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Posted On: 11/04/2019 2:57:34 PM
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NetworkNewsBreaks – OriginClear, Inc. (OCLN) CEO Aims to Drive Disruption of Big Water
OriginClear’s (OTC: OCLN) CEO Riggs Eckelberry was featured in a recent article by Jeremy Ryan Slate of Grit Daily(TM) discussing Eckelberry’s plans to drive the disruption of Big Water, a trillion-dollar industry that has fallen behind the times and is affecting the health of millions. With centralized water systems not coping with demand, as well as the worsening of water quality, he has a goal for OriginClear to be the driving force to take the water industry from a $1 trillion to a $5 trillion dollar market. Likening the potential of decentralization in the water treatment industry to the PC revolution in the second half of the twentieth century, Eckelberry states in the article, “When we had mainframes, everything was centralized. Then we had PCs. And guess what? All the value, first of all, skyrocketed. It’s trillions of dollars versus millions and billions. And so many, many, more PCs and the value of all those PC’s is now at the businesses and is no longer at the central Mainframe. Very similar here instead of being concentrated at some communal water treatment center, which you still need. But it would only then do the basics now.”
Please see full disclaimers on the NetworkNewsWire website applicable to all content provided by NNW, wherever published or re-published: http://NNW.fm/Disclaimer
OriginClear’s (OTC: OCLN) CEO Riggs Eckelberry was featured in a recent article by Jeremy Ryan Slate of Grit Daily(TM) discussing Eckelberry’s plans to drive the disruption of Big Water, a trillion-dollar industry that has fallen behind the times and is affecting the health of millions. With centralized water systems not coping with demand, as well as the worsening of water quality, he has a goal for OriginClear to be the driving force to take the water industry from a $1 trillion to a $5 trillion dollar market. Likening the potential of decentralization in the water treatment industry to the PC revolution in the second half of the twentieth century, Eckelberry states in the article, “When we had mainframes, everything was centralized. Then we had PCs. And guess what? All the value, first of all, skyrocketed. It’s trillions of dollars versus millions and billions. And so many, many, more PCs and the value of all those PC’s is now at the businesses and is no longer at the central Mainframe. Very similar here instead of being concentrated at some communal water treatment center, which you still need. But it would only then do the basics now.”
Please see full disclaimers on the NetworkNewsWire website applicable to all content provided by NNW, wherever published or re-published: http://NNW.fm/Disclaimer
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