International Automated Systems’ (IAUS) New Solar Technology
and Bladeless Steam Turbine Set to Revolutionize Industry
February 24, 2009, Salt Lake City, UT –
INTERNATIONAL Automated Systems, Inc.
(IAS : IAUS.PK) and RENEWABLE Energy Development Corporation (REDCO), are
pleased to announce that REDCO will be working with IAS to purchase IAS’s solar
panels and new bladeless turbine for utility-scale solar projects.
After completing its due diligence of the
IAS technology that included a thorough analysis of the independent engineering
review of IAS’s new solar panels and turbine, REDCO has concluded that the IAS
technology is commercially viable.
The third party engineering review was
conducted by reputable engineers with Ph.D. and M.S. degrees in Physics,
Mechanical Engineering and Nuclear Engineering from prestigious Universities
such as M.I.T., U.C. Berkley, U.C. Davis, and DePaul. Collectively, these
scientists have many years of accumulated specialized expertise in optical
engineering and efficiency, thermal dynamics, combustion stability, liquid
rocket engine performance, system optimization, mechanical and fluid systems
analysis, solid and gel propellant performance, structural dynamics, rotating
machinery and vibration with application to turbine blade rubbing. This review
supports that the IAS’s bladeless turbine and solar panels meet and in some
cases exceed all performance and efficiency projections. Perhaps the most
telling outcome of this independent engineering review was the conclusion that
the IAS bladeless steam turbine can operate as a part of an overall closed loop
system or as a stand-alone component.
The composite analysis also supports
that compared to other solar technologies the IAS technology has a higher
overall annual efficiency factor than photovoltaic (PV), traditional
concentrated solar power (CSP) such as towers and troughs, and is better or
comparable to CSP dish technology. The net conclusion is that based on the
functionality and the low-cost design, an IAS solar thermal power plant needs to
convert only 5% of the gross annual solar energy hitting its panels to
electricity in order to compete with the lowest priced solar technology
available today. An IAS solar thermal power plant has an annual
solar-to-electric efficiency of nearly 24%.
Ryan Davies, President & CEO of REDCO
said, “I am excited to work with IAS and we anticipate building many solar power
plants using their technology. After careful analysis of their technology and of
the independent reviews conducted verifying their projections, I believe that
the IAS technology is unique, revolutionary and ready for commercial
application. I believe that the IAS turbine combined with their solar panels and
heat exchanger will produce reliable solar energy at a fraction of the cost of
traditional solar.”
Mr. Davies is no stranger to new
technology and emerging businesses. He has had a successful career as an
entrepreneur and businessman, starting Found, Inc in 1997, which later sold to
CRS Retail Systems for $110 million; starting O2 Blue in 2001 which later sold
to Prebon Energy and as the founder of REDCO, a privately financed renewable
energy development company. Mr. Davies has raised over $50 million in private
equity throughout his career. REDCO indicated that it will soon announce its
first of several commercial solar energy projects – all of which will use the
IAS solar technology.
REDCO – REDCO is a privately held company
with offices in Utah. For more information, visit their website at:
www.renewdevco.com.
IAS – IAS is a publically traded company
with offices in Utah. For more information, visit their website at:
www.iaus.com.
Note: Statements contained in
this release that are not strictly historical are forward-looking within the
meaning of the "Safe Harbor" provisions of the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995. Such statements are made based upon information available to
the company at the time, and the company assumes no obligation to update or
revise such forward-looking statements. Editors and investors are cautioned that
such forward-looking statements invoke risk and uncertainties that may cause the
company's actual results to differ materially from such forward-looking
statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to,
demand for the company's product both domestically and abroad, the company's
ability to continue to develop its market, general economic conditions, and
other factors that may be more fully described in the company's literature and
periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.