A quote from Steven Kwast's speech at the Hillsdale College December 5, 2019:
"This technology can be built today
To deliver any human being to any place on earth within the hour
To deliver wifi from space where you never need a cell tower to connect
To deliver energy from space where you never have to plug your phone in; it trickle charges and you can use that energy over time.
It can be applied to cars, to houses …
The technology of Edison and Tesla that we live with in our energy environment, our paradigm today: is expensive it's dangerous and it's wasteful…"
He is referring to technology that was in development during the Bush Administration but was ultimately 'sold out' by the Clinton Administration:
"During the following two years, we made very important progress on that development effort. In fact, most if not all our currently operational ballistic missile defense (BMD) systems trace their initial acquisition heritage to that period. But those for the space-based components, particularly Brilliant Pebbles, were scuttled by the Clinton administration, and never since have been revived."
https://www.newsmax.com/henryfcooper/george-hw-bush-sdi-program-brilliant-pebbles/2018/12/03/id/892906/
Brilliant Pebbles, it seems, is not new; how it translates in to free energy I have yet to tie together. However, one word that I learned today: Cislunar Space.
Cislunar space (alternatively, cis-lunar space) is the volume within the Moon's orbit, or a sphere formed by rotating that orbit. Volumes within that such as low earth orbit (LEO) are distinguished by other names. Practically, cislunar space is a useful label for "the volume between geostationary orbit and the moon's orbit". Beyond cislunar space lies translunar space.
Cis-lunar is Latin for "on this side of the moon" but also "not beyond the moon". Therefore, one might regard the Lagrange points L4 and L5, the stable regions of the Moon's Trojan points, as cislunar, but in practice they are so interesting as to be likely to be talked about in their own right.
https://space.fandom.com/wiki/Cislunar_space
highfrontier.org/oldarchive/Archive/hf/The%20Rise%20and%20Fall%20of%20Brilliant%20Pebbles%20-Baucom.pdf