Green-On-Demand, LLP is a new up-and-coming corporation headquartered in Virginia Beach, Virginia, whose primary mission is to bring the inexhaustible wealth of nature's primary fuel source (hydrogen) to the world in a completely non-polluting form that can easily be used by all internal combustion engines (ICE).

The Green-On-Demand project group has been working diligently for the last several years on a method to separate the two hydrogen atoms and the single oxygen atom from molecular water without the inherent limitations that has stymied other inventors and scientist for centuries. After a lot of work, and the advent of technological breakthroughs such as nanotechnology, the discoverers of this technology have developed an elegant new solution to this age-old electrolysis dilemma. Currently, our prototypes show that a given amount of electrical power applied to our units will produce in the neighborhood of 12 times as much hydrogen gas as a typical Brown's Gas generator, currently being pursued and marketed by almost all of the hydrogen-based companies on the Internet. Most of these companies tout their Brown’s Gas process as being technologically superior to their competition's products, but they all face the same obstacle: the Brown's Gas process has been in the Public Domain since 1874, and therefore is not patentable.

The Green-On-Demand (G.O.D.™) process is fundamentally different from the Brown's Gas process, and can be used to generate enough hydrogen gas from plain water using conventional, off-the-shelf, electrical sources to run virtually any internal combustion engine on the market without the need for storage. It is our nanotechnology-inspired discovery that is so novel that it is in the process of being awarded several international patents.


All knowledge is to be used in the manner that will give help and assistance to others, and the desire is that the laws of the Creator be manifested in the physical world… For as given, the greatest service to God is service to his creatures…

– Edgar Cayce (reading 254-17)