

How does Firewater work?
Firewater takes water and electricity and converts nitrogen and oxygen into plant-usable nitrogen for your crops.
Water + Electricity= Firewater for your crops
Your Firewater machine charges the atmosphere and converts N₂, the nitrogen in our atmosphere, and oxygen (O), which we breathe and which is in water (H₂O), into plant-available nitrogen, mostly in the form of nitrate (NO₃), in charged water—what we call Firewater.
Natural Process
This process is the same process that happens in nature all around the world every day when lightning storms pass through an area. What is happening is that plasma in the atmosphere is being charged with electromagnetic fields, which rapidly changes the local atmosphere.
When that happens, nature gets a lift in fertility, and any farmer knows that crops get greener and healthier after a lightning and thunderstorm.
Physically, what is happening is that atoms in the air are loosening up, and negatively and positively charged ions are rearranging, attaching themselves, and mixing with the water.
- Plasma is all around us. Experts say the universe is 99% plasma.
- Plasma is what makes up the sun, fire, lightning, rainbows, northern lights, and lava in nature.
- In commercial products, we see plasma in television screens, lights, lighters, and many other applications.
In Scripture we read: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Then God said, ‘Let there be light’; and there was light. And God saw the light, that it was good.” —Genesis 1:1–4 Based on Scripture, this light was created before the sun and moon, and most likely was plasma.
In science, we know plasma as the fourth state of matter, beyond what most people are familiar with as the other three states of matter: solids, liquids, and gases.
What Firewater is doing is accessing plasma in the air by charging the machine’s chambers with low levels of electricity. The Seven Thunders uses less than 500 watts to make enough nitrogen for 500+ acres of corn in a year. One hundred gallons of highly activated Firewater per day is made per machine.
Firewater is what we call it; globally, plasma-activated water (PAW) is what many call this type of process and equipment.
In biology, we have learned that plants, animals, soil microbes, enzymes, fungi, and minerals are all stimulated and benefit from plasma in a lightning storm and when northern lights in nature are activated. Firewater (plasma-activated water) adds nitrogen to the crops and also adds energy to the crops, soil, and water.
Firewater takes a natural process and makes it available to improve fertility for your crops and for farmers around the world.