Hurricanes & Utility Grid. CIG Fox

CIG Fox Energy - Utility Grid

Cypress Devision 3 project 


While our Energy Box systems for road,  highway, bridges & rail applications work in prototype form

We can generate energy for the traditional grid, to charge batteries, in motion charging & charge stations then our CIG Fox Energy - Utility Grid which is a stand alone variant with fly wheel, air & salt battery storage then wireless & wired access currently in test stages for exclusive prior to public access

Energy storage can be placed under ground in safe capsule bunkers while atmospheric oxygen producing vegetation can be place on top 

Our water & irrigation solutions will keep the vegetation safe for the earth's atmosphere & ecosystems 

We are also developing methods to harness a percentage of hurricane energy so all dirty energy is voided globally through CIG Fox Energy - Utility Grid options which compliment Energy Box application

How much energy in a hurricane?

Let's start with hurricanes, with their low-pressure "eye" and multitudes of thunderstorms spinning around it. You probably know that these large tropical cyclones are releasing a lot of energy. But how much is a lot, really?

Well, that depends on how you measure it, but any way you slice it, hurricanes release a phenomenal amount of energy. If we start by looking at just the energy generated by the winds, we find that for a typical mature hurricane, we get numbers in the range of 1.5 x 10^12 Watts or 1.3 x 10^17 Joules/day (this is according to the Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory.)

This is equivalent to about half of the total electrical generating capacity on the planet! For a single hurricane!

But that's not all, we're just getting started. A hurricane also releases energy through the formation of clouds and rain (it takes energy to evaporate all that water). If we crunch the numbers for an average hurricane (1.5 cm/day of rain, circle radius of 665 km), we get a gigantic amount of energy: 6.0 x 10^14 Watts or 5.2 x 10^19 Joules/day!

This is equivalent to about 200 times the total electrical generating capacity on the planet! NASA says that "during its life cycle a hurricane can expend as much energy as 10,000 nuclear bombs!" And we're just talking about average hurricanes here, not Katrina.

"Floating gyro energy ship vessels that can ride out a hurricane & ride with generating energy yhat is stored on board then static Island or land options in prone areas on small areas of land to harness the hurricane"


All international patents & copyrights belong to CIG Fox & Dr Nic Bennett 


The Commonwealth Group. CIG Fox Research

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