Craig Bouchard is Using science to reduce environmental pollution.
Craig Bouchard is a businessman, an author, and a philanthropist who uses science to provide environmentally friendly solutions. With excellent entrepreneurial skills, he has successfully established three companies dealing with metals. He found Esmark, a company that had $4 million in revenue and grew to over $4 billion by 2008. The growth rose the company through the ranking to the leading appreciating stock in the 2008 NYSE. He is an alumnus of the Illinois State University where he got his Bachelors degree I 1977 followed by an honorary degree in 1981 from the same university. With extensive business knowledge, he has managed to be a New York RIET board member, part of the trustees’ board in the University of Boston and the Montana University foundation.
Craig Bouchard achievements and Awards;
Craig Bouchard joined the more fabulous Chicago Leadership Forum as an alumnus and was among the top performers in the Ernst and Young Award for the best entrepreneur in 2005. He has a USA patent for the production of Dry-Type coolers. Craig Bouchard is a great author, and he has been recognized as the best selling author in New York. His book on leadership and shareholder values have been ranked the top in the best-selling list in Barnes and Noble as well as being among the top ten in the bestseller list in the New York Times ranking category.
With Craig wrote “The Adventures of Ai”, a children project book that was the most popular in 2014. The book was internationally demanded, which led to the production of translated versions in Arabic, Spanish, Mandarin, and Japanese benefiting close to twenty charities around the world.
Development of Ecolution KWh;
Ecolution kWh is the first company that focuses on the conversion of kinetic energy to electric energy—the kinetic energy produced by train cars during motion to reduce environmental pollution. The company’s operation is patented in the United States with pending patents in China, Germany, South Korea, and Japan. The electricity that is produced can be used for the creation of rolling grid electricity, powering transport refrigeration units, or can be transferred to a grid for further distribution.