Malabo, Equatorial Guinea & Houston, Texas----The Ministry of Mines, Industry and Energy of the Government of the Republic of Equatorial Guinea (“Ministry”) and Energy Allied International Corporation of Houston, Texas, USA (“Energy Allied”), announced today that they have entered into an exclusive partnership designed to develop the downstream petrochemical sector in Equatorial Guinea. Energy Allied has been selected by the Ministry to evaluate and formulate the Downstream Petrochemical Industry in Equatorial Guinea and assemble the financial, technological, operational and managerial resources needed to design, engineer and implement financially viable and operationally sustainable projects which match the resources and aspirations of the Ministry. ...read more
June 30, 2011 – Houston, Texas
The U.S. Trade and Development Agency (USTDA) and Energy Allied Egypt, an energy projects development firm, announced today in Houston the signing of a grant agreement. This announcement was made during the Egypt Forward Forum, a week-long event sponsored by USTDA to promote investments in Egypt and foster US-Egyptian commercial ties. The USTDA grant of US $283,000 will enable Energy Allied to commission a study into the feasibility of establishing large scale biodigester operations in Egypt, with an anticipated total investment value of US $100 Million.
...read more
December 12, 2010, Cairo, Egypt – The American University in Cairo (AUC) along with The
Seawater Foundation (TSF) and Energy Allied International (EAI) have executed a long-term
cooperation memorandum formalizing their collaboration on Integrated Seawater Agriculture
Systems (ISAS). ISAS is a closed-loop agricultural system which combines desert land and
untreated seawater to produce biofuels, seafood, salt, protein meal and animal feed. The signing
ceremony, held at the AUC New Cairo campus, also included the unveiling of the Red Sea Project,
the first ISAS project now under development in Egypt. ...read more
Biofuels continue to generate interest throughout the international community. Europe considers the product a sustainable source of Energy; the US sees its potential in decreasing the price tag on crude; and other countries are merely focused on its export value. ...read more
|