NEW YORK, Aug. 9, 2006 (PRIMEZONE) -- W2 Energy, Inc. (Pink Sheets:WWEN), a developer of green energy, is pleased to announce that Michael McLaren, the Company's Chief Executive Officer, will be featured on Stu Taylor on Business (www.stutaylor.com), a business talk radio program. Stu Taylor will be speaking with Michael McLaren on Thursday, August 10, 2006 at 8:00 am EDT. New England residents can listen live on WBIX AM 1060 or via the Internet at http://www.wbixonline.com/. To listen online, just scroll down WBIX's home page and click on the purple "audio click here" button. Past guests on Stu Taylor on Business include Jack Welch, former CEO of GE, Joe Scarbourough of MSNBC, and business book author Harvey Mackay.
About WBIX Radio
WBIX AM 1060 is a 40,000 watt AM radio station based in Framingham, MA that broadcasts primarily a news, lifestyle and business information format. The station can be tuned in throughout most of New England including New Hampshire, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New York and Rhode Island.
About W2 Energy
W2 Energy Inc. is a growing, publicly traded company that develops renewable energy technologies and applies it to new generation power systems. Specifically, W2 Energy Inc.'s biomass to energy plants utilize state of the art technologies to produce green energy, both as fuel (sulfur free diesel) and electricity, at the most efficient cost in capital investment and production per/barrel, per/Megawatt.
The W2 Energy GAT reactor breaks down biomass or coal using the chemical energy stored in the biomass itself; the plasma acts as a high temperature catalyst. Unlike typical plasma reactors that utilize convection of the intense heat produced by the plasma, our GAT reactor can amazingly produce enough Syngas (H2, CO) to feed a 10,000 barrel per day synthetic diesel plant and 100 Megawatt steam turbine with a mere 4 MW input. Since our unique process works in this manner, most if not all the CO2 produced by the process is converted into carbon suboxides in the form of humic acid, and is mixed within the ash to produce high grade organic fertilizer. Therefore the process is completely C02 neutral even using coal or peat as base fuel.
Safe Harbor for Forward-Looking Statements: Except for historical information contained herein, statements are forward-looking statements that are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, which may cause the company's actual results in the future periods to differ materially from forecasted projections. These risks and uncertainties include, among other things, energy market volatility, product demand, market competition, and risk inherent to the company's research and development operations.