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Carbon Reef Flood Control Inc. Announces Proven AI Infrastructure Security Product
NEW ORLEANS - LouisEagle -- Carbon Reef Flood Control Inc. (CRFC), a New Orleans infrastructure technology company, issues a public call to action for municipal, technology and business leaders: the underpinning of the AI build-out is unprotected — and the solution is ready now.
The Risk the AI Industry Is Not Pricing
The global technology industry is ready to deploy $600 billion in AI data center infrastructure in 2026 alone. The May 2026 Sigma Report published by Swiss Re, reports roughly $450 billion of hyperscaler capital expenditure this year goes directly into physical AI infrastructure. A single AWS outage in October 2025 generated estimated insured losses of up to $581 million.
The Gulf Coast is one of those markets: Total economic losses between Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and Hurricane Ida in 2021 exceeded $300.3 billion. Louisiana's Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority (CPRA) documents $15 to $24 billion in annual damage costs from continued inaction.
"Every AI campus that wants to operate in the Gulf South depends on the ground staying dry, the grid staying live, and the real estate market staying solvent. Carbon Reef solves all three," said Itara Uma Sumeros, Founder and CEO of CRFC.
The CRFC Solution
Crescent Ville Technologies Inc. performed a critical infrastructure security assessment (CVTI-PSA-2026-001). Carbon Reef Flood Control used this to develop the Portland cement-free composite substrate engineered specifically for Gulf Coast environmental chemistry to sequester carbon dioxide as a designed output. A provisional patent was filed with the USPTO (No. 64/070907) for the seven-component formula — activated with seawater, sourced from Louisiana's industrial supply chain. A prototype exists, and the London Avenue Canal pilot is mapped to provide substrate reinforcement along subsidence corridors.
The Return on Investment Case
The infrastructure return math is documented; CPRA's August 2025 Coastwide Risk Reduction Hindcast study found Louisiana's post-Katrina flood system generated benefit-cost ratios of 4:1 to 10:1, avoiding $165 billion in damage from a single storm event on an $18.2 billion investment. Engineered reef systems generate additional revenue exceeding $250,000 per square kilometer through carbon credits, sustainable fisheries, and data collection.
The Public Challenge
CRFC is seeking team members and partners who understand resilient physical infrastructure is the prerequisite for every digital investment built on top of it. "This is a physics and finance argument. The effectiveness of the formula is proven and includes enhanced security capabilities," said Sumeros. "The question is, who in the technology investment community is going to look at this solution and say no?"
About Carbon Reef Flood Control Inc.
Inquires may be submitted at: https://carbonreef.tech or by email to legal@carbonreef.tech.
The Risk the AI Industry Is Not Pricing
The global technology industry is ready to deploy $600 billion in AI data center infrastructure in 2026 alone. The May 2026 Sigma Report published by Swiss Re, reports roughly $450 billion of hyperscaler capital expenditure this year goes directly into physical AI infrastructure. A single AWS outage in October 2025 generated estimated insured losses of up to $581 million.
The Gulf Coast is one of those markets: Total economic losses between Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and Hurricane Ida in 2021 exceeded $300.3 billion. Louisiana's Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority (CPRA) documents $15 to $24 billion in annual damage costs from continued inaction.
"Every AI campus that wants to operate in the Gulf South depends on the ground staying dry, the grid staying live, and the real estate market staying solvent. Carbon Reef solves all three," said Itara Uma Sumeros, Founder and CEO of CRFC.
The CRFC Solution
Crescent Ville Technologies Inc. performed a critical infrastructure security assessment (CVTI-PSA-2026-001). Carbon Reef Flood Control used this to develop the Portland cement-free composite substrate engineered specifically for Gulf Coast environmental chemistry to sequester carbon dioxide as a designed output. A provisional patent was filed with the USPTO (No. 64/070907) for the seven-component formula — activated with seawater, sourced from Louisiana's industrial supply chain. A prototype exists, and the London Avenue Canal pilot is mapped to provide substrate reinforcement along subsidence corridors.
The Return on Investment Case
The infrastructure return math is documented; CPRA's August 2025 Coastwide Risk Reduction Hindcast study found Louisiana's post-Katrina flood system generated benefit-cost ratios of 4:1 to 10:1, avoiding $165 billion in damage from a single storm event on an $18.2 billion investment. Engineered reef systems generate additional revenue exceeding $250,000 per square kilometer through carbon credits, sustainable fisheries, and data collection.
The Public Challenge
CRFC is seeking team members and partners who understand resilient physical infrastructure is the prerequisite for every digital investment built on top of it. "This is a physics and finance argument. The effectiveness of the formula is proven and includes enhanced security capabilities," said Sumeros. "The question is, who in the technology investment community is going to look at this solution and say no?"
About Carbon Reef Flood Control Inc.
Inquires may be submitted at: https://carbonreef.tech or by email to legal@carbonreef.tech.
Contact
Itara Uma Sumeros, CEO, CRFC Inc.
MS Cyber Security, Tulane University, 2020
***@carbonreef.tech
Itara Uma Sumeros, CEO, CRFC Inc.
MS Cyber Security, Tulane University, 2020
***@carbonreef.tech
Source: Carbon Reef Flood Control Inc. & CVTI
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