Greenif Company We can be green if we develop the technologies that will make us a green world.



A turbine built with the Radial Turbine Blade System can operate using green energy sources to generate electrical power without harming our environment.



Greenif Co. Strategy



More energy from the sun hits Earth in one hour than all the energy consumed on our planet in an entire year. Water covers approximately 70 percent of our world's surface. The greatest opportunity to harness the sun’s renewable energy exists with those technologies that are and will be the best enablers of seabased solar energy production. Wind is produced by the uneven heating of the earth’s surface by the sun and is solar energy. Wind is currently the optimal potential energy by which to harness the Earth’s solar power due to the fact that wind turbines have a lower cost-per-kilowatt than solar panels. The vision is to make seabased wind power production economically viable on a mass scale.



In order to economically and efficiently harvest wind energy from the vast expanses of the oceans and seas, we must develop technologies that can capture and deliver it over distances that cannot be economically and efficiently achieved with buried or covered electricity transmission cables. Hence, we must capture the energy, and transform it into a readily transportable form on-site; whereby it can then be transported, delivered and converted to electricity at an optimal location for delivery to consumers.



Amazingly, the capture and conversion of wind energy into a readily transportable form can be accomplished by integrating existing technologies into a system-of-systems for this purpose. The development of new technologies will increase the viability of mass scale offshore wind energy production, but the core capabilities consist of mature and readily available technologies.



Currently, the best way to use existing technologies to capture and convert wind energy at sea into a useable and transportable form of energy is to convert the electric output from wind turbines into hydrogen (H 2 ) gas using electrolysis. The H 2 gas can then be transferred into a lighter than air envelope (blimp) for transport to a station at or near shore for download/transfer to a fuel cell power plant, where the H 2 gas can then be converted to useable electricity.



Future technology developments to further advance offshore wind energy production will include advanced transport vessels and seabased platforms, hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) at-sea production plants, and the development of a radial turbine blade system that is designed to operate on H 2 O 2 fuel. The radial turbine blade system will provide an economical and efficient means of converting H 2 O 2 into mechanical energy for the purpose of driving an electric generator to make electricity, thus creating a new type of power plant. This will be an important development because H 2 O 2 is more economically and safely transportable by means of ground transportation to locations far from the shore than H 2 gas.



We can achieve mass scale offshore wind power production, capture and delivery in the near future and open up the "other" 70% of the earth for green energy production. However, the Department of Energy (DoE) must partner with the private sector in the development of H 2 gas and H 2 O 2 at-sea conversion/production projects to achieve this vision. The DoE has already conducted successful wind to H 2 gas conversion and storage projects.



Calculations show that approximately 35 megawatt-hours of fuel cell electricity output can be delivered in a single 50 foot radius blimp filled with H 2 gas. This is enough electricity to power approximately 35,000 homes for one hour.



To further the environmental benefits of the above concepts, offshore wind turbines can be installed on abandoned oil platforms to repurpose the oil platforms for the production of renewable energy while also reducing the wind turbine installation costs. There are currently over 28,000 abandoned oil platforms in the Gulf of Mexico alone.



These overarching business concepts can create near-term profitability and long term growth while achieving seabased wind power production on a mass scale. We can be green if we develop the technologies that will make us a green world. Seabased Wind Power Production

Seabased Wind Power Production

Click on the link below to watch a five minute video of the technology overview and proof-of-concept demonstration of the Radial Turbine Blade System! Radial Turbine Blade System Video Radial Turbine Blade System Patent Application Links Invest E-mail: Scott O'Hearen scott@greenif.com