Kashima Kita Power Corporation and Vanteck which holds all rights, title and interest to the technology for the continent of Africa. Vanteck acquisition Vanteck is pleased to report that it has reached an agreement with Federation to acquire from Federation its interest in the issued shares and options of Pinnacle that in the total will represent 19.99 per cent of the then issued capital of Pinnacle. Federation has also agreed that subject to Australian corporation law provisions it will also assign to Vanteck the balance of its interest in the Pinnacle Securities. Federation currently holds 4,309,262 (approximately 11 per cent) of Pinnacle's common voting shares, 7,033,895 (approximately 48.65 per cent) of Pinnacle's OA options exercisable until Feb. 1, 2001, at 20 Australian cents per share and 351,785 (approximately 5.10 per cent) of Pinnacle's OB options exercisable until Jan. 31, 2002, at 20 Australian cents per share. The cost to convert the Pinnacle OA and OB options into common voting shares is $1,477,136 (Australian)/$1.25-million (Canadian). Federation/Vanteck's initial joint position in Pinnacle's common voting stock is subject to the exercise of the OA and OB options currently held outside of those held by Federation/Vanteck, particularly the OA options which expire Feb/ 1, 2001. To acquire options and common shares of Pinnacle from Federation, which will represent 19 to 99 per cent of the issued share capital of Pinnacle, Vanteck will issue three million treasury shares to Federation at a minimum deemed price of $1 per share. The number of Vanteck shares will be based on the number of Federation shares issued based on the weighted average market price of Federation's shares throughout the period of the offer for Pinnacle's voting shares and options, and the majority of Pinnacle's direct out-of-pocket cash costs. Subject to Australian corporations law provisions, Vanteck will also acquire the securities of Pinnacle which represent greater than a 19.99-per-cent interest. At that time Vanteck will issue to Federation additional treasury shares determined by dividing Federation's cost by the then market price of Vanteck. On completion Vanteck will become the largest single shareholder of Pinnacle. Vanteck financing Incidental to the foregoing, the company has agreed to a brokered private placement through Pacific International Securities, Inc. of up to $2-million at a price of $1 per unit, and a non-brokered private placement of up to an additional $325,000 at a price of $1 per unit. Each unit will comprise one share and one non-transferable share purchase warrant. Each warrant will be exercisable over a period of one year from closing at an exercise price of $1. A commission on funds raised in the non-brokered private placement of 7.5 per cent will be paid to Pacific International Securities, Inc. in cash or shares, of Vanteck at PI's option. In addition, the agent will be issued non-transferable share purchase warrants (entitling the agent to purchase up to 16 per cent of the brokered private placement amount for one year from closing at an exercise price of $1, and an additional 50,000 units as a corporate finance fee. Units and warrants to be issued to the agent will have the same attributes as the units offered in the private placement. The securities issued will be subject to a four-month hold period. The proceeds of the private placement will be used primarily to provide Vanteck with the necessary funds to exercise the Pinnacle OA and OB options convertible into voting shares of Pinnacle. The funds, on exercise of the Pinnacle OA and OB options will go into the treasury of Pinnacle. The Federation/Vanteck Pinnacle share agreement which will give rise to Vanteck's equity position in Pinnacle along with the Federation/Vanteck Pinnacle board positions will enable and facilitate a unified approach to the international adoption of the VRB/VESS technology. The market for non-traditional energy storage, particularly to electricity utility suppliers and their customers, is rapidly growing. As a consequence of deregulation, restructuring and increasing demand, the opportunity to exploit the VRB/VESS technology is quickly expanding, providing the company with an opportunity to capitalize on the market's urgent need for energy storage and quality power. The VRB/VESS technology The VRB is a unique patented electrochemical energy storage technology with technical performance characteristics and cost competitiveness against conventional energy storage technologies such as lead-acid and nickel-cadmium battery technologies. The VRB technology is most suited to stationary energy storage applications. Stationary applications include power stations, the telecommunications sector (power back-up systems) and alternative energy generators such as wind farms. As electricity cannot be stored on a large scale, power stations for example, require expensive surplus generating and distribution capacity to meet peak demand. In the power industry sector the VRB is a new enabling technology that can effectively store electricity on demand. The VRB improves power reliability, power quality and will reduce costs for such applications as load levelling, peak shaving etc. as well as providing essential uninterruptible power systems (UPS). The VRB technology is safe with low ecological impact. It uses conducting plastic electrodes and contains no heavy metals such as lead, nickel, zinc, cadmium etc. The VRB is referred to as a reduction/oxidation (redox) flow battery. Energy is stored chemically in two forms of ionic vanadium in acidic liquid electrolyte. The VRB consists of a number of flow cells (stacks). The electrolyte is pumped from separate storage tanks into each of the flow cells. The two different forms of the electrolyte remain separated by a proton exchange membrane (PEM). In doing so, one form of the ionic vanadium is oxidized and the other form reduced, the resulting current is collected by electrodes and available to an external circuit. The electrochemical reaction is reversible so the VRB can be charged and discharged. The concentration of each ionic form of the vanadium electrolyte changes as the VRB is charged and discharged with electrical energy being converted to chemical energy and vice versa. The VRB technology is significantly enhanced through the Vanadium Energy Storage System (VESS). VESS integrates the VRB into a very practical energy storage system, wherein the design and operating characteristics of the VRB are optimized and integrated with automated intelligent control and operational management electronics. The VESS arrangement leverages the storage attributes of VRB technology and provides: practical energy storage for new applications previously thought to be not cost-effective or achievable with lead-acid technology; storage in terms of energy and power transfer (rather than the traditional approach to standby energy storage in terms of charge and discharge line voltages); instantaneously increased autonomy time by the introduction of additional charged electrolyte; multiple output power capabilities to service different line voltage requirements at the one installation; systems that can be charged and discharged simultaneously; operation with one or more electrical inputs and outputs at multiple voltage levels; beneficial operational and replacement options for existing DC power infrastructure such as -- every cell is in the same state of charge, self-controlled to provide automated self-regulation and self-protection, extremely low level of maintenance, longer life, with partial replacement of some components after five to 10 years, energy storage can be incrementally added at any time, with a cost of about 20 per cent of lead-acid. Vanteck activities, South Africa As previously reported TSI/Eskom of South Africa has agreed to trial for purposes of uninterruptible power supply (UPS) an initial 250 to 520-kilowatt/hour constant power VRB connected to a 400 VAC line in Cape Town, South Africa, along with a range of other power utility application tests. The TSI/Eskom VRB-UPS power system application trial demonstration test is to protect sensitive load equipment against short duration dips and line interruptions, and to improve line power quality. Installation and commissioning is scheduled for the first quarter of 2001. The cell stacks for the TSI/Eskom unit are being supplied by Sumitomo Electric Industries Ltd. (SEI) Japan. Witness testing by Vanteck's technical consultants, Telepower Australia, of the cell stacks at SEI's Osaka, Japan, works is in progress prior to Vanteck's acceptance of the stacks and the shipping of the stacks to South Africa. The other components, apart from the cell stacks, required for the 250 to 520-kw/hour UPS trial demonstration unit will be secured primarily in South Africa in conjunction with Vanteck's alliance partners. The vanadium electrolyte will be manufactured jointly by Vanteck and Highveld Steel and Vanadium Corporation. The installation site and the major electronic equipment will be supplied by TSI/Eskom and the project co-ordination will be undertaken by Vanteck's primary technical consultants, Telepower Australia. SEI will assist with the installation and the commissioning of the unit. SEI is a leading supplier of electrical transmission and distributed equipment to power companies worldwide. SEI has maintained a strong interest in VRB technology since the early 1990s and is a licensee of the technology from Pinnacle VRB Limited, Australia, for stationary applications in Japan. SEI have successfully built demonstration scale units primarily for grid load levelling applications in Japan and are now building and installing commercial scale units in Japan. The most recent commercial application is a 1.5-megawatt uninterruptible power supply unit which is currently being installed for an SEI customer. Eskom is the fifth-largest power utility in the world and the dominant South African power utility supplying approximately 95 per cent of the country's electricity requirements which amounts to more than half of the electricity generated on the African continent. Eskom has 26,461 kilometres of transmission lines which span the entire country and carry power to neighbouring countries. As a member of the Southern African Power Pool (SAPP), which consists of 12 national utilities, Eskom also supports the development of a southern African transmission grid to encourage co-operation and accelerate economic growth in the region. As part of Vanteck's commercialization strategy for the VRB technology in South Africa and the African market, Vanteck, as previously reported (see Stockwatch dated Aug. 11, 2000), has entered into a tripartite heads of agreement with TSI-Eskom and Highveld Steel and Vanadium Corporation Limited of Witbank, South Africa. Highveld is a substantial steel and ferro-alloy producer and is the largest producer of vanadium in the world. (The company, as reported by its news release in Stockwatch April 28, 2000, has a separate alliance agreement with Highveld.) The Vanteck, TSI, Highveld alliance has been formed for the purpose of among other things: i) having TSI identify and host certain demonstration trial sites for Vanteck's Vanadium Redox Battery (VRB)/Vanadium Energy Storage System (VESS); ii) establishing through demonstration trials the further development of the technology as an energy storage system for the South Africa and African market for which TSI operates; and iii) providing a framework for the parties to bring together their particular strengths and credibility, as well as their technical and operational resources with respect to the commercialization of the technology. The private placement and acquisition from Federation of its Pinnacle position is subject to Canadian Venture Exchange acceptance. |