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American Eco-Energy, LLC
Regarded as the "Energy Technology" arm of Envisage
Capital, American Eco-Energy ("AEE") realizes potential profits from projects enabled in
part from government incentives and undervalued and underutilized fuel sources.
AEE was formed in late 2002 to take advantage of
the market opportunity presented by the need for an economical alternative to
fossil fuels and Natural Gas in the small to medium boiler size range.
The Waste to Energy System ("WES")
is a flexible, alternative fuel energy system specifically dedicated to meeting this opportunity.
American Eco-Energy is the owner and developer of processes that convert
industrial wastes and low-value streams into high value energy sources with no
hazardous emissions into the environment.
Waste to Energy System ("WES")
Technology
The
development of the Waste to Energy System, or "WES" with tire-derived fuel as
its primary source of energy to create BTU output has outstanding potential for
multi-application in the energy industry.
The WES is a small (10 million to 50 million
BTU/hr of heat input) distributed energy system capable of converting waste
rubber (e.g. used tires) and other waste streams into a cost effective and clean
burning synthetic gas.
Approximately 300 million scrap tires are land-filled
annually in the U.S. representing an estimated thirteen whole tires per cubic yard. The WES unit will help to solve our nation's scrap tire pollution as well as create a
source of regenerative energy, specifically "WES Gas"
for unlimited profit potential. Current strategies
for implementation throughout the U.S. will catapult American
Eco-Energy into the forefront of alternative energy innovation. Expansive
economic opportunities will be created by the WES unit in a
"win-win" scenario for both investors and WES technology employers.
For more information on this exciting new
technology please visit the website of American Eco-Energy at www.AmericanEco-Energy.com.
Click on Pictures for WES Videos
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THE OPPORTUNITY
As stated by the Council of Industrial Boiler Owners (the national trade organization for
boiler owners in the 400K to 250MM
BTU/hr heat input range, precisely the target market for the WES):
"With the Energy Bill coming, the Boiler MACT here, the Interstate Air Quality
Rule coming, natural gas prices looking like they will remain high for the long term, and with a new relationship needed with the Utility Industry,
there is no better time for our members and the industrial community to consider renewable energy, biomass and other opportunity fuels.”
- March 2004, CIBO BoilerBlast News
In August 2000, The Economist, said the
"electric revolution could be every bit as dramatic as the revolution
that hit the world' s telecommunications industry in the 1980s".
An industry
long viewed as unexciting has suddenly become hot because a combination of
factors: Our "24/7" economy is creating an increasingly urgent need
for more and more reliable power sources at a time when deregulation of the $300
billion electric utility industry means that power reliability is worsening. For
manufacturers and information intensive companies, reliability problems can
impose costs of millions of dollars an hour or more.
Meanwhile, growing concern
over urban air quality and global warming is driving greater spending by
governments and businesses on the development and use of clean energy
technologies.
Consider just a few of the market realities driving Wall Street
firms to initiate major coverage of new energy companies:
- Bear Stearns estimates that the market
opportunities for distributed energy "could one day total as high as
$200 billion annually." Goldman Sachs believes the fuel cell market
alone could exceed $95 billion.
- Venture capital investment in clean energy
technology has grown more than tenfold from the mid-1990s to an estimated
$800 million in 2000, with rapid continued growth expected.
- Major companies like Royal Dutch Shell, Ford Motor Company,
Texaco and several utilities have cumulatively committed several billion
dollars in investments in clean technologies such as fuel cells and solar
photovoltaics.
- The Seattle Times reports that last year investors
put nearly $3 trillion into investment funds and portfolios that are
screened for social responsibility, up 400% from 1995. Nearly 80% of those
portfolios focus on environmental factors.
- The overseas market will see up to $10 trillion in energy
infrastructure investments by 2020 in many countries whose urban air quality
is already poor and whose grid infrastructure is inadequate. This means very
rapid global growth of distributed energy.
In short, the market is hampered
by the lack of firms that provide a comprehensive, reliable analysis of
distributed energy technologies and the key drivers that help determine the
success of existing and emerging distributed energy technologies. Envisage
Capital, through American Eco-Energy, seeks to change this trend by capitalizing
on the clean, effective and efficient WES
technology offering a sound energy alternative coupled with opportunity for
maximized investments.
Contact Information
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Envisage Capital
603 Terrace Lane - Suite 101
Colleyville, Texas 76034
- 817-301-0142(office)
- 469-519-8764 (fax)
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