Help Nkrumah, a Jamaican Inventor and my brother, save the environment from further Climate change impacts. He has a new environmental invention never before seen that captures carbon emission from vehicles and he needs your help urgently to get his invention into the world! Hi, my name is Ikeme, and I am raising funds for my inventor brother, Nkrumah Fong to expand his small test workshop so he can test his invention which is a new environmental device that captures emission from motor vehicles and will help solve the climate change crisis. Meet Nkrumah Fong, my older brother. Nkrumah has invented a ground-breaking invention that deserves to be funded. Nkrumah has invented a device that captures Tailpipe emissions right from the vehicle! It’s called Vector 1, short for Vehicular Tailpipe Exhaust Absorber Model 1. A first in the world and game-changing technology that may actually help with our Climate change crisis affecting the world. With Global tempuratures surging, Nkrumah believes only direct carbon capture techs can make the change needed to reduce impacts seen now. But he now needs your help, you see, Nkrumah currently has a small laboratory/mini-workshop that he built in his small apartment during the Pandemic caused by COVID-19. Nkrumah is now at a point were he needs to buy testing equipment and expand his workshop to do the necessary tests needed to get his invention approved for use. He needs your help to get the device properly tested using a few costly equipments and he needs to expand his workshop from out of his small apartment, which does not have enough space to have the equipment, team members and to do the necessary testing. Nkrumah is already at the end of the prototyping phase for his invention, but needs your help in bringing his new invention into th the world. Background of my brother Growing up in Jamaica with my five siblings, we lived in a small home with our father. Though we didn't have much, we found comfort in each other's company. I was the second child, and our older sister later became a migrant US Army veteran living in the US. Our dad, known as Willy, was a History and English teacher. As he pursued his Master's degree, our family's life improved, but unfortunately, it led to my parents' separation just before high school. My mom went her own way, and our dad took care of all five of us. Growing up in Jamaica was enjoyable, especially with good parents, and the country's beauty and activities added to the experience. The split affected us, especially my bro, as he was dyslexic and faced challenges in school. He struggled with learning and often got teased by others, but that changed over time. However, things changed when bro discovered his passion for reading and the sciences as our dad's books were always an enviting feature for exploring various subjects, such as the planet and space, a fun thing for Nkrumah. He developed a love for the environment and learning and became one of the brightest students in our extended family. He went on to pursue a bachelor's degree in Applied Chemistry and Mathematics at the University of the West Indies, but I didn't follow the traditional studying methods. Instead, he was an inventor and learned through hands-on approaches. During high school, he had a conversation about global warming with his teacher, which sparked a lifelong mission to make a positive impact on the environment. In college, he became a mentee to a local inventor, Richard Walker and focused on research related to Waste Vegetable Oil and Algae for Biofuel production. After seven years in the field, he decided to explore further and completed his post-graduate degree in Environmental Management. He continued to work as an R&D chemist until the COVID-19 pandemic hit, which gave him the opportunity to spend more time at home. Nkrumah, for the first time, built his own lab or workshop in his rented apartment to do his own experiments. After three years of research and prototype building, Nkrumah built a never-before-seen invention. He designed and built "Vector 1," which is the world's first and only "Vehicular Tailpipe Exhaust Absorber Tube Model 1. Yeah, I know that name, but I told you Nkrumah is different. A device so revolutionary that it is potentially a contender to reduce the CO2 emissions from motor vehicles worldwide. With the support of the Jamaican Government and a grant from the Development Bank of Jamaica, Nkrumah now has the opportunity to file for patents so he can get the technology built and sold worldwide and save the planet. As you can see, his lab his small and is now impeding himself and his team from finanlising Vector-1. So Please help Nkrumah expand his workshop, get the much-needed testing equipment, and get this technology into the world! CERES Labs Facebook page
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