CIG Off-Grid Silo-Farms
Yield Risk. Investments
CIG Off-Grid Silo-Farms
TWO PART PROCESS
Safe Off-Grid Energy
Safety procedures in place with a simple Energy Safety protocol for live Energy with Emergency Safety System
Safe Silo-Farm for advanced Verticle Farming
Choice in product unit for growth & use once packaged for sale to buyers in different markets
HIGH RISK - HIGH ROLL
Cocaine as a Product. High Risk illegal VS Legal opportunities
636,500 Coca leaves required for every 1-4 months in harvest
To cultivate the coca plant, which grows as a shrub or tree, well-grown cuttings or seed can be used. Between six and 18 months after planting, the elliptical leaves can be harvested. The plants continue to produce for up to 30 years
With that being said you require 636,500 Coca leaves so you have to plan a growth change-out every six - eighteen months which allows for a transitioning back up so you can cultivate harvesting 636,500 Coca leaves every 1-4 months providing returns with re-usable gasoline or equivalent & Sulfuric Acid with a Point A - Point B partial automated process for your $15-18 or up to $20 Million in returns sold at $22 Million & 35-39 Millionnby the time it hits the streets as a supplier in a heirarchy devide yeuld spread out effort
Widows U not N or L has allegedly done this with their separate Retail efforts falling outside CIG, Space, The Shield, M.D.E & Sad Planet with Sub-Brand investments
Profits with other connected efforts stage at $75-110 Million annually with around 5-10 splitting in different heirarchiss then others enjoying under $10 Million from with funds often then filtered through retail & other businesses & investments
INDOOR TROPICS OFF-GRID ENERGY
Fast grown high yeild cocaine
300-500 kilos of coca leaves for 1 kilo of cocaine in the nasty process of
https://youtube.com/shorts/rlE5oozWg3w?si=quc9NR3YQtE18P7j
This is the lucky number. Columbian Off-Grid plant boxing with partial safe automation. Bricks of cocaine off assembly ine quarterly going to didn't know we were doing that
Retail dollars understand. Cocaine didn't understand. Fuel filters & funny business didn't understand. Disregarding alleged black market funny business
"Crazy idea"
1 kilo. Now a one kilo bag is 2.2 lbs. We need over 2800 lbs per quarter for a small operation
1273 Kilograms. Kilos. Every 4 months or more per a 4 month term so you earn your $15-18 of 22 Million in profits (or more) before it in layers hits the street at 35-39 Million
Gasoline Substitutes Required to Split in Cocaine Manufacturing Process not Cutting of final product if not pure
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jun/14/quarter-of-colombias-fuel-cocaine-industry
636,500 Coca leaves required
Coca leaves to Gasoline & Sulfuric Acid filtering form Cocaine Paste then processed into Power for Cocoane Snort & or to Cook into Rock on Ash for Crack Cocaine unlike similar Substitutes or other substances
Stationary Shipping Container Energy
https://cmbennettbrothers.blogspot.com/2025/06/cm-stationary-shipping-container.html
High Yeild Investments - Silo-Farming
https://artsmusicandfilm.blogspot.com/2025/07/cig-connected-interests-void-interest.html
OPIOID FENTANYL
Prices. The average price of a gram of non-pharmaceutical fentanyl is U.S.$1,470.4
Now cost to product each gram & safely press NEW & OLD use pills safely for use from Point A - B then profit Yeild before traffickers & sellers sell to users is an important equation
Cost for manufacturers are likley under $125 of over $1400 per gram & traffickers plus end dealers earn 10-25%. Manufacturers profits are often atleast $400-500 per gram. That is averages of over $400,000 per kilo (kilogram)
You require 50 Kilograms fentanyl at $400 per gram returns to compete with Cocaine with 636,500 Coca leaves required (1273 Kilos of cocaine) for your $15-20 Million return (United States Dollars)
End seller profit is important for Manufacturers which then transfer to traffickers for end sellers & users
A face mask like for Covid 19 is good especially with different virus or flu strains then Fentanyl guns separate from wireless or traditional which could shock like a taser yet Pneumonia stains can also be spread like Sars, H1N1 or Covid 19
DRUG MANUFACTURERS NOT TRAFFICKING SMUGGLERS
Widows U are a Ghost annual not greedy train with around $75-$125 Million in total annual profits separate from L & N yet hard to catch
Legitimate pharmaceuticals for legal options cna be done in the same way with variable profit spread for High Yields for different third party buyers & branding
"Medications not Drugs" if you will taking it down to a breakdown. Point A to B in how it's made
Dr Sydney N Bennett is neutral on the durg trade & management of because people west to use & people what to supply
Opioid. Opium. Fentanyl
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is made in a lab from precursor chemicals instead of from poppies. It is 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine. According to experts, 2 milligrams of fentanyl is generally considered a lethal dose for most people. This is equivalent to a few grains of salt.
Fentanyl was developed as a powerful pain relief drug for people with end-of-life cancers. In a medical setting, it can be administered via injection, patch, or lozenge. Clandestinely produced fentanyl is usually a powder added into other drugs (cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine even marijuana) or pressed into counterfeit pills that can look like OxyContin, Percocet, Vicodin, Xanax, Alprazolam, Adderall, Ecstasy, Molly (MDMA), or other pills/tablets.
Because Fentanyl is cheap and so highly addictive, it creates a much greater profit margin. The occasional loss of one or two users are not detrimental to their bottom line because they know that another addict can be easily created.
People can also develop a tolerance for Opioids like Fentanyl requiring them to use more and more to get high. This causes drug dealers and cartels to make stronger pills with more Fentanyl. However, these stronger pills may kill newer users who have not developed such a tolerance. In addition, some dealers intentionally add deadly amounts to some pills because the death of a user is like an advertisement that that dealer has really strong drugs.
Finally, these drugs are being mixed and cooked in open air "labs" in rural parts of China and Mexico. These labs are not being run by individuals with an interest in quality control and scientific measures. They use large vats over inconsistent heating elements.
CONTROLLED PILL PRESSING
A chemist tested effort then measured amounts with cutting material for safe ingestion is required when pressing pills for NEW users then OLD users with a controlled effort & more than one is a lethal dose if a time-frame is not followed before re-use safely
Standardized management of all pharmaceutical & drug substances with information on proper use pertaining to your daily life then diet - exercise then options to veen off then return without causing short & long term health effects is improtnat just line safe tabaco use
Standards do kot exist which leads to deaths or injuries like woth anything else you cna breath in or injest
Education & standards then safe use practices while manufacturers & traffickers then sellers are an important effort like users
ALICE IN WONDERLAND
One Pill. A small dust chip from could be lethal or the entire pill not strong enough depending on how not is manufactured or cut
How it is made. National Geographic
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lYy9vzvhwOI&pp=ygUTZmVudGFueWwgcHJvZHVjdGlvbg%3D%3D
NEUROLOGICAL TECHNOLOGY STANDARDS
The NB-OT Labs. Carries out. Holds subject candidate to what they do to them & attacks the subject candidate which is unmanned to partially to fully manned then held accountable for what the Non-Standardized Lab does in the past & present then years later
Back to Illicit Drugs
In the height of the opioid epidemic, a kilogram of heroin could be purchased for approximately $6,000 and sold for appropriately $80,000. For the same purchase price, a kilogram of illegally imported fentanyl could be sold for approximately $1.6 million, then cut into heroin and other drugs to expand their volume.
Some black-market drug makers create new fentanyl analogs to avoid classification as illegal, get around policy restrictions on manufacturing, and evade detection in standard drug tests. It can be difficult to determine if pills were legally produced for pharmaceutical distribution or illegally produced for illegal drug sales. Counterfeit prescription medications, such as a fentanyl-laced Xany-bar or counterfeit Xanax, were reportedly made at a “pill mill” or illegal pill press.
The availability of black-market fentanyl and fentanyl analogs led to a U.S. opioid epidemic that continues to cause thousands of overdose deaths each year and destroy families and communities in the process. Harm from fentanyl analogs also extends to first responders. A lethal dose of carfentanyl, a fentanyl analog, is about the size of the head of a pin, requiring the full protection of hazmat suits. Breathing in like a respiratory wave or gun would be lethal
Fentanyl was created in 1959 by Dr. Paul Janssen as an intravenous surgical analgesic. The drug is 50–100 times more potent than morphine. Because of its strength, the drug was rarely used except in hospital operating rooms or on large animals.
In the 1990s, a new transdermal skin patch for fentanyl was developed to treat chronic pain. The non-surgical delivery mechanism offered some unique advantages over other drugs, including quick onset of action, relatively few cardiovascular risks, and low histamine release. These attributes made it a good prescription choice for some patients, because it reduced some of the risks of medical complications that other pain relievers have.
Lozenge, lollipop, tablet, and nasal spray versions soon followed, under such names as Actiq®, Duragesic®, and Sublimaze®. The ease and effectiveness of these user-friendly delivery methods led to abuse, and the fentanyl analog market was born. Criminal manufacturers began creating designer drugs—analogs with modified chemical structures—to avoid identification as a controlled substance.
From 1999 to 2011, the death rate in the United States due to opioid analgesics nearly quadrupled, then began to skyrocket around 2013–2014. This timing coincided with the first detection of illicit pills containing fentanyl, fentanyl analogs, and other novel synthetic opioids such as U-47700.
Warning signs of the fentanyl-fueled opioid crisis first emerged in the Northeast. William R Brownfield, Assistant Secretary for the Office of National Drug Control Policy, warned that Massachusetts was “a preview of coming attractions.” Across the United States, drug abuse, addiction, and overdoses were responsible for 50,000 deaths in 2015, the majority of which involved an opioid.
In 2017, the President issued Executive Order 13784, establishing a Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis. Many of the 45,000 drug-related deaths that year were determined to have resulted from abuse, addiction, and overdoses due to fentanyl.
A major contributor to the opioid drug crisis was availability. Modern internet e-commerce enabled individual players, small-scale drug trafficking organizations (DTOs), and large-scale DTOs with their own production facilities to flood the illicit drug market with fentanyl. The drugs could be purchased and delivered through standard mail to the United States from places as far away as China. In many cases, drug users and mid-level dealers have no idea where or how their drugs are manufactured or what they might be cut with.
Carfentanyl, a fentanyl analog, is an odorless white powder. It is one of the most potent opioids known and used commercially. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, carfentanyl is approximately 10,000 times more potent than morphine, 100 times more than fentanyl, and 50 times more than heroin. Marketed under the trade name Wildnil®, it is used as a general anesthetic for very large animals.
In July 2016, carfentanyl was found cut into heroin and fentanyl sold on the streets of Ohio. In a span of three days, 35 overdoses and 6 deaths occurred there. In the same year, in Anoka County, Minnesota, six overdoses and two deaths occurred in a 12-hour period in October 2016. These instances and similar cases throughout the nation pointed to single batches of fentanyl-laced heroin as the culprit for dramatic spikes in overdose cases.
Most opioid users do not intentionally seek out fentanyl analogs. To unsuspecting customers, the drugs can look like legal opioids or benzodiazepines for pain relief. And once a person is exposed to a higher-toxicity drug, the brain chemistry alters further, and the user will seek out the most potent form of the drug. At the height of addiction, some users are unable to discern risk and are willing to go to any length to obtain the drug, including boiling fentanyl patches to extract the drug for injection or ingestion. And if a user is new to taking opioids, the risk of overdose is even higher because their bodies have no tolerance to the drug.
Fentanyl analogs, including fentanyl-laced heroin, come in many flavors, with street names such as white heroin, Perc-O-Pops, Chiclets, Apache, China Girl, White China, Dance Fever, Jackpot, Murder 8, TNT, Tango and Cash, Friend, Goodfella, and Redrum (murder spelled backward). The sheer variety of the drug, including emerging combinations, make toxicology testing and accurate death reporting extremely challenging.
Investigations into drug overdoses have shown the difficulty in identifying whether drugs were commercially or illegally produced. For example, carfentanyl and other analogs do not show up on traditional opioid toxicology testing. And specific testing for these substances is not routinely performed. An investigation may show all the scene indications and autopsy findings of an opioid overdose death, but simple toxicology tests can still be negative for opioids. in many states, medical examiners are often too overwhelmed by the numbers to do the testing to determine which analog was involved.
The toll of drug abuse and overdoses extends far wider than deaths, which in 2019 reached nearly 50,000. The costs to families, communities, and emergency response in terms of dollars, psychological, and health effects are incalculable. Nipping the problem in the bud—keeping illicit drugs from reaching the market—is critical for stemming the tide of illegal drug activity and protecting the nation from the scourge of fentanyl analogs.
As part of the federal response to EO 13784, the Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate established a collaboration among U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the United States Coast Guard, other federal agencies, and first responders. Their goal is twofold: (1) to identify and develop improved fentanyl detection capabilities, including standards and advanced rapid detection technologies and analytics, and (2) to increase capacity to disrupt the supply of drugs being smuggled into the United States.
Synthetic opioids present immense challenges to detection, particularly in the vast infrastructure that enables speedy and high-volume legitimate trade. From shipping docks and airports to border crossings and mailrooms, smugglers go to great lengths to hide their drugs in the flow of legal commerce.
Dogs with their keen sense of smell have been trained for a variety of U.S. security and emergency response settings for more than 50 years. The first drug-sniffing dogs were put into service in the mid-1960s and are now regularly seen in cargo terminals, airports, mail delivery and sorting centers, and even schools.
But training and maintenance associated with sniffer dog teams is expensive. And dogs and their handlers can only take so much. They can get burned out, or worse, suffer health effects from the chemicals and fumes associated with illicit drugs such as fentanyl analogs. Even a minute amount of drug-to-skin contact can be deadly.
In the last decade, technologies for chemical detection have been developed to try and replicate the sensitivity of a dog’s nose. In a dog, the part of the brain used to detect and analyze smells is also about 40 times more efficient than humans.
Specialized laboratory equipment and analytical techniques such as GC-MS (gas chromatography mass spectrometry) and LC-MS/MS (liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry) can identify regulated fentanyl compounds. As emerging new compounds appear on the market, nontargeted testing can be aided with LC-HRMS (liquid chromatography high-resolution mass spectrometry).
But it is one thing to test samples in a laboratory, using known spectra libraries and large instruments. The testing process also takes time—too much time for a field setting.
Two early models of handheld chemical analyzers, or spectrometers, came out in quick succession. TruNarc debuted in 2012, followed by TacticID in 2014. The compact, lightweight, and robust devices have simple push button controls and work by scanning. For illicit or dangerous substances such as fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, or methamphetamine, the screen turns red. Drug precursors or chemicals that can mask some narcotics’ Raman signals return a yellow or orange screen. Green means all clear.
In 2019, SwabTekTM introduced new field kits with dry test strips capable of detecting fentanyl and other dangerous narcotics. The single-use recyclable spot test uses a paper strip with dry reagent test zones applied to the strip surface. A cotton swab is used to transfer the suspect residue to the paper strip test zone. The SwabTek test kits provide a safe, 100% recyclable, non-hazardous alternative to the industry standard “wet chemistry” field kit.
Field technologies such as the ones described above require close contact to the sample source. One example of a new standoff detection technology is Pacific Northwest National Laboratory’s (PNNL’s) ultrasensitive vapor detection system, VaporID. Rather than searching for particle residue using surface swipes or pulses of air to dislodge particles for analysis, the system 'sniffs' for vapors, much the way canines do.
VaporID joins an atmospheric flow tube with a mass spectrometer. The system can accurately detect organophosphorus compounds and narcotics at ultra-low levels previously impossible to detect in the presence of other chemical vapors. The technology could complement or replace contact and canine-assist detection methods for drug screening used in mailrooms, airports, and shipping center.
Unscrupulous scientists persist in exercising their craft, working in underground labs to manipulate fentanyl, isolate analogs, and create deadly combinations. The collection of hard-to-trace substances entering the market continues to kill users and sicken law enforcement as they battle the epidemic.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has a significant role in countering the trafficking of opioids and other narcotics into the United States, including detection and interdiction of illicit narcotics, as well as investigative efforts to disrupt and dismantle smuggling operations. The DHS Science and Technology Directorate Opioid Detection Program supports the mission requirements of CBP, Immigration and Customs Enforcement Homeland Security Investigations (ICE HSI), and state/local law enforcement in four primary areas:
• High-throughput, nonintrusive screening technologies to rapidly and automatically identify anomalous and suspected concealed narcotics
• Automated alarm resolution technologies to provide confirmation of opioids and other narcotics, without having to physically open or handle the shipment
• Improved effectiveness of handheld detection systems employed by frontline operators to detect small amounts of drug materials, even when diluted
• Advanced analytical tools for analysis of evidence, data fusion, and information sharing to enable automated detection.
In January 2021, DHS announced a new multiphase study to improve the detection of synthetic opioids. In collaboration with PNNL, the study will assess the performance of field-portable drug detection equipment from industry against fentanyl and fentanyl-related compounds, other drugs, and cutting agents.
For the study, the industry partners will obtain the latest reference spectra for approximately 50 DEA-controlled substances, including novel synthetic opioids, as well as independent test results, which will enhance their capability and marketability. End users of the equipment—the first responder and interdiction communities, as well as interested federal, state, and local agencies—will also benefit by receiving system updates with the expanded libraries at no cost. They will gain a broader understanding of the capabilities and limitations of current field detection equipment to feel more secure with detection performance.
The effort specifically targets instruments used by federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial law enforcement and first responders that use spectral libraries to identify unknown samples suspected of containing illicit drugs. These include, but are not limited to, field-portable gas chromatograph/mass spectrometers, high-pressure mass spectrometers, ion mobility spectrometers, Raman spectrometers, and Fourier transform infrared spectrometers.
In the coming years, DHS will continue partnering with industry to complete narcotics data collection for government-owned spectral libraries and will initiate a new Opioid Investigation and Intelligence Project to support ICE HSI.
Reference.
https://www.pnnl.gov/explainer-articles/fentanyl-analogs
Canadian Drug Cartel existed the entire time at different levels like international imports
Narko Drone Subs
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jul/11/colombia-narco-submarine-cocaine
Meth Lab. British Columbia
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=rJSfgf3x9QA
Boring underground machines then underground ant farms safely constructed with off-grid Energy allows undeniable undectable energy & unit production Yields
A soft vent disguised hidden in the woods & undectable then escape exits & entrances
A cover story & effort for why you are near the property then those that exit without you & return for an activity of legitimate then you swap places on rotations while advanced technologies are utilized prepping for the rendezvous. Dollar days
10-25+ under the physical ground labs constructed voiding a bust of one over others
Trendy Toy-Unit & funds carefully spread through offline - online sales then actual retail taxation & product Units shipped out too legitimate beneficiaries & purchases yet between involves a cash injector of non-legitimste funds from illegal & illicit trade with an undetectable effort
Now a selective series of allows a legitimate return & people don't speak of that "injector" factor which often for Widows U not N or L assists in developing a larger background base to sustain managed front end efforts amongst main & connecting interests where U is separate from N & L
Flower Shop. Mob outfit below. Secrecy. Only few are aware & minimized violamece or risk to public safety
CIG



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