Global 8 Environmental Technologies Inc. (G8ET) is a publically-traded U.S. company dedicated to providing solutions for the health and recovery of our environment through the development and operation of world class Environmental Technology Centers.
We can organize financing for our wholly-owned subsidiary, Global 8 Environmental Management, Inc. (G8EM) to build and operate Environmental Technology Centers through our subsidiaries based around the four elements of nature: Global 8 BioOrganics, Inc. (Earth),Global AirFlow, Inc. (Air), Global 8 BioEnergy, Inc. (Fire), and Global 8 WaterFlow, Inc. (Water).
Global 8’s Environmental Technology Centers can be custom-built and tailored to the specific environmental and energy needs, history, and culture of their geographic location. They reflect our integrated approach to solving environmental challenges. We can bring together extensive engineering experience, access to international funding sources, proprietary technologies, and innovative business strategies to create effective solutions.
We can provide Environmental Technology Centers to development partners anywhere in the World.
Contact us for more information.
Email: .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) •
Phone: 1-760-390-8351, or 1-866-373-7881
Shareholders and Investors please call
Jeff Hallman at: 1-888-295-1092
EARTH
Global 8 BioOrganics is dedicated to the collection, recycling, processing and disposal of solid waste.
AIR
Global 8 AirFlow is dedicated to the reduction of air pollution and harnessing wind energy for environmentally friendly production of electricity.
FIRE
Global 8 BioEnergy is dedicated to the destruction of harmful greenhouse gases and the production of renewable energy from methane gas, geothermal sources and solar power.
WATER
Global 8 WaterFlow is dedicated to the generation of hydroelectric power, desalination of sea water and purification of drinking water, sewage and contaminated rivers and lakes.
Global 8’s Acting CEO, Daniel Wolf, has been impacting the world around him for decades.
His Harvard Law studies emphasized international law, international contracts, and negotiation; at the University of California San Diego he won fellowships from the Fulbright Foundation, the Tinker Foundation, and the University of California MEXUS Consortium. His undergraduate work at Reed College in Portland, Oregon, included heavy doses of Economics and Physics, and he won a fellowship from the Thomas J. Watson, Jr. Foundation for research in India. His background has given him great depth of experience and numerous business and government contacts around the world.
He was the founding Director of the TransBorder Institute at the University of San Diego (1994-98), where he also taught political science.
The San Diego Union-Tribune’s international editor wrote that Wolf’s monograph “Undocumented Aliens and Crime: the case of San Diego County” played a key role in ending a wave of public and government overreaction to the perceived public-safety threat presented by undocumented workers. The Ford Foundation added that it was one of the “best publications” of the Center for US-Mexico Studies.
Mr Wolf’s studies of the Nicaraguan electoral system is still utilized by social scientists and attorneys researching that country’s electoral processes.
He was a consultant to the U.S. Attorney for Southern district of California and practiced as an architectural designer in Oregon, where he was recognized for engineering quality and innovation in passive solar architecture.
As the founder/President of “Citizens of Oregon for Decent Housing” (1972-75) Mr Wolf drafted and circulated a ballot initiative to reform Oregon’s landlord/tenant law, operated the nation’s first landlord-tenant hot-line, and lobbied passage of a landmark Residential Landlord and Tenant Act through the Oregon legislature.
His favorite non-profit project is Piclopedia, which utilizes easy-to-understand drawings to make low-tech DIY farm inventions available to developing world farmers and artisans via the internet.
Mr Wolf is more recently known for his many articles and speeches about the problem of land mines left over from the third world’s many wars. He founded the non-profit organization Terra Segura International and invented the “Armadillo”, a decidedly low-tech mine clearing device that was designed to cost only $15,000 US to build and to clear an acre of land for less than $700. (The US Congress almost funded this device in 2002, but instead opted for more expensive high-tech solutions whose operational costs are between $3,000 and $15,000 an acre.)
Daniel Wolf has been a Director of the Fulbright Academy of Science and Technology since 2009. His Fulbright was in Nicaragua 1990-91, where he conducted research on the institutionalization of democracy as part of his graduate studies at the University of California, San Diego. He recently chaired a panel on Human Rights at the 6th Annual Conference of the Fulbright Academy of Science and Technology in Heidelberg (March 2011).
Daniel Wolf believes that, “Global 8 Environmental Technologies can make a strong contribution to the well being and success of people everywhere on this globe. Our shareholders, clients and communities will benefit from our leadership, our innovation, and our business strategies that seek to benefit all parties.”