Auto Manufacturers Participate in Japanese Government LENR Program

Mar 132017
 

Japan Funding LENR Research
March 13, 2017 – By Steven B. Krivit –

A Japanese government Web site confirms that two of Japan’s largest automobile manufacturers are participating in the government’s multi-year low-energy nuclear reaction (LENR) research program, first reported by New Energy Times in 2015.

The New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO), a Japanese government research and development agency, operates the Web site. LENR advocate Jed Rothwell, who speaks Japanese, found the Web page with the update today. (PDF Archive)

Japan is the first nation in two decades to make a substantial commitment to this research, which offers vast, unexplored opportunities in energy and materials science.

The participants in the government-sponsored program include Technova, a member of the Toyota Motor Corp. family of businesses, Nissan Motor Co., and four universities, Tohoku, Kyushu, Nagoya and Kobe.

Meanwhile, progress in LENR research in the U.S. has been delayed, the result of a lingering stigma created by science authorities tasked by the U.S. Department of Energy who, in March and April 1989, bet against confirmation of a new nuclear process, as explained in the 2016 book Hacking the Atom.

When confirmatory experimental results were reported in the summer of 1989, some people in the government science establishment went to great lengths to ignore and dismiss the data. The 2016 book Fusion Fiasco explains precisely and for the first time how this scientific cover-up happened and who was responsible.

 

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