International Project Funding

We have all had questions on International Project Funding before. Below are the top questions posed by visitors just like you to our. We hope our answers located below will help you solve your funding problems today. Feel free to ask another question, or even comment on what has been written.

There has been a lot of debate recently regarding International Project Funding, and it is therefore critical for you, the reader, to grab all of the information that is out there on the vast topic of funding. Your funding can have a huge impact on your future, so don’t procrastinate any longer. Read up on International Project Funding today!

Elmer Said:

How are people like dlf and purvankara making money on international basis with finance for project .?

We Answered:

How about a real investment that pays off within weeks? you don't have to do much work, you just get 6 or 7 people that you know and you will get a check every couple of months for maybe $500 and a year later, it may be $30,000, but ultimately it's a jackpot of $2,000,000 .

http://www.5x9program.com

This is not a gamble, but a pyramid scheme. You only pay once and never pay again, something like $40 .

http://www.5x9program.com

Really easy to get 5 people under you:
Father, GrandFather, Mother, GrandMother, Brother, Sister, Cousin 1, Cousin 2, Uncle 1, Uncle 2, Friend 1, Friend 2, Co-worker. That's 13 people right there, that's more than enough

go to their website and check them out. http://www.5x9program.com

Angela Said:

Im working on a project for school and i need some help on international stock Mutual Funds?

We Answered:

A mutual fund is a form of collective investment that pools money from many investors and invests the money in stocks, bonds, short-term money market instruments, and/or other securities. [1] In a mutual fund, the fund manager trades the fund's underlying securities, realizing capital gains or loss, and collects the dividend or interest income. The investment proceeds are then passed along to the individual investors. The value of a share of the mutual fund, known as the net asset value (NAV), is calculated daily based on the total value of the fund divided by the number of shares purchased by investors.

Legally known as an "open-end company", a mutual fund is one of three basic types of investment companies available in the United States. [2] Outside of the U.S., mutual fund is a generic term for various types of collective investment. In the UK and western Europe (including offshore jurisdictions) other forms of collective investment are prevalent including unit trusts, Open-Ended Investment Companies (OEICs), SICAVs and unitized insurance funds.

Amber Said:

Will the fall in the price of oil affect funding for the st.vincent Argyle international airport show?

We Answered:

i'm nmot sure..but they may find other avenues to get their funding from.

Hazel Said:

International charity projects to raise money for?!?

We Answered:

Hi Brady,

It's great to hear that you're looking to do some fundraising for International charities, so I thought I'd take a moment to tell you about the charity I work with called Send A Cow.

Our work is based in Africa and we help people to grow enough food to feed their families, help them to sell their produce and develop small businesses that last. We provide training, livestock and ongoing support to help families make the most of the resources they have.

You can read about our work here on our webpage - http://www.sendacow.org.uk/about-us

I wish you all the best in your fundraising

Jess from Send A Cow x

Tammy Said:

where I get international funding for a charity for children with cancer?

We Answered:

Drug companies are a good place to start. Find out what some drugs are, and who makes them. Contact the company, they may be eager to fund something like this in turn for free advertising

Erica Said:

Should the international countries cooperate together to help built the future interplanetary spacecraft?

We Answered:

Well, I think that if the individual national economies can afford it there is no harm in producing individual interplanetary fleets.

So eventually most of the major industrial powers will have small fleets of interplanetary transports.

However, I really think that it will be like our current endeavors in other heavy industry/heavy manufacturing. Take two real world examples.

Mc Murdo Station/Admunsen Station in Antartica both of these scientific facilities have been in operation for at least 50 years.

Deep sea oil/gas exploration, there have been deep-sea oil and gas rigs for nearly as long as the science stations.

Other areas include the strip mines for copper and bauxite in the Chilean Andes and in the Rocky mountains in the US.

I expect that's how things will start originally.

Other than being in Chile and Colorado etc, the mines in question like those in the North Sea oil / gas fields are operated by MNC, multi-national corporations (Exxon, Alcoa, Yukos, Mitsubishi, Sinopec, Boeing, Ratheyon, Halliburton).

We'll have a couple of "public transit" nodes, something like a transit point station for orbital traffic that is a fuel depot, traffic control, garbage collection, maintenance yard with some research and industrial capacities. Sort of orbiting versions of a rest-stop/municipal repair yard.

These should be internationally administered.

You will have a similar smaller transit node in orbit around the moon.

From there you will have various bases on different parts of the moon, the poles for instance are good for permanent human habitation. solar collectors, nuclear reactors and possibly water purification for extraction of H20 from the subsurface lunar soils.

The other areas of the moon will be divided into two areas, mineral extraction and scientific research.

Putting miners at a colony works for 6 month or year-long stints where they would mine whatever resources we choose - gold, platinum,iron, bauxite and other minerals are probably abundantly available in the deep stratum of the moon. But really after you have the initial mines and production facilities up and functioning you will need some areas "civilization" so small centralized mining towns, cooperatively run by multiple mines will probably be setup with medical and other facilities.

Factory production at the poles will become more important as spaceship finishing and production becomes more prevalent.

After we've industrialized and developed basic space faring where ships can be reliably produced and launched from the moon, is when you really will see things take off.

Its basic economics, shuttling people from here to the moon is one thing, but lifting large payloads and large amounts of equipment is just too darned expensive, from earths' surface.

Once we've really mastered the "short run" of regular transit to / from the moon, we can really start thinking about going elsewhere.

We might do a stunt project - like Apollo to go to Mars, This will definitely need to be internationally based since the distances are totally different.

Mars again might initially be colonized by an international team of scientists or so, but nations will also setup shop there. The US government , the Chinese, the Russians, the EU will all likely have areas of control over Mars but these will be areas where the US sets up and encourages it's MNC's to do business just as on Earth.

Mars really has two things going for it, readily available water at the surface, and a 24 hour day which means that plants can grow with little to no additional energy provided by generators.

Underground housing and opaque plastic shielding can protect from the effects of radiation from the sun/space.

Beyond Earth/Moon/Mars however, it's probably going to be all international science missions and MNC's.

The benefits of the asteroid belt in the way of space-borne ice and minerals and relatively convenient access to Mars mean that Mars becomes an important "bread basket" for the middle solar system. Ironically industrial farming may be what makes Mars's economy rather than mining.

Terri Said:

How do i raise $65,000 to fund a very lucrative manufacturing business?

We Answered:

Banks don't steal ideas they borrow money and charge interest.

If you want to ask a bank for $65,000 you need COLLATERAL (A Card, a house, property) in case you don't pay they just take it and sell it and keep borrowing money to the next customer.

Banks don't care what your idea is or how much money are you going to make. They just want their money back.

If your "very lucrative" manufacturing business cannot even pay the interests of the loan then you should not invest in that business.

Most banks don't even ask you what you are going to do with the money.

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