Energy for a Cleaner Tomorrow!

Welcome to CIDA Energy, working to bring you a cleaner tomorrow! We are a clean energy research and production company working on finding the best & most efficient means of clean, safe and inexpensive energy. Energy that can be harnessed and reproduced on a mass scale with little or no effort.

Our research and development teams are working on alternative fuel sources, alternative energy & alternative food sources.

  • BioFuel – The world has become reliant on petroleum, but is it the viable fuel of the future? We at CIDA Energy believe that there are far better alternative fuel resources in the world – the technology is out there to utilize them and now is the time to put that technology to action. Currently in research is Algae, Oil Palm, & Water as fuel alternatives.
  • Energy – Energy can be used for many things, from running your washer & dryer, to powering production plants. It gives us light, heat, power. It simplifies our lives – and if you don’t think so try not turning on a light all day. Solar & Wind are two of the greatest resources that we have and they don’t cost us anything to make – all we need to do is to harness these great resources and we will be able to bring that sustainable energy to your door.

Algae Plantation – Algae is one of the fastest growing plants that is available in the world and can be grown almost anywhere. Through technology it can even be grown without direct sunlight using solar energy indirectly. One of our major development projects is a 1000 Hectare Algae Plantation – which is equivalent to 2470 Acres. When in full production this plantation will conceivably produce up-to 225 Million gallons of fuel per year.

Solar Farm – Our second major development project is a solar farm. When it is complete it will have the capability to supply enough energy for up-to 250,000 homes in the U.S. But our goal is not to stop there. We want to be able to make it reproducible on any scale and install them in underdeveloped nations. The same sized solar farm in the United States would supply enough energy for a city of over one million people in underdeveloped nations because they use far less energy.

About the Author

M.L. Zupan

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