SkyBuilt Power Press Releases

Haiti Provides Opportunity for Free Energy Roll-out

January 15, 2010—By Matt Imber, Pure Energy Systems News

The calamity in Haiti and other disasters like this provide an opportunity for new, emerging free energy technologies to step forward in coming to the rescue. This would be a great humanitarian setting to debut such technologies where the need is great and hearts are softened.

Skybuilt Power's renewable energy modules are designed to be transported to the site and to be rapidly deployable. They can also be airlifted in.

Wouldn't it be awesome if an exotic free energy technology made its debut in coming to the rescue in Haiti or another such disaster?

As I watch the latest events unfold on cable news of the recent Haiti disaster, I am on the lookout for a story that I think may be there that is being missed and it’d be great if someone scooped the story. While the immediate efforts and concern are and should be focused on dealing with the living and the dead, and for providing shelter and medical care for those in need, I am also very interested in the media’s coverage of the technical aspect of disaster relief, and how breakthrough technology might be used in such remote locations and for dealing with the long-term aspects of sustainable recovery, and used where it is needed most.

Certainly, we would expect that companies like SkyBuilt Power will make a showing on the scene with their disaster-relief drop-and-go renewable energy modules in shipping containers.

The technology I would most like to see for such disaster relief is renewable energy used for remote power generation. The Dominican Republic was reportedly helping to restore power, but what is desperately needed in times of such emergencies is remote, decentralized power -- preferably available in trailer sized (or smaller) units which can be airlifted and dropped to remote sites. Of course there are such "portable" generators, but these usually run off of diesel fuel and are big, loud, expensive, impractical and unaffordable for small villages. I would hope that US AID or the Red Cross would have something up their sleeve besides more of the same fossil fuel based, inefficient diesel generators, and that they would have advanced energy generation technology that they are free to use without intervention or more suppression we’ve seen from the oil & energy cartels.

Does US AID or another government agency possess Breakthrough Technology and do they have it at-the-ready for emergencies like this? If so, what kinds of technology are they using, and where is this covered during the mass media’s focus on the disaster?

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Please contact Dave Muchow, President and CEO, for further information on SkyBuilt Power Inc.

 

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