Community | January 21, 2011 | 17 comments

Gerald Celente looks to 2011 free energy breakthroughs as the beginning of a new revolution

Image
Dagum
Last April, we ran a story about an interview that Alex Jones of Infowars did with Gerald Celente of the highly respected Trends Research Journal. Most of the trends Celente points to are dire, painting a dismal picture of the future, but not all. Despite the very grim outlook, Celente has a charismatic, upbeat demeanor about him...


***Excerpt***

..."On a very positive note, go back to 1990. What got us out of the recession? A productive capacity: the Internet Revolution. Products were invented, designed, manufactured, serviced…

"What we're going to see now is an energy revolution. There are scientific visionaries and entrepreneurs that we see; and we're going to be releasing more information in two weeks in Trends Journal about breakthroughs in new energy that could shift the whole game. It may be as big as the discovery of fire or the invention of the wheel." ...

Continued at: http://pesn.com/2011/01/08/9501739_Gerald_Celente_looks_to_2011_free_energy_brea...
  1. groups:
    Community,   Green
  2. tags:
    Trends Free Energy Gerald Celente
  3.     
    |

17 comments // Gerald Celente looks to 2011 free energy breakthroughs as the beginning of a new revolution

  • ras_menelik
  • ras_menelik
  • ras_menelik
    • +1
      ras_menelik  
    • Ozoneocean wind and solar are 100s of years and 50 year old technology nothing wrong with them, you seem to be certain that nothing better can or has come since then I hope that you are dead wrong and that Booby's machine comeing to market in less than 60 days changes your mind.

    • 1 year ago
  • ras_menelik
  • ras_menelik
    • +1
      ras_menelik  
    • Inventor Bobby Amarasingam of AOGFG expects that their 6-12 kilowatt power generator using gravity as the source will cost around $5,000 or less, be around 1.5 cubic meters in size, and be available by early March. On December 4, we reported that British "Inventor Bobby Amarasingam, is pushing ahead with his gravity motor technology, claiming test results, license agreements, manufacturing contracts, and customer contracts. Is it really possible to harness gravity? He says their recent 12 kW prototype testing was successful." I've had a few chats with Bobby since then, and he has given me permission to report on some subsequent developments of his patent-pending technology and its rollout. He said that with the 12 kilowatt test version they were able to prove the 1 to 96 ratio that had been predicted by one of the engineers from Rolls Royce (acting independently). He said it takes about 500 Watts to get it spinning, but once it is turning, it only takes about 50 Watts to keep it turning at 30 rpm, while it generates 12 kW. It's only about 1.5 meters cubed in size and runs very quietly – "almost as quiet as a refrigerator." The expected retail cost will be around $5,000 USD. That's less than $1 per Watt installed, which is 3-6 times cheaper than solar or wind. Though the output can allegedly range from 6 kW to 12 kW, it's not dynamically load-following, as a typical household power system would require, so the first versions would be better suited to constant power output scenarios. With the companies he has lined up presently in the manufacturing process, he expects that at latest by next March the first products will be available in the marketplace at a rate of around 100,000 units in the first year. One 6 kilowatt version will be cheaper, with a one year return on investment expected, with a down side that it will require a change out of the brushes on the generators. The other will be more expensive but ill be essentially maintenance free, with a 15-year warranty possible. Then on December 26, he called and said that he had figured out a way to cut the cost by 75% by just combining the main shaft to a single generator, rather than having a generator at each carriage point in the Ferris wheel type arrangement. He said he built a mock-up to test the idea, and it worked. He said this is the 18th machine he's built. Then on December 28, he left me a message saying that he had figured out a way to eliminate the drive motor so that the excess energy could be fed back to self power the system. He said it may take him a few days to build a mock-up to demonstrate that. He said that there is no high-tech involved, but that it is a slight variation of existing technology, just put together in a novel way. A group in Holland is doing the gears. A group in China is doing some of the manufacturing. And the main assembly and engineering is being done by a Dutch group. On the 26th, he said a group of billionaires, under the instigation of the gentleman from Roll Royce, were going to be meeting to talk about how to support this technology to bring it into mass production. He bemoans that he hasn't been able to get local groups in the UK interested in getting involved. Nor has he been able to get the BBC interested in giving it any coverage, though he's sent them material. He said he could show them working prototype, but they don't respond. He said the reporter from ThisIsSomerset who first broke the story about this technology last September did a follow-up piece, but the paper wouldn't publish it. The Dutch didn't believe it until they saw it, and realized it is "so simple". With all the news about how much money the conventional renewable energy is costing, and how energy prices are going up, Bobby thinks it’s a travesty that his technology isn't getting more attention, given that it is both clean and cheap and easy to manufacture anywhere in the world, enabling distributed energy for the developing nations. "They will spend $500 billion in research and development on some fusion technology, when there is a solution that is so simple – child simple. Such a waste." He said that he has been financing this with his own money, without going into debt, selling some cars he had. One person offered him 60 million pounds to buy him out, but Bobby said it would be worth that much each year in royalties. He plans on doing humanitarian work with the money he gets from selling these units. "10% for me, and the rest for humanitarian work." read more on above link..
      http://www.mygeni.org/view/weblink.mygeni?wid=1496&back=view%2Fuser.mygeni%3...

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ZRfM0M4wcw

    • 1 year ago
  • ozoneocean
    • +1
      ozoneocean  
    • That article seems a bit scatty and fringey... One of those things that sort of offers a vague hope down the line somewhere.

      I already get free energy from solar panels on the roof. In fact the electricity company pays ME. But they were very expensive to put up.

      The technology is ALREADY here, it's not fringe mumbojumbo, it's not in some miracle crap that only 5 people know about or some scientist may one day perfect. All we need is an economy of scale to make it cheaper to install this stuff- that means cutting the crap and putting real serious investment into the mature technologies of solar, wind and storage so we can have those products in stores at prices everyone can afford!

      We can always refine and improve it later, but continually pinning our hopes on the next amazing invention that's just around the corner is getting us nowhere and allowing big oil and coal to rape us

    • 1 year ago
  • ras_menelik
    • 0
      ras_menelik  
    • Top five
      Featured / Best Exotic FE: Gravity Motors > AOGFG >
      'Child simple' 6-12 kW gravity generator prepping for market - Inventor Bobby Amarasingam of AOGFG expects that their 6-12 kilowatt power generator using gravity as the source will cost around $5,000 or less, be around 1.5 cubic meters in size, with production prototype being ready by early March. (PESN; December 29, 2010)
      Featured: Papp engine / Plasma >
      Plasma Expansion Motor Could Revolutionize Renewable Industry - Nobel (inert) gas engine patterned after the Papp Engine, would cost 1/3 what a comparable output engine would cost, while its fuel would cost a few dollars per month -- negligible; totally revolutionizing the renewable industry. Six test engines expected to be completed soon. (PESWiki; Dec. 26, 2008)
      Featured / Best Exotic FE: Nuclear > Cold Fusion >
      Directory: Andrea A. Rossi Cold Fusion Generator - Feature page at PESWiki for collecting material from around the web regarding Italian inventor, Andrea Rossi's energy amplifier, which produces useful power from the apparent fusion of hydrogen and nickel into copper at relatively low temperatures and pressures. They claim to be going into production with a 10 kW industrial product that is reliable, safe, and cheap. (PESWiki; January 17, 2011)
      Featured / Top 100 / Best FE: Nuclear > Fusion > Focus Fusion >
      Focus Fusion could power civilization cheaply and cleanly - Lawrenceville Plasma Physics LLC has announced that they have indisputable evidence that they have achieved 1 billion degrees via plasma confinement. With another year of experimentation followed by three years of development, they could be ready to bring to market a 5 MW plant (output of the largest wind turbines) that only costs $300,000. (PESN; January 12, 2011)
      Featured: Electromagnetic / Solid State >
      ERR Fluxgenerator by Noah's Ark Research Foundation - Inventor, James B. Schwartz of the Philippines, has come up with a device that allegedly puts out six kilowatts of electricity from the surroundings, using a solid state arrangement in a panel made from "left-handed material" -- Aluminum and Bismuth interwoven with coils -- tying into the Earth's frequencies. (PESWiki; Aug. 15, 2009)

      Gravity_man the audience is listening ...

    • 1 year ago
  • ozoneocean
    • +1
      ozoneocean  
    • ras_menelik:

      And this list of magical devices is why alternative energy is going nowhere. -_-
      We HAVE proven tech in production that actually WORKS (sun, wind, tide, geothermal etc), that is where the focus needs to be, not Dr Smith's amazing mystery device of magical magnificence that's a bazillion times more efficient than the sun that only he can see.

    • 1 year ago
  • Nephwrack
  • Dagum
  • ikkibu_emuqa
    • +5
      ikkibu_emuqa  
    • we need to have a hemp revolution that would save the planet for sure. hemp has so many uses ive always questioned as to why the idiots who rule this soon to be desolate land have not turned to hemp to not only save the planet but humanity as a whole.

    • 1 year ago
  • PzLuvHappeniz
  • ozoneocean
  • PressCore
    • 0
      PressCore  
    • ikkibu_emuqa:

      You may be begging the question. You've already answered it. They're
      idiots. I don't take any pleasure or satisfaction for reflecting the insult to
      humanity they are. I have a high I Q, and don't cotton to those whom God
      made normal, but choose to think defectively, and act defectively thus.
      Yes, if all humans realized the unknown holds the greatest rewards, and
      that it's not beneath them to open their minds, we'd change back to the
      successful hemp culture colonial Americans were known for, and fluorished.

    • 1 year ago
  • ikkibu_emuqa
    • +1
      ikkibu_emuqa  
    • ozoneocean:

      smoking is awesome u learn so much cuz evrything interest u lol. this plant is truly divine but sadly its lookd down upon :/ we could have had our cars running off of hemp which has no carbon footprint meaning its completely good for the environment. we could have had our houses built of hemp which hav way too many positives for me to list. if youre interested type in hemp pod on google n it will explain the positives of the house

    • 1 year ago
  • PressCore
    • 0
      PressCore  
    • ozoneocean:

      It wouldn't have to. It's been proven that Americans waste at least 1/2
      of all the food they produce, and in that 1/2 there's enough pure fresh
      water to amp the food production of the entire South Western States..
      Hemp contains Omega 3 fatty acids. Hemp " milk " is very nuitritious.
      Since humans are overfishing ocean fish, and crustacions to near
      extinction, hemp would substitute as a viable food source. You don't
      appear to realize the ancients found 10,000 uses for the plant in all
      the world's cultures. Most of that knowledge has perished with the
      decline of those civilizations. It's need that causes people to discover
      those uses. They can be re-discovered. If George Washington Carver
      could invent 100 uses for the peanut, truely professional, motivated
      people can reinvent those 10,000 uses for hemp as oil based products.
      The ancient wisdom was to mass produce it, use it as building materials
      to spare trees, and barter with it to spare money which were recyclable
      semi/precious metals. The only unfortunate part is that we live in an
      wasteful culture corrupted by greed, Ponzi Scheme " money ", and
      denaturization thanks to Corporate Fascism which has perpetuated
      Prohibition. What do you think inspired James Cameron's movie Avatar ?

    • 1 year ago
  • PressCore
    • 0
      PressCore  
    • ikkibu_emuqa:

      Try using an inhaler sometime as an alternate delivery system to using
      a pipe to smoke it. It'll take a bit longer for the cannabinoids to reach
      the Omegdala and Substantia Nigra, but you'll not only get the same
      blue wavelength consciousness, you'll save your lungs. And by not
      incinerating your Ganja, your stash will last a lot longer, and minimize
      your expenses. Always a good idea to save a good part of what you
      make. You never know when you might need it.

    • 1 year ago
more from Community:

top videos