We are now located at No. 3 Exchange Place, Edinburgh EH3 8BL. Please click here for a map.
We are also excited to give you a sneak preview of our new upcoming product, watch this space for information soon!



We are now located at No. 3 Exchange Place, Edinburgh EH3 8BL. Please click here for a map.
We are also excited to give you a sneak preview of our new upcoming product, watch this space for information soon!



(Reuters) – Britain needs to invest more in low-carbon technologies to reach its goal of cutting harmful greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent by 2050, a climate advisory body to the government said Monday.
The UK aims to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent by 2050 from 1990 levels to help fight climate change.
As part of this goal, low-carbon technologies will be vital to generate cleaner forms of electricity for electric vehicles, heating and delivering energy-efficient buildings, the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) said in a report.
“Without government support, a range of essential low-carbon technologies are likely to get stuck in a so-called ‘valley of death’, where development is curtailed, and will fail to make it to market,” it said in the report.
The Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) said on Friday it was reducing its low-carbon expenditure by 34 million pounds ($52.15 million) as part of a savings program across government departments to reduce the public deficit.
DECC said it would spend over 150 million pounds on low- carbon technology this year.
“It is unfortunate there has been that cut. It is a move in the wrong direction but it is specific to this year. Our focus is not the short-term but what happens in October in the (government’s) comprehensive spending review,” David Kennedy, chief executive of the CCC, said at a briefing in London.
The CCC estimates total government funding for low-carbon development during 2009-2010 amounts to 550 million pounds, which is the minimum amount needed to avoid missing the UK’s carbon budgets and opportunities to build a greener economy.
Up to five times more public support for energy research, development and deployment (RD&D) is needed, Kennedy added.
LAGGING BEHIND
Britain’s spending on energy RD&D as a percentage of gross domestic product lags behind other developed countries.
“By international standards our spending is very low here. The U.S. spends three times as much as we do relative to GDP on low-carbon innovation,” Kennedy told the BBC’s Radio Four early Monday.
To support the development of technology, the UK needs to focus on developing and deploying offshore wind, wave and tidal power, carbon capture and storage (CCS) including gas, smart grids and meters, electric vehicles and aviation.
“The UK should also deploy nuclear power, advanced insulation technologies, CCS for industry and heat pumps,” the committee said in the report.
It should also be investing in the research and development of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, third generation solar photovoltaic technology, electricity storage and advanced bio-fuel technology.
Currently, the funding which supports low-carbon innovation is complex and difficult for business to navigate. The government needs to strengthen the framework to ensure public money is well spent, the CCC added.
Having joined the Scottish Hydrogen & Fuel Cell Association in April, HMC Ltd. went to All-Energy in Aberdeen for the 2-day exhibition and conference on 19-20 May. The company shared space on the SHFCA stand and we had 2 of our own converted cars on display outside at the main entrance. Fortunately, we had fabulous weather over the 2 days and a constant stream of interested visitors, some of which have developed into orders and agency agreements and partnerships. We will be reporting on these developments as they progress.
As a result of the huge interest in our product at All-Energy and other developments, the company is now accelerating it’s plans to open manufacturing plants around the world, with projects going forward in Scotland, Germany, Romania, Australia and 2 in the USA (E coast, W coast). Other enquiries have come from the Middle East and S. America.
On the back of our success at All-Energy, Hybrid Motor Conversion Ltd. has booked space at All-Energy Australia in Melbourne, October 6-7. Look for us on stand E6!
http://www.all-energy.com.au

Tom Read and Mohammed Afzal meet Chris Huhne, the new UK Energy Minister at All-Energy in Aberdeen
Ayman Kassem, Founder and CEO of Hybrid Motor Conversion Ltd. returned from a trip to America last week bringing some very welcome news! HMC Ltd. has secured exclusive world-wide manufacturing and sales rights to the HHO technology system that we use in our hydrogen conversions, including a brand new proprietary on-board microprocessor. Following the phenomenal interest that was generated by our presence at All-Energy in Aberdeen (19/20 May), it has become evident to everyone involved that the time for hydrogen enhanced combustion has arrived and in a big way. HEC is destined to become the option of choice for everyone serious about reducing their environmental impact, whether through concern for the environment or because air quality standards and targets demand it. HMC Ltd. will soon embark on a world-wide manufacturing platform with plants in Scotland, the USA and Australia, creating thousands of skilled jobs and saving millions of tonnes of carbon emissions.
Watch this space for further announcements shortly!
Members of the Hybrid Motor Conversion team will be attending this exciting event in the next few days and out of the 450 exhibiting companies we are the ONLY one to exhibit such a product!
Please see the link below for full details of what we’re doing:
http://www.all-energy.co.uk/What_they_are_showing.html?exID=35054
We’re very excited to have you visiting our website.
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Thanks from dropping by, the Hybrid Motor Conversion Team.