Some interesting info in the Chinese reports from which the slide show was picked: - Sino-US Science and Technology International Innovation Park was inaugurated on Oct 18 in the presence of Tom Darden. - The park will initially have more than 20 companies from the US and other countries, and investments of 15 bln yuan (USD 2.5 bln) are made. - fields involved are "Internet +", low-carbon environmental protection, new energy, new materials, bio-medicine, high-end equipment manufacturing. - "The two sides reached a consensus, the introduction of advanced US technology and innovative ideas." - "Thomas Darden hints: Most American innovation opportunities come from scientific and technological innovation-oriented enterprises. (...) I hope to replicate Triangle Park, North Carolina Business mode (...) in China to attract more US technology companies and Chinese enterprises to grow."
I don't think I have to remind how important a clean, cheap and abundant energy source such as LENR would be for China today, with its disastrous use of coal. And how easy it would be for a country like China to push rollout of LENR technologies without much discussions on how to regulate them. Mats > 7 nov 2015 kl. 11:56 skrev Blaze Spinnaker <[email protected]>: > > Yeah, pretty interesting. > > Some more info on IH > http://www.bloomberg.com/research/stocks/private/people.asp?privcapId=245130378 > > Most of it is well known. Haven't seen the bloomberg page before, though. > >> On Fri, Nov 6, 2015 at 7:10 AM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote: >> See: >> >> http://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/index.php/Attachment/421-20140925152226-9375-pdf/?s=d62872f7500919d1a9ea09c6742e8e0e9222a983 >> >> This is in English and Chinese. Parts of the Chinese are not translated. You >> can Google translate them. I am a little surprised to see how much I can >> understand reading it in Japanese. I guess technical terminology is pretty >> much the same. It is like "reading" a cold fusion paper in Italian when you >> speak only English. >> >> - Jed >

