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Supporting Chee Soon Juan's caféSupporting Chee Soon Juan's café I refer to The Independent Singapore’s news, “Singaporeans urged to support Chee Soon Juan's café despite their political preferences” (July 16). The underlying objective of doing any business is to ensure it is viable and profitable. Otherwise, there is no point of undertaking risk for it. It is natural for...

Will PM Wong address the astronomical ministerial salaries?Will PM Wong address the astronomical ministerial salaries? I refer to The TR-Emeritus opinion article, “Will PM Wong address the astronomical ministerial salaries” (June 14) by Mr Yoong Siew Wah. It has always been a controversial topic which concerns about our top political leaders who receive their salaries that are many times higher than those foreign political leaders. Our...

Steering with stability in transition timesSteering with stability in transition times I refer to The Straits Times’ Editorial, “Steering with stability in transition times” (May 16). Let us analyze and interpret this specific subject from a broad perspective, how Singapore should respond and adapt to the evolution of the entire international situation and formulate its foreign policy that is extremely...

We will lead in our own wayWe will lead in our own way I read with interest The Today’s report, “'We will lead in our own way': : Lawrence Wong takes office as 4th prime minister of Singapore” (May 15). We can get some inspiration or enlightenment from the story of the 108 heroes in Water Margin: they originally had their own abilities, aspirations and ambitions. They...

Chinese villagers living on cliffsChinese villagers living on cliffs In the Liangshan Mountains of Sichuan Province in China, there is a small isolated village on a cliff 1,400 meters above sea level. This is the village of Atuler, known as the Cliff Village with 72 families who has been living there for almost 200 years. All travel is by a ladder that leads to the sky at almost right...

Ukraine will cease to exist thanks to the westUkraine will cease to exist thanks to the west Scott Ritter is a former Marine intelligence officer who served in the former Soviet Union, implementing arms control agreements, and on the staff of General Norman Schwartzkopf during the Gulf War, where he played a critical role in the hunt for Iraqi SCUD missiles. From 1991 until 1998, Mr. Ritter served as a Chief Inspector...

Bride's family asked for RMB 500,000 in bride priceBride's family asked for RMB 500,000 in bride price Contrary to popular beliefs, many couples in China are unable to afford to get married. With the exception of rural villages, those in the cities mostly asked for hundreds of thousands in bride price (聘礼/彩礼). According to our techie who has been in China for over a decade, the bride price may include monies intended...

Higher salaries lead Singapore to become top pick for Asian workers looking to moveHigher salaries lead Singapore to become top pick for Asian... I refer to the Independent Singapore’s Featured News SG Economy, “Higher salaries lead Singapore to become top pick for Asian workers looking to move” (Feb 22). In this era of rapid technological advancement, all countries are faced with the dilemma of being hungry for talent. Therefore, top talents in respective...

Where Romance Meets FinanceWhere Romance Meets Finance Sugarbook was launched by Darren Chan in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It is a luxury dating website designed to resolve financial issues through emotional support. It provides a platform to grow your relationships through mutual benefits that are not restricted to mentorship, companionship, wealth and emotional support. It...

Marriage, children and practical concernsMarriage, children and practical concerns A couple bows before their parents and offers them tea, as is traditional in Chinese weddings. I refer to The Straits Times’ Editorial “Marriage, children and practical concerns” (Feb 5). Since the history of human civilisation, the formation of individual family and the issue of procreation have become two...

Not in my backyardNot in my backyard I refer to the TODAY’s Commentary, “'Not in my backyard' — when some groups can protest more loudly, the most vulnerable ones suffer” (Jan 25, 2024). A few good points from the article are worth to be probed further and discussed. In December 2023, the announcement of plans by The National Environment Agency...

Opposition parties seek to strengthen parliamentary presenceOpposition parties seek to strengthen parliamentary presence I refer to The Independent Singapore’s SG Politics column, “Opposition parties seek to strengthen parliamentary presence” (Nov 29, 2023). As we know, Singapore political scene has been firmly dominated by the PAP since 1959. Thus, the opposition parties in Singapore have to face and withstand many challenges ahead...

Educating the next generationEducating the next generation I read with interest the Straits Times’ Editorial, “Educating the next generation” (Jan 5, 2024). Any form of spontaneous learning should provide you with a happy, positive, and memorable experience. However, only a small number of children are in exception. Therefore, based on this, parents should realize the...

GST increase in 2024GST increase in 2024 On 1 Jan 2024 GST rises 1% from 8% to 9%; this is a 12.5% increase in GST. I am not convinced that this is necessary. It will contribute to inflation, and cause economic hardship. The handouts to mitigate this are temporary and the increase is permanent. In 2015, when the possibility of GST rising was an election issue...

Race relations in SingaporeRace relations in Singapore I refer to the Today’s “Commentary: In 1954, David Marshall spoke about race relations in Singapore. Have we made real progress since then?” (Dec 15). For any country to be prosperous and powerful, it must first achieve political and social stability, and its people must live in harmony and be united. Only in this...

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Editorial
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Super typhoon Bebinca hit the city of Suzhou in Jiangsu...

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Super typhoon Bebinca wreaks havoc In Shanghai

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How strong is Singapore's fighter jets?

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Opinions
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The Great America, No More

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A glimpse of the obscurantism of Singapore society

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Excess Deaths in Singapore

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I applaud ST journalist's effort in pursuing this issue of Excess Deaths in Singapore (which is one of...
Throwing out the baby with the bath water

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Total Policy Reset

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Letters
Supporting Chee Soon Juan's café

Supporting Chee Soon Juan's café

I refer to The Independent Singapore’s news, “Singaporeans urged to support Chee Soon Juan's café...
Will PM Wong address the astronomical ministerial salaries?

Will PM Wong address the astronomical ministerial salaries?

I refer to The TR-Emeritus opinion article, “Will PM Wong address the astronomical ministerial salaries”...
Steering with stability in transition times

Steering with stability in transition times

I refer to The Straits Times’ Editorial, “Steering with stability in transition times” (May 16). Let...
We will lead in our own way

We will lead in our own way

I read with interest The Today’s report, “'We will lead in our own way': : Lawrence Wong takes office...
Higher salaries lead Singapore to become top pick for...

Higher salaries lead Singapore to become top pick for...

I refer to the Independent Singapore’s Featured News SG Economy, “Higher salaries lead Singapore...
Marriage, children and practical concerns

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A couple bows before their parents and offers them tea, as is traditional in Chinese weddings. I...
Not in my backyard

Not in my backyard

I refer to the TODAY’s Commentary, “'Not in my backyard' — when some groups can protest more loudly,...
Opposition parties seek to strengthen parliamentary...

Opposition parties seek to strengthen parliamentary...

I refer to The Independent Singapore’s SG Politics column, “Opposition parties seek to strengthen...
Snippets
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Chinese villagers living on cliffs

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In the Liangshan Mountains of Sichuan Province in China, there is a small isolated village on a cliff...
Ukraine will cease to exist thanks to the west

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Scott Ritter is a former Marine intelligence officer who served in the former Soviet Union, implementing...
Bride's family asked for RMB 500,000 in bride price

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Contrary to popular beliefs, many couples in China are unable to afford to get married. With the exception...
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Sticky & Recent Articles

Gan Kim Yong calls on Singapore companies to restore pay cuts

Gan Kim Yong calls on Singapore companies to restore pay cuts

Written by Our Correspondent For the second time in a year, Manpower Minister Gan Kim Yong has called upon Singapore companie to restore the pay cuts of workers made during the recession last year. "Companies that are doing well should recognise the contributions and sacrifices that their workers made during the recent recession," Mr Gan was quoted as saying in the Straits Times today, echoing a speech made earlier by NTUC Secretary-General Mr Lim Swee Say. Despite the repeated exhortations by PAP leaders, many employers appear indifferent to their calls to increase the wages of Singapore workers. While the cost of living has continued to increase, especially that of public housing, the wages of ordinary Singaporeans have not increased by much. One reason may be the easy availability of cheap foreign labor in Singapore which gives employers far more options and flexibility in their recruitment policies. Though there is a dependency quota to be filled before foreigners can be hired, it can be easily circumvented by getting earlier arrivals to apply for PRs thereby freeing more empty slots for foreign workers. PRs are lumped together with citizens as "local" workers in all official statistics used by Manpower Ministry. Technically speaking, it is possible for a company to have 100 percent local workers on its payroll without a single Singapore citizen. As there is no minimum wage system in Singapore, employers can afford to depress the wages of workers by as much as possible to cut labor costs. There are no independent trade unions in Singapore to fight for the interests of Singapore workers. The only legal trade union NTUC is a pseudo-PAP organization which is always headed by a PAP minister. No matter how much "noise" Mr Gan and his PAP colleagues continue to make, they are completely powerless to coerce companies to raise the wages of Singapore workers who are completely under their mercy.   EDITORS’ NOTE: Please join our Facebook page here and invite your friends to do so to create awareness of the current affairs affecting Singaporeans.  Read More →

Temasek’s $1.1b project bites the dust, again?

Temasek’s $1.1b project bites the dust, again?

Erlend Olson have been a bit player in semiconductors for years, the former NASA engineer had made an improbable metamorphosis into a burgeoning oil-exploration kingpin. His company, Terralliance Technologies, a secretive startup in Newport Beach, Calif., had developed an algorithm for telling petroleum engineers where to drill. Never mind that Olson was an electrical engineer with no background in oil. He had convinced some of the world's most sophisticated investors, including Goldman Sachs (GS, Fortune 500) and Kleiner Perkins, that his unconventional approach was legit. Kleiner would go on to bet a whopping $93 million on Terralliance, a sum that may be the storied firm's largest venture investment ever. Terralliance hadn't found much oil, but its founder and CEO was so adept at locating cash reserves that he believed he was about to close a deal that would seal his company's future -- and his fortune. He had come to New York that August to negotiate a financing with Temasek Holdings, the sovereign wealth fund of Singapore, which Olson had been romancing for months. The price of oil had recently soared to $145 a barrel, and Temasek planned to invest $1.1 billion, valuing Terralliance at more than $4 billion. A hulking figure with a glassy-eyed intensity, Olson had assured his investors that an infusion of this magnitude could lead quickly to a public offering worth as much as $60 billion. That would make Olson, as he wistfully recalled later, a "three-comma guy." Olson wasn't alone in counting commas. Kleiner Perkins thought it was on the threshold of its first mega-win since Google's (GOOG, Fortune 500) IPO in 2004. Goldman Sachs, which had been betting shrewdly on plummeting housing prices, envisioned another killing. Passport Capital, a young San Francisco hedge fund, anticipated burnishing its reputation for energy investments. John Fredriksen, a Norwegian supertanker mogul who had lent Terralliance $50 million only months earlier, stood to score a quick hit. All told, the investors had sunk nearly half-a-billion dollars into Terralliance, an astounding sum given the audacity of the company's aspirations -- and the paucity of its accomplishments. Why experienced investors pumped so much capital into such a risky venture is just one mystery in the tale of Terralliance, a saga that has not been comprehensively told despite the high profiles of the players involved. Kleiner Perkins, a firm that loudly promotes its most promising investments, for years didn't list Terralliance on its website and declined multiple requests to comment for this article. Despite interviews with many of the key people involved, it's also not clear what exactly Terralliance's technology purported to do, or how well its investors understood it. What is certain is that Terralliance's gambit to become a force in oil exploration ended badly. Despite Olson's high expectations, the unraveling began during those August 2008 meetings in New York. Before taking Temasek's cash, Kleiner and Goldman thought it was important to share concerns they had about Olson. Terralliance's globetrotting CEO may have been an oil industry neophyte, but he had spent like a Saudi prince. His shopping list ran the gamut from oil wells in Turkey and Mozambique to demilitarized Soviet fighter jets. An auditor had raised red flags about Olson's dealings in the Congo and referred its findings to the U.S. Justice Department for potential anti-bribery-law violations. As troubling, Terralliance had yet to close its books on 2007. Two lead board members, Joe Lacob of Kleiner Perkins and Joe DiSabato of Goldman, informed Temasek's lead negotiator, Nagi Hamiyeh, that they intended to demote the charismatic but free-spending founder to chief scientist. It was all too much for someone wielding a city-state's checkbook. Instead of signing on the dotted line, Hamiyeh returned to Singapore. In early 2009 the board fired Olson outright. By then the price of oil had cratered, Temasek's stock market holdings had collapsed, and Terralliance had all but crumbled into a heap of litigation, layoffs, and recriminations. By the spring Kleiner Perkins was in damage-control mode on Terralliance, even as it was promoting a new thrust into the field of "green" energy. As for Olson, who was out of work and raising new funds to continue his global quest for oil, not adding a comma to his net worth was the least of his worries. Olson didn't set out to look for oil. As the dotcom bubble was peaking in 2000, he found himself at a crossroads. Then 37, he had spent 14 years at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, which runs the country's unmanned space probes. After leaving JPL, Olson co-founded a semiconductor company in 1998 called Pivotal Technologies, where he was chief technology officer. Pivotal made chips for cable modems and Bluetooth devices, and its designs were in hot demand, enabling it to sell out to Broadcom after just two years for $605 million. A government employee for most of his working life, Olson suddenly was wealthy. Not super-rich, mind you, but way beyond his space agency peers. "I went from making $65,000 a year to being worth millions," says Olson, who years later still affects the look of a gussied-up engineer: open-neck shirts, faded blue jeans, and black wingtips. Olson was a rare twofer in the IT world: a technologist who could tell a story. "Erlend is a larger-than-life guy, and he always was," says an executive who worked with him at Pivotal. "He was the franchise. There was an engine under that hood." At Pivotal, however, Olson didn't have free rein, says this executive. "Erlend is like a nuclear reactor: If you use him properly, the guy can boil water. If you use him improperly, he can melt down the city." Actually, finding water, not boiling it, happened to be Olson's goal. As he tells it, his parents, who had retired from positions at the top-secret Sandia National Labs in New Mexico, were missionaries in Africa and complained to him about the difficulty of drilling water wells. NASA's projects search for signs of life on and beneath planetary surfaces, including the presence of water. Together with some other ex-JPL buddies, Olson began tinkering with publicly available satellite data of terrain near his home in Southern California. Olson also had familiarity with remote-sensing technology deployed by NASA. He had designed low-power chips crucial to running communications systems millions of miles from Earth. The noodling by Olson and his JPL pals yielded an unexpected eureka moment. "We kept running into oilfields, which was frustrating because we were looking for water. I knew nothing about the oil business or the fossil-fuels business," says Olson, who told Fortune his story in numerous interviews over the past year at hotels and restaurants in Southern California. As he continued to investigate tracts that encompassed some of the oldest and once most productive oilfields in the U.S., Olson made another startling discovery: "We'd notice there was no pump jack, even though we knew there was oil there." The team spent the next couple of years modeling known oilfields and developing an algorithm to test the model's predictive power. Olson likens the experimentation to writing a program for forecasting stock market fluctuations and then testing it on historical pricing data. The next step was putting the technology to work. "We figured if we could make a treasure map of where the oil is, why not go dig the treasure ourselves?" Olson funded operations of the new company out of his own pocket. He studied the oil and gas business and deemed it technologically timid. His approach to finding hydrocarbons went beyond the two tools most favored by the industry. One is seismography, the bouncing of sound waves off structures beneath the ground in the hunt for what geophysicists call anomalies -- abrupt changes in the substructure that suggest that worthless dirt may have given way to valuable minerals. The other is geology, or the analysis of rocks to see whether their makeup suggests the presence of something worth drilling for. Olson's approach was to test for a series of indicators in the ground -- an example is electrical activity that can be detected remotely -- that when combined with massive computer files would yield accurate probability studies on the chances of finding oil. The mapping technique was a first step, to be followed by the industry's standard geophysical practices. Whether it was real science or high-tech dowsing, Olson used his findings to pitch investors. Kleiner's Lacob and Goldman's DiSabato invested a total of $45 million in 2004 and 2005. (DiSabato had profitably invested in Pivotal.) Kleiner and Goldman opened all kinds of doors. Olson was introduced to the respected oil executive Joe Foster, founder and former CEO of Newfield Exploration and a banking client of Goldman's in the 1990s. Terralliance "had Kleiner Perkins and Goldman behind it," says Foster. "They told me about this, and I said it sounds too good to be true." Nevertheless, in the Continental Airlines lounge at the Houston airport, Foster met with Olson. "Erlend sort of knocked my socks off. It didn't make sense to me that you could acquire that kind of data with a satellite. But I left the meeting saying, 'Shit, I'd better think about this.'" Foster joined Terralliance's board in 2005. Excitement about a sure-fire way to find oil -- and all sorts of other valuable things -- isn't new, of course. "The real story, to boil it down, is as old as mankind: a charismatic individual with a compelling story you just want to believe," says Foster, who says he lost several hundred thousand dollars of his own money in Terralliance. "My whole career I've been interested in alternative exploration tools. By force of personality, [Olson] convinced a lot of people. There's a real psychological story there. This was beyond numbers and contours." Investors wanted proof, so Terralliance began mapping small projects and then drilling for oil and gas. Success was relative. The company's maps accurately indicated oil was present in previously active oil basins -- albeit in places previous drillers hadn't explored -- in locations including Oklahoma and Alberta. Though not a huge surprise, these finds helped Terralliance make the case for bigger projects. The company raised an additional $248 million in mid-2006, with new investors including Ithmar Capital, a private equity firm in Dubai. Olson was the fundraiser-in-chief as well as head negotiator for the drilling leases he was signing around the world. At one point Terralliance claimed to be drilling for oil or negotiating rights to explore for it on four continents, including eight African countries. An oilfield in eastern Turkey produced some oil, though it turned out not to be commercially viable when oil prices dropped. An expensive well in Mozambique turned up all but dry. Many of Terralliance's other proposed projects never broke ground. Olson decided that Terralliance needed to make its own maps rather than rely on purchased satellite data. So the company bought an airplane and a helicopter, each fitted with custom-designed sensors. For Olson, this "low and slow" approach was a half-measure. He craved the "high and fast" capability of U-2 spy planes that NASA uses for research. U-2s aren't available for commercial use, however, so Olson arranged to buy two surplus Sukhoi SU-27 "Flanker" fighter jets, stars of the Cold War-era Soviet air force, from the Ukrainian government. Terralliance paid $22 million for the pair of jets, as well as more than $4 million for an option to purchase two others. Olson says the planes cost more than conventional, slower aircraft but are more effective because they can cover more ground. "It was like a NASA platform but better," he says. "I got the blue-collar version of the U2." By 2007, Terralliance was running out of cash, despite having raised nearly $300 million in less than three years. Olson is unapologetic about the outlays. "We spent like NASA during the Apollo program, and we were on our way to the moon as well," he says. Stephen Buscher, an oil industry investment banker, relocated from Russia at the end of the year to become Terralliance's chief financial officer. He marveled at Olson's persuasive powers. "It's unbelievable how easy it was to sell that story with Erlend manning the PowerPoint," says Buscher, who signed on to take Terralliance public and has since left the company. One PowerPoint obtained by Fortune sheds light on Olson's technique. In an October 2007 presentation to Kleiner's partners, he proclaimed Terralliance a "Revolution in Oil and Gas Exploration." He declared that the company had 500 million acres in "oily places" under its control, more than Exxon Mobil, a claim that seems to have encompassed everything from partnership agreements to discussions with governments. Olson had no doubt that if Terralliance could just raise more money, it had "all the projects necessary to be as valuable" within five years as Occidental Petroleum. Oxy, a decades-old oil company, was worth more than $60 billion. There was never a shortage of potential investors willing to listen to Olson's pitch. In early 2008, Temasek emerged as the most enthusiastic. The Singaporean fund had begun a major thrust in oil acquisitions, forming a special subsidiary, Orchard Energy, as its petroleum vehicle. Temasek dispatched consultants to study Terralliance's technology, as well as its petroleum assets. In the meantime Terralliance needed funding to keep the drill bits turning. Through Goldman connections again, it met Passport Capital, whose founder, John Burbank, had been a top-performing U.S. hedge fund manager in 2007. Passport agreed to lend Terralliance $150 million -- a bridge loan -- with the expectation that the loan would be repaid in a matter of months. To share the risk, Passport offered a third of its Terralliance loan to an investment firm in London called Franklin Enterprises. Franklin is a private investment arm of Norway's John Fredriksen, CEO of Frontline, a major oil tanker operator. Passport told Franklin about a company code-named Project Sunshine, whose backers included the original investors in Google and which promised to be the "Google of the oil and gas industry," according to a lawsuit Franklin later filed against Passport. The pitch worked; Franklin invested in March. How Terralliance was spending its capital became a central sticking point. The company hired a chief accounting officer named Howard Selzer, who had worked at Enron in its dark days. Selzer hired PricewaterhouseCoopers, and together they became a thorn in the side of the CEO. Olson hadn't kept particularly good records in the early years of the company. Accounting for travel expenses was notably weak, and Selzer eventually identified $4.4 million of expenses Olson owed the company. The auditors also had a devil of a time accounting for the business uses of all the company's property. A warehouse near Pasadena was supposed to contain aircraft parts but upon investigation was full of earth moving equipment as well as a masterfully crafted baby crib. Olson had a side business in real estate development, and his wife had recently given birth to their first child. Olson -- who says the facility was Terralliance's original headquarters and that he had permission to store his belongings there -- personally sublet the warehouse from the company. The auditors also accused him of making questionable payments to government officials in the Congo, where Terralliance had signed a drilling concession, and referred the matter to the U.S. Justice Department. (No one involved is aware of any actions taken in the case by Justice, which declined to comment. Olson also declined to comment on this.) By then, board members -- in particular Kleiner's Lacob and Goldman's DiSabato -- had had enough of Olson. But there was a catch. He was the main point of contact with Temasek, and he also told Terralliance's story better than anyone else. In an effort to remove his authority but keep him onboard, the board demoted Olson in September 2008 to chief scientist. The next month, when the auditors finally closed the books on 2007, they noted that Terralliance "renounced the concession interest" in the Congo, and that the "former officer" who negotiated it, Olson, "no longer had the authority to legally bind the company." With so much turmoil, it's no wonder that Singapore's Temasek hit the pause button on its investment in August 2008. Fredriksen's Franklin Enterprises also caught wind of the controversy and asked Passport for its money back. Passport rejected the request, and in October, Franklin filed suit against Passport, charging the San Francisco firm with misleading it about the nature of Terralliance's management and finances. (In a court filing Passport denied the allegations.) The Soviet fighter jets seemed a flamboyant purchase; some people involved with the company even doubted their existence. Whether or not they were a good idea, the planes were real. The same month that the auditors completed their work and Fredriksen sued Passport, the jets arrived unassembled at a commercial hangar in Rockford, Ill. The planes remain there and are for sale for $5 million apiece. According to Pride Aircraft, which is marketing the planes, the twin fighter jets were "painted in the standard Russian air-superiority blue/gray camouflage scheme by the Ukrainian overhaul facility" that outfitted them for commercial use. The SU-27s never flew a mission for Terralliance. In the year since Erlend Olson had told the Kleiner Perkins partners that his company could soon be worth $60 billion, the world had become a different place -- for Terralliance, for Wall Street, and for so many others. Terralliance's senior executives made a last-ditch effort to woo Temasek in November 2008. The deal team watched Barack Obama's acceptance speech from a Temasek conference room in Singapore. By this time, though, the price of oil had fallen to $60 a barrel, and Temasek formally walked away in December. Kleiner Perkins moved swiftly in 2009 to try to salvage its investment. John Doerr, Kleiner's most prominent partner, hadn't previously been actively involved with Terralliance, but he began attending board meetings. He hired as executive chairman a longtime confidant, Mike Long. Doerr flew to London to meet with Franklin in the hope of resolving the litigation with Passport. He enlisted computing pioneer and Kleiner partner Bill Joy to evaluate Terralliance's technology. In May, Terralliance announced new funding, which amounted to a restructuring of the company that severely diluted the stakes of existing investors. Kleiner, Goldman, Passport, and others invested an additional $54.2 million, $30.5 million of which ultimately went to Franklin. An additional $7 million was promised by the end of 2010 to Franklin, which dropped its suit against Passport. With Olson gone -- he was fired as an employee in March and left the board in May -- Terralliance abandoned its wildcatting dreams. The investors still believe there's something to the mapping technology. So instead of buying drilling rights, today the company -- renamed TTI Exploration -- is charting plots on a project basis for clients. Last July, Terralliance filed suit against Olson for misappropriation of trade secrets, alleging that he had failed to return documents belonging to the company and had started a new venture based on Terralliance's intellectual property. There has been no activity in the suit since then because TTI doesn't know where Olson is and can't serve him with court papers, says TTI lawyer David Schindler of the Silicon Valley office of Latham & Watkins. Olson calls the company's claims baseless and says the lawyers shouldn't have any trouble serving him: "My wife doesn't seem to have any trouble finding me." Of the many unanswered questions in the strange story of Terralliance, two stand out: 1. Was there ever anything to the technology? 2. How could such seasoned financiers have invested so much money with so little control over it and in an industry with which they were so unfamiliar? Given that Olson never patented the technology and otherwise wouldn't document it for his own investors, it's problematic for any outsider to judge it. He certainly believes that it works, and he says that consultants from Temasek's Orchard Energy blessed it. That claim can't be verified because Temasek declined to comment for this article. Joe Foster, the former board member, says he still doesn't know whether the technology worked. "The way I came to look at this was as a very good reconnaissance tool," he says. "It would tell you where to do more work -- or to get the hell out." Kleiner Perkins certainly believed. "They perceive themselves to be great venture capital investors and capable of taking substantive risks," says Foster. "I spent an afternoon with Kleiner. They were sold. They didn't necessarily have any technical background for this, but they had hired consultants. I had plenty of technical capability, and I got sucked right in too." Kleiner Perkins declined to comment on Terralliance, citing the ongoing, if inactive, litigation against Olson. So did Goldman and Passport. Franklin Enterprises did not respond to requests for comment. Kleiner partner Joe Lacob, who exited the board last year, said in an e-mail: "Clearly, the economic upheaval of late 2008 and early 2009 dictated business-model changes for many, many companies. [Terralliance], through the efforts of many, has successfully navigated those waters and emerged, arguably, stronger than ever." As for Erlend Olson, he has formed a new venture and has been spending his time in airplanes again, particularly between California and Africa. He still burns with the same intensity. But where once he searched for water, then for oil, now he's looking for validation. Source: Adam Lashinsky Senior editor at large, CNN News. March 29, 2010  Read More →

Manchester United held by Blackburn Rovers to a goalless draw

Manchester United held by Blackburn Rovers to a goalless draw

Written by Our Correspondent Manchester United's season looks set to be over after being held to a goaless draw by Blackburn Rovers. It was knocked out of the Champions' League earlier this week by Bayern Munich. The result means that Chelsea is still one point ahead of Manchester with a game in hand. It faces Bolton at home next Tuesday and is expected to win easily. With only 4 more games to go, Manchester United is losing ground to Chelsea and may end up without a trophy this season. In the meantime, Liverpool continues its dismal form with a goalless draw at home to Fulham. It is currently three points adrift of fourth-placed Manchester City which has a game in hand.  Read More →

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