The Environmental Impact of ebeam Technology

Do you care about environmental issues? Are you concerned about climate change? Do you worry about the health of future generations? Would you prefer to keep plastic out of our oceans, chemicals out of our food and water, and dangerous toxicity out of our industrial supply chains?

Whatever your environmental concerns, they likely have a common solution. They will require the development of new technologies. Take climate change, perhaps the most important environmental issue of the twenty-first century. A recent online article on the future of environmental policy, signed by eighteen environmental experts, stated, “We are aware of no quantified climate mitigation scenario in which technological change is not responsible for the vast majority of emissions cuts.”

New technologies. New materials. New manufacturing processes. All are essential to put our planet on a long-term trajectory of environmentally friendly development. And one new breakthrough encompasses all three: compact electron beam technology.

Ebeam technology not only has green benefits—ecological potential that would impress the most passionate environmental activist—but also boasts a powerful business case that is catching the attention of smart CEOs.

Ebeam has the potential to play a critical part in this future. Ebeam has the power to improve our manufacturing footprint, enable the creation of new environmentally friendly materials, and reduce energy usage across the board. And it does all of this while simultaneously achieving the goal of COOs around the world—lower costs.

 

EBEAM Technology

Imagine a stream of electrons, focused in a carefully controlled blue beam against a dark vacuum. That blue beam, or ebeam, has a hundred powerful applications, and more are being considered every day. It can sterilize, detox, synthesize—clean our water, upgrade assembly lines, reduce our dependence on costly, dirty chemicals. It can save energy, and protect our food and drink. It can even help create plastics with remarkable properties, stronger and more durable but easier to reuse and recycle. Like the laser and the x-ray, two ubiquitous twentieth-century technologies, ebeam may one day be as integrated into our global economy. Indeed, this technology not only has green benefits—ecological potential that would impress the most passionate environmental activist—but also boasts a powerful business case that is catching the attention of smart CEOs. Blue technology is green technology, upgraded. Blue is the new green.

The potential of ebeam is no Jetsons space age dream. Real companies are using ebeam today, employing it on their manufacturing lines to improve business processes, save money, and dramatically improve their brands’ environmental reputation—all at the same time.

Consumer technology is sexy—iPhones, Android, 4G, Google Glass, wearable tech, etc. Subtle technological shifts deep in the supply chains and assembly lines of global manufacturing are less likely to make Bloomberg headlines. But make no mistake, in the coming years, ebeam is poised to make a real difference—for the planet, and for your company’s bottom line.