Hello and welcome to the Stock Market Research 2000 Newsletter. If you no longer wish to receive this free newsletter, please visit http://24.188.149.184/NRGE/remove.html to remove your email address. Stock Market Research 2000 January Profile NuElectric Corporation - Trading Symbol OTCBB: NRGE Shares Outstanding: 3.8 Mil Est. Shares in Float: 400 K Long Term Debt: None Recent Stock Price: $0.94 52 Week Price Range: 3/8 - 2 For more information, please visit http://24.188.149.184/NRGE or call toll free 888-323-0856. Did you know that the EPA is about to dramitcally lower the arsenic count in water? You may say, "well how in the world does this apply to me?" Well it does. Almost everything that you deal with has some link to water in some way shape or form. Refining water will become more expensive and the products that you buy that depend on water will become more costly. Imagine a company that will be able to remove the necessary amounts of arsenic at a fraction of the cost that other companies charge. NuElectric is a company that will do just that. A lady by the name of Dagmar Bonnin, developed an innovative, versatile, and less expensive process while working as a professor at the University of South Florida. Her technology will easily reduce the contamination to a much lower level specified by the government, thereby helping to maintain safe water supplies at an affordable price. Trace quantities of arsenic occur naturally in surface and groundwater supplies in many areas of the country; particularly in the Midwest. But that's not the major problem. Arsenic has many industrial uses, such as hardening of copper and lead alloys, pigmentation in paints and fireworks, and the manufacture of glass, cloth, and electrical semiconductors. In the past, it was also used in the production of agricultural pesticides including herbicides and insecticides, and in desiccants, wood preservatives, and feed additives. The runoff from these uses as well as the leaching of arsenic from waste generated by them has caused increased levels of soluble arsenic in the nation's water supplies. Modified Zeolite Minerals Dr. Bonnin's process of removing the arsenic uses modified Zeolite minerals, which are common, readily available alumina-silicate minerals. The modification involves exposing the zeolites to concentrated ferrous aqueous solutions to form an iron-laden Zeolite mineral, thereby increasing the zeolite's affinity for arsenic. When contact is made between contaminated water and the zeolites, the zeolites act as sorbents, chemically bonding with the arsenic, and are then removed. The minerals can be used in a column as a filter, or they can be prepared in powdered form and used in an existing water treatment plant. Advantages over Other Processes - Bonnin's process is superior to existing methods in several ways. - The Zeolite process removes both forms of arsenate and arsenite. - No need for the additional steps and expenses of oxidation. - No expense for disposal. When compared to other specific methods, Bonnin's process has a variety of advantages. For example, activated alumina is used in one such method, but in order to make it economically feasible, reconditioning of the sorbent for subsequent reuse is necessary. This process itself creates a hazardous solution that requires further treatment and, ultimately, the expense of disposal. Activated carbon and flyash can also be used, but activated carbon has a limited natural capacity for arsenic species and is expensive. In the case of flyash, a waste product produced in large quantities at coal power stations, the properties of any given batch of flyash depend on the particular fuel in use. As a result, quality control and the flyash's capacity for arsenic species are difficult to maintain. Also, because flyash is produced only in a powdered form, it has limited application in column separation. One of the key advantages of Bonnin's method is related to both cost and safety. Because the zeolites are inexpensive, they do not have to be reused to make the process economically viable and because the arsenicladen zeolites that are the end product have passed the EPA's Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure Test, they can be simply and safely disposed of in a non-hazardous waste landfill. In summation, when looking at the alternatives, you realize that Dr. Bonnin has come up with the most realistic solution. NuElectric is positioning itself to accommodate the water industry�s needs. NRGE has also identified other potential technology acquisitions for the future. Once again please visit http://24.188.149.184/NRGE or call toll free 888-323-0856. ****** DISCLAIMER ****** This material is being provided by Stock Market Research 2000, an electronic newsletter paid by the issuer for publishing the information contained in this report. Euro Media, Inc. has paid a consideration of 25,000 free trading shares of common stock of NuElectric Corporation to Stock Market Research 2000 as payment for the publication of the information contained in this report. Stock Market Research 2000 and its affiliates have agreed not to sell the common stock received as payment for its services until January 19, 2000, which date is 15 days from the initial dissemination of this report. After such date, Stock Market Research 2000 may sell such shares. Because Stock Market Research 2000 is paid for its services, there is an inherent conflict of interest in Stock Market Research 2000's statements and opinions and such statements and opinions cannot be considered independent. The information contained in this publication is for informational purposes only, and not to be construed as an offer to sell or solicitation of an offer to buy any security. Please be advised that NuElectric Corporation is not offering securities for sale to persons in California or Minnesota. Stock Market Research 2000 makes no representation or warrant relating to the validity of the facts presented nor does Stock Market Research 2000 represent or warrant that all material facts necessary to make an investment decision are presented above. All statements of opinions are those of Stock Market Research 2000. Stock Market Research 2000 relies exclusively on information gathered from public filings on featured companies, as well as, in certain circumstances, interviews conducted by Stock Market Research 2000 of management of featured companies. Investors should not rely solely on the information contained in this publication. Rather, investors should use the information contained in this publication as a starting point for conducting additional research on the featured companies in order to allow the investor to form his or her own opinion regarding the featured companies. Factual statements contained in this publication are made as of the date stated and they are subject to change without notice. Stock Market Research 2000 is not a registered investment adviser, broker or a dealer. Investment in the companies reviewed is speculative and extremely high-risk and may result in the loss of some or all of any investment made in NuElectric Corporation. Projections of future financial results are provided solely by NuElectric Corporation. No assurances are given that NuElectric Corporation will achieve said projections. This publication contains forward-looking statements that are subject to risk and uncertainties that could cause results to differ materially from those set forth in the forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements represent the judgment of NuElectric Corporation as of the date of this publication. The Company disclaims any intent or obligation to update these forward-looking statements.
