This document is intended to light up facts that are lost in technical
reports.
First, that the price of oil will continue to rise and
clearly a shortfall in oil supply, now predicted by some to begin in the next
year or two, will cause the price to spike, resulting in severe economic problems and leading
to more wars such as the disaster in Iraq. The price of oil will only fall
sharply with a revolutionary breakthrough in renewable energy technology.
Secondly, it is still little understood, by most of the
public, that unless such a breakthrough occurs in the not-to-distant future, millions of
people are likely to die and many more to have their lives seriously disrupted.
The window for a rapid reduction in the use of fossil fuels is now less than
ten years. No existing technology is
capable of so fast a change. Only a revolutionary system, such as GENIE, can do
so.
Without exception, all of our work is based on prototypes.
The report by Lee Felsenstein, a well known and respected EE in Silicon Valley,
has been posted on our website for months. It is based on his second visit to
our lab, where he had an opportunity to inspect an early GENIE prototype. The
name GENIE, by the way, came into use some months after his article appeared.
There have been a number of GENIE prototypes constructed, as
well as rotary prototypes that have repeatedly been Over Unity. Individuals who
have a reason to do so and have signed NonDisclosure Agreements have visited
the labs and had the opportunity to reach their own conclusions about our work.
Five multi-billion dollar firms have signed NDAs and are interested in GENIE for uses ranging from handheld electronics to multi-megawatt
generators. Lab work indicates GENIE will be able to replace batteries of any
size, thus making it practical for future cars to be electric and capable of
selling power to local utilities, when parked. That last potential is addressed
in an article that appeared both here and on our website. It appears possible that many future cars will
pay for themselves, once such systems are optimized by utilities. And utilities are paying close attention to GENIE at this time.
Construction of fuel burning power plants of every variety
is likely to have a difficult time competing with the modest cost of Genie
generators, once they are in mass production. Technical progress reports will be made public when it makes sense to do so. The debacle in London a few months ago by the firm based in Dublin was a lesson in how not to proceed. 1 kW GENIE generators are moving toward the market. And while some may find it hard to believe, they are likely to be in production by the end of next year.
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