Conference on Future Energy to be Held September 22-24
Washington, DC, August 29: As the
the threat of global climate change caused by fossil fuels looms on
the horizon, remedies for future energy technologies are being
presented by Integrity Research Institute at a two-day conference to
be held September 22-24, 2006 at the Sheraton College Park just
North of the Washington Beltway on I-95 at Exit 29B. The Conference
on Future Energy (COFE - pronounced "Co-fee") is the second in the
series, with the first one held in 1999, originally scheduled for
the State Department Secretary's Open Forum.
Progressive ideas abound at the second international future energy
conference with presentations by top scientists, professors,
attorneys, entrepreneurs, doctors, engineers and inventors from
three countries. Presenting showcase developments during the Plenary
Sessions on Saturday, September 23rd, COFE2 offers an exciting
renewable energy innovation called a "tidal power electric
generator" developed by Blue Energy Canada
www.bluenergy.com
with Martin Burger, CEO. One of these 20 MW vertical-axis Ocean
Turbines operates off the coast of Nova Scotia, with the assistance
of the University of British Columbia.
Dr. George Miley, University of Illinois professor,
http://fsl.ne.uiuc.edu will be reviewing his experiments with
Plasma Focus Fusion electric power generation. This is the fourth
type of fusion (also called "proton-boron" fusion) that was most
often disregarded as too difficult to attain, until Sandia Labs
recently broke the billion-degree barrier recently with their
"Z-Pinch" fusion reactor. Now Dense Plasma Focus Fusion, which has
four times the output of conventional magnetic confinement fusion
and no radiation, suddenly has gained more attention, since it has
surpassed the same temperature barrier with a much simpler and more
economical design.
Dennis Bushnell, Chief Scientist at NASA Langley Research Center,
will be presenting on post-petroleum energetics and also agriculture
that can be sustained by seawater irrigation. James Dunn, from
NASA's Center for Technology Commercialization, will be reviewing
fuel cell developments, his own electric airplane, the first of its
kind, as well as many other emerging energy inventions he has
personally investigated. David Goodwin, from the US Department of
Energy, will give a report on the government's fission and fusion
research.
Glen Gordon, MD, will be discussing his discovery of a therapeutic
electromagnetic pulse generation for intercellular fluid
mobilization and therapy, with arguments for a future energy
medicine transition. Dr. Gordon, aged 69, is famous for curing
himself of congestive heart failure with the
www.EM-Probe.com
that he invented and then bicycling across the country, while
appearing on TV and radio talk shows. He also worked with Dr. Donald
Jaueisen during the development and patenting of the device, which
moves biological fluid congestion through short, powerful magnetic
pulses, with the fastest rise-time in the field.
Dr. Fabrizio Pinto, formerly of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, will
be the keynote speaker during the award banquet on Saturday night,
followed by a live concert pianist performance by Erika Monteith.
Dr. Pinto's specialty is nanotechnology utilizing quantum principles
of zero-point energy and the Casimir force, with a number of patents
and journal publications to his credit. He has discovered that
propulsion as well as electricity generation on the quantum scale is
theoretically allowed by the present laws of thermodynamics. Dr.
Pinto is the President and CEO of
www.interstellartechcorp.com . Dr. Thorsten Ludwig, from the
German Association for Space Energy, will be presenting on the
European developments in the same area of quantum zero-point energy.
On Sunday, Emerging Sessions include Dr. Tania Slawecki, on
sabbatical from Pennsylvania State University, will be discussing
their work with tests on electromagnetic therapy devices or energy
medicine. She is a Materials Science Research Professor who has
worked with NIST and served as Director of her State's Center for
Sustainability. Presentations on Wankel Motors, Catalytic Energy
Science, Antigravity Development, Intellectual Property Strategy for
Emerging Energy, and Future Energy Technologies are on the list.
A screening of the movie, "Who Killed the Electric Car?" will be
shown on Friday night to open the Conference on Future Energy, at
the Loews AMC Theatre on Powder Mill Road next door to the Sheraton
College Park.
NOTE: Conference attendees are encouraged to take advantage of the
last few days of the very affordable, discounted conference rates
available from IRI 202-452-7674 and the Sheraton 301-937-4422,
ending September 1st. Early-bird discount registration for the
conference and hotel conference rates will both expire after
September 1st. More information is available, including a free copy
of Future Energy magazine, at
www.IntegrityResearchInstitute.org and also by calling
202-452-7674 or toll-free 800-295-7674 anytime 24 hours a day. The
Conference on Future Energy is Metro-accessible to save energy, from
the Greenbelt Metro station, by calling the Sheraton for free
shuttle service. The Sheraton College Park Hotel is located at 4095
Powder Mill Road, Beltsville, MD 20740 on Rt. 212 off the I-95
interstate expressway connecting Washington and Baltimore. It is
also about 30 minutes from BWI or Reagan National airports.