(Toronto) — Jay Yeo, Solamon President, and Graeme Boyce, CEO, proudly and jointly announced today the company has launched Clean Market™Â to enable partnerships effective immediately from participants in numerous industries and provide the ability to conclude deals at any level.  ”We understand the complexity of utility-scale projects and the amount of development time required,” explains Yeo, “but, due to a few technological advancements, we can now put certain players into specific arenas whereby the net result is a positive gain for all.  In addition to a growing list of solar options, some people believe in geothermal these days and some still find wind attractive, but each will find Clean Marketâ„¢ a hub, to simply spawn new participants and new partnerships.”
The website is located at www.cleanmarket.co whereby people will be invited to interact and in fact contribute their thoughts and ideas, and to publish a regular new bulletin in the future, in addition to a daily radio show, weekly tv show and annual trade show, as well as co-producing industry award presentations and marketing numerous co-branded events targeted at specific communities and audiences that comprise the new energy industry.  Yeo and Boyce emphasized financing models that work in unison with other funding sources also take time to develop, once local land owners and contractors have been sourced and qualified, in addition to utility and infrastructure requirements.
Clean Marketâ„¢ has been set up to connect buyers and sellers and thus create new markets focussed on the safe and secure delivery of renewable energy systems. Â When making the announcement, both Yeo and Boyce emphasized Clean Marketâ„¢ was a brand, and one intended to spread easily while moving across the Sunbelt nations. Â Over the past 18 months, Solamon executives have criss-crossed the Caribbean islands, Central America, Europe and South Asia and discussed with civic and business leaders their energy needs, now and for the next two decades. Â “It was a daunting task,” Yeo admits. “But we were up for it, and were successful in achieving not only a marked degree of penetration in a rapid manner but an on-going invitation to remain at the table and ensure long-term sustainability.”
A year ago, at the CREF conference in Barbados, Solamon’s Boyce and Yeo were joined by SVPs Ainsley Brown and Christian Giles to introduce their growing company to government ministers, finance executives, energy managers and hardware suppliers. Â ”Since that event in particular,” Boyce adds, ” we’ve only scratched the surface in terms of identifying opportunities and each day I discuss solar, as well as the other energy systems. Â There hasn’t been a shortage of excellent conversations related to converting an oil-dependent economy into an energy producer and the options to get from Point A to Point B, but at the end of the day there needs to be a bona-fide project and in any country that starts with PPAs and Permits. Â Clean Market facilitates projects and deals.”
Operating in the Sunbelt, Solamon Energy is managing the development of several mega deals across the Caribbean, Central America, Africa, the Middle East and South Asia. “We offer a straight-forward business model to people who need energy delivered to their doorstep,” concludes Yeo, “and either offer to sell a solution – from designing to commissioning an Apollo Acreâ„¢ – and the client would finance and own the entire project, or arrange turnkey financing, but we would own the system and simply supply electricity to the client for the next 25 years under a pre-approved power purchase agreement.”
Solamon Energy typically offers a ground-mounted solar array of integrated photovoltaic cells over a package of land called the Apollo Acreâ„¢. The company now also designs and installs custom solutions with local partners to provide roof-mounted and parking lot systems that are augmented by micro wind turbine technology and other innovative features, including geothermal.
About Solamon:Â Solamon Energy Corp. sells integrated arrays of ground-mounted and rooftop photovoltaic cells. These solar power plants are connected by cable to varied transmission equipment, including converters, inverters and batteries, utilizing 5 acres of land per unit; each unit is called an Apollo Acreâ„¢. Additionally, it is expected the company’s business activities will spin-off many jobs locally, given engineering requirements, construction, unit commissioning and subsequent maintenance.