Emerging Graphene Technology Company

Hydrothermal Graphite Deposit Ammenable for Commercial Graphene Applications

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Message: ZEN is Nuclear Grade

and we have the tonnage/guaranteed supply that the nuclear industry would insist on if we were to supply this market. I just plugged $30k per ton in Takenotes DCF for fun...the NPV came in at $12B LMAO!!! The IRR came in at 434% LMAO again!! While these numbers are absolutely ridiculous so is our current market cap.

Our market cap after today's debacle is a paltry $102M. The market certainly has not got this one right and I would expect a very swift and serious correction to our current share price.

End users, over 20 of them have material in their hands right now. ZEN will produce between 50k and 100k tons per year which in the big picture, really is not much. Which one of these companies will blink first and want to secure some of this very rare graphite. How will they secure this, an offtake, a buy out?? How much time will they need to come to the conclusion that they cannot wait for another of the 20 NDA signatories to steal their thunder? The end games are upon us and a desparate grab for cheap shares has been engineered to steal as much of retail shares as possible. The news of an offtake would send this stock soaring as all the boxes are getting ticked and I believe the news flow is just starting.

Remember, during the summer, it was the sulfur issue that was brandied about as a big issue along with persistent questions about purity because ZEN did not have an GDMS results to back up their claims of high purity. Those claims were manufactured to damage the chart and the spirit of shareholders. Those claims were blown out of the water today. Now, more bogus claims were invented by the manipulators who want your shares. Do you really think their new claims have any more credibility then their last claim?

Pull back, look at Ken Stowe's resume, Dr. Chahar's, Dr. Yamashita

Here they are:

Mr. Stowe was president and chief executive officer of Northgate Minerals Corp. from 2001 until his retirement in 2011. He spent the initial 21 years of his career with Noranda Inc. in various corporate, operational, and research and development roles. He has also held senior positions at Diamond Fields Resources Inc. and Westmin Resources Ltd. In 2006 Mr. Stowe received the prestigious award of Canadian mineral processor of the year, which recognizes an individual with great accomplishments and contributions in the field of mineral processing.

Mr. Stowe previously served as vice-president, technology, at Diamond Fields Resources, overseeing the feasibility study of the Voisey's Bay nickel-copper deposit. Upon Voisey's Bay's acquisition by Inco, Mr. Stowe joined Westmin Resources as vice-president, operations, to start up the Lomas Bayas copper mine in Chile. He then joined Northgate and successfully turned around the struggling Kemess South copper-gold mine. Mr. Stowe led Kemess South to become one of the lowest-cost gold mines in the world. Currently Mr. Stowe is a director of HudBay Minerals and Alamos Gold

Dr. Chahar:

Dr. Bharat Chahar, PhD, is a chemical engineer with more than 30 years of carbon research and development experience with ConocoPhillips based in Houston, Tex. Dr. Chahar obtained a BTech (chemical engineering) from Indian Institute of Technology at Delhi, India; an MSc (chemical engineering) from University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada; and a PhD (chemical engineering) from Rice University, Houston, Tex., United States.

From 2002 to 2013, Dr. Chahar was global marketing and product manager for CPREME graphite materials at ConocoPhillips and Phillips 66. He led the creation and development of this new business to produce and supply graphite anode material for lithium-ion batteries. At the time, CPREME graphite was the largest North American-based supplier of anode materials for lithium-ion batteries with customers across the three major continents -- North America, Europe and Asia. As the leader of this business since its inception, he was responsible for all aspects of starting this endeavour, including strategic direction for marketing, sales, research and development, intellectual property, and manufacturing scale-up. The CPREME graphite anode material was considered the benchmark by leading manufacturers in the lithium-ion batteries for high-power batteries such as those needed for the automotive market. The CPREME graphite business was able to achieve the premier status in the industry despite the fact that the lithium-ion battery manufacturers and their suppliers were largely based in Asia, and ConocoPhillips had no market presence until 2006.

From 1998 to 2002, Dr. Chahar was manager of carbon business and director of carbon products development at Conoco Inc. This position focused on Conoco's efforts to develop new carbon products and manage development of heavy oil upgrading technologies. In this assignment, he was responsible for developing and implementing strategy for growing Conoco's new carbon product portfolio and extending carbon capabilities.

Dr. Yamashita

Mr. Yamashita is a chemical engineer with more than 35 years of carbon research and development experience with Mitsui Chemicals and ConocoPhillips based in Tokyo, Japan, and New York. Mr. Yamashita obtained a master's degree (chemical engineering) from the Tokyo Institute of Technology.

From 2003 to 2013, Mr. Yamashita worked with Dr. Chahar on marketing and business development of CPREME graphite materials at ConocoPhillips and Phillips 66. They led the creation and development of this new business to produce and supply graphite anode material for lithium-ion batteries. At the time, CPREME graphite was the largest North American-based supplier of anode materials for lithium-ion batteries with customers across the three major continents -- North America, Europe and Asia. They were responsible for strategic direction for marketing, sales, research and development.

The CPREME graphite anode material was considered the benchmark by leading manufacturers in the lithium-ion batteries for high-power batteries such as those needed for the automotive market. The CPREME graphite business was able to achieve the premier status in the industry despite the fact that the lithium-ion battery manufacturers and their suppliers were largely based in Asia, and ConocoPhillips had no market presence until 2006.

These 3 guys are all heavy weights in their respective fields and have jumped in with ZEN. Look at their resumes? Are these guys for real? Of course they are but the manipulators would prefer you forgot about these guys joining the ZEN team!

Do not forget ZEN is also the recipient of a $350k grant from the National Research Council of Canada for their unique and large graphite project!

Concentrate on the facts instead of the noise, you will see that the greatest investment opportunity has been placed in front of you by these manipulators and do not be a victim...instead take advantage of their game and increase your position!

Glorieux

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