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WHY ECCO?

ECCO Energy recognizes that its investors are seeking short-term gains and high innovation in an industry notorious for corporate inefficiency and long lead times between acquisition and returns. ECCO Energy's minimal-risk strategy lies in its proven ability to utilize evolving technologies, low investment and low operational costs to capitalize on immediate opportunities and generate high returns.

ECCO Energy reincorporated in 2006 with less than $1 million in assets. Today, the company holds more than $19 million in oil and gas properties in Texas, Ohio and Louisiana. One of the company's newest projects involves acquiring and developing wells in the Marcellus tar shale formation in Ohio, properties expected to gather a significant return on investment in the next five years.

Why does ECCO's strategy work?

Company CEO Sam Skipper directs a management philosophy combining the inherent aggressive tenets of today's technology and finance with the rough-and-tumble background of his wildcatter uncle, Barney Skipper, "The Longview Oil Prophet," who discovered the third well in the East Texas Oil Field. The results? ECCO Energy's maximized, short-term profits create high value and low risk for investors, and at the same enable the growth of future acquisitions and development.

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© Copyright by ECCO Energy Corp., 2009.
The information includes forward-looking statements, which are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. We refer you to the discussion of risk factors that could affect future operating or financial performance in our most recent prospectus and Form 10-K and other SEC Filings. ECCO Energy assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements made here as a result of new information or future events or developments. You will find a reconciliation of any non-GAAP financial measure, as defined by the SEC in Regulation G, to the most directly comparable GAAP number in Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures. Information about Barney Skipper was found in The Last Oil Boom by James A. Clark and Michel T. Halbouty. Additional information about the Lathrop 1 drilling site was found on the Texas Historical Commission Web site.