…Rick Carrier became the first allied soldier to discover the Buchenwald concentration camp. The next day, April 11, 1945, he marched into the camp with Patton’s Third Army and liberated the prisoners.
More than a half century later, and after leading a successful effort to protect the American bald eagle, he was the first person to submit an offshore wind application to the Minerals Management Service.

Rick wanted nothing from the government except the opportunity to demonstrate his green hydrogen concept with a single turbine in the Atlantic. He did not ask for any subsidies or research grants. This war hero from the greatest generation just wanted to continue doing great things for the country and the world.
Unfortunately, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 had yet to be enacted, and the framework for permitting such projects had not been established. While we tried to find a way to make the project possible, the legal obstacles were too great.
It was an honor to have worked with Rick on his green hydrogen initiative. RIP.
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