C/M Stationary Energy Plant: Niagara Falls in a Spare Room
C/M Stationary Energy Plant: Niagara Falls in a Spare Room
5 gW PER SECOND. TWO WALLS IN A 6X10
A 6 X 10Ft room with 8 Ft walls
"Much smaller than 500 Sq Ft"
1.3 - 19.5 kW required to generate 5 gW per second
One wall. 8 ft x 8 ft stacked 7 units
Dissertion unit to grid built into the room
Now this trumps (beats) our 1050 x 5000 Sq Ft rooms which have a larher dispersion unit & Emergency Safety System integrated
"The best we have at $500,000 - $750,000 initial price or less & lower cost maintenance then metering in dispersion with tax & R&D integration"
365 days. 24 hours. 5-15+ year low-cost maintenance schedule
Lowest cost Stationary Plant
Bulk sales units at $300,000 per unit not including repair parts with monitoring technology with ability to take partial offline
25 unit or more otherwise pushing to $500,000 - $750,000 with the later being one unit
$7.5 Million for 25 units. 125 gW per second
The area of an object measuring by 250 x 150 ft is 3125 Sq Ft which is required for 25 units
Alberta Canadian dollar 2026
The Robert Moses Niagara Power Plant (US side) cost approximately $737 million to $800 million
to construct, with completion in 1961. It was built to replace the collapsed Schoellkopf Power Station. Modern upgrades to the facility are currently valued at $1.1 billion, with major refurbishments on Ontario-side stations, such as the Sir Adam Beck complex, requiring a C$1 billion investment starting in 2025.
to construct, with completion in 1961. It was built to replace the collapsed Schoellkopf Power Station. Modern upgrades to the facility are currently valued at $1.1 billion, with major refurbishments on Ontario-side stations, such as the Sir Adam Beck complex, requiring a C$1 billion investment starting in 2025.
Total Capacity: ~4.4–4.9 Gigawatts (GW) per second
$800 million in 1961 is equivalent to approximately $8.7 billion to $8.8 billion in 2026, due to a cumulative inflation rate of over 975%. Prices have increased roughly 11 times over between 1961 and 2026, meaning $1 in 1961 had the same purchasing power as $11.04 today.
Net Zero is a good globally. It's affordable. C/M & Sydney Nicola Bennett's
https://may2026conclusion.blogspot.com/2026/05/cm-energy-end-game.html
Generic Stock image of Niagara Falls used. Free use open source
CYPRESS MOTOR SPORTS & SYDNEY NICOLA BENNETT



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