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SuperCloud Energy Partners with Gaia Eco Developments to Build GPOD and Sodium-Ion Battery Facility in Missouri

By FisherVista
SuperCloud Energy and Gaia Eco Developments are establishing a major manufacturing facility in Missouri for GPOD systems and sodium-ion batteries, creating a real-world demonstration of zero-emission, off-grid power for large-scale infrastructure.

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SuperCloud Energy Partners with Gaia Eco Developments to Build GPOD and Sodium-Ion Battery Facility in Missouri

SuperCloud Energy, a clean energy innovator, has announced a strategic partnership with Gaia Eco Developments to build its primary GPOD (Green Power On Demand) manufacturing and sodium-ion battery production facility at Gaia's flagship eco-development campus in Missouri. The facility, which will encompass approximately one million square feet, is designed to produce advanced sodium-ion energy storage systems and assemble GPOD energy platforms, positioning it as a global hub for next-generation energy technology.

The partnership enables SuperCloud to manufacture and deploy GPOD systems within a live, integrated infrastructure environment. GPOD is a containerized, next-generation energy platform capable of delivering continuous, zero-emission electricity without reliance on fossil fuels. Each 40-foot GPOD container generates approximately 6MW of electricity per day, enough to power more than 200 average U.S. homes, while operating quietly with minimal maintenance. By integrating GPOD directly into the site's infrastructure, the development will serve as a real-world example of how advanced manufacturing, data infrastructure, and other energy-intensive operations can run on reliable, zero-emission power without traditional grid dependency.

Jim Devericks, Founder and CEO of SuperCloud Energy, highlighted the significance of the partnership: "The Gaia partnership represents exactly the type of real-world deployment GPOD was built for. After Ryan and the Gaia team saw GPOD in action, they recognized its ability to support large-scale, continuous power needs at a commercial level, including those of the entire campus. The campus had originally been planned around wind and solar, but GPOD presented a much bigger opportunity. Not only will we be manufacturing our own sodium-ion batteries and assembling GPOD systems on-site, the facility itself will run on GPOD power."

Ryan Sands, CEO of Gaia Eco Developments, emphasized the strategic alignment: "From the beginning, Gaia was designed to bring together breakthrough technologies that can help redefine how sustainable infrastructure is built. When we saw GPOD demonstrated, it became clear that this technology had the potential to power the entire campus while supporting the advanced manufacturing and data infrastructure we are building here."

The Missouri campus is being developed as a closed-loop, zero-reliance, regenerative ecosystem integrating energy generation, water treatment, food production, AI data infrastructure, and advanced manufacturing technologies. The project's design emphasizes self-sufficient infrastructure where technologies operate together to produce clean energy, water, and other critical resources while minimizing waste and external utility dependence. Over time, Gaia's planned Discovery Park, education, and media components are expected to make the campus a high-visibility demonstration environment for next-generation infrastructure.

For SuperCloud Energy, this partnership represents a significant step toward scaling global production of GPOD systems while demonstrating their ability to power major infrastructure developments. Once operational, the Missouri facility is expected to become one of the primary production centers for SuperCloud's GPOD systems, supporting deployment across industrial, infrastructure, military, and remote energy applications worldwide. The collaboration underscores the growing importance of sodium-ion battery technology and off-grid energy solutions in meeting the demands of large-scale, zero-emission power needs.

For more details, access the original release at newmediawire.com.

FisherVista

FisherVista

@fishervista