Electrodynamic Catalysis: Reducing Pollution
A Crazy Idea Gaining Ground
November 20, 2005
Exactly one year ago, I installed on my website a page dedicated to the invention of American inventor Paul Pantone. I interpret the observed phenomenon (fuel savings, reduced pollution) as an increase in combustion efficiency due to an electrodynamic catalysis effect caused by micro-droplets of water, electrically charged through friction (similar to what occurs in a thundercloud before lightning strikes). See this dossier.
And now, recently, Poivre d'Arvor presented a report on this topic during the 8 PM news.
This is a very positive development. Of course, his team couldn't answer the question:
- Why don't industrialists and public authorities show interest in this invention, since... it clearly works?
Certainly, but what could a minister possibly reply to someone saying:
- We're going to reduce fuel tax revenues by 20 to 50 percent.
What car manufacturer could respond to statements like:
- Scrap your catalytic converters. There's something far better. Don't even think about claiming ownership of this idea, profiting from it, locking it up in a web of patents and rights. It's too late. It's already running wild, like a wild horse, a technology without a master—and those who ride it aren't for sale.
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