SOBRsafe shares jumped after the company said it had agreed a reverse takeover that would shift the microcap from alcohol detection into zero-carbon energy and infrastructure for data-hungry industries. Under the plan, Clean World Ventures would become the dominant owner of the combined listed group, which is intended to trade under the Clean World Ventures name if the transaction closes as expected in the third quarter of 2026.

According to the companies, CWV is a manufacturer of distributed green hydrogen and clean electricity systems that use wastewater and scrap aluminium as feedstock. The pitch is that the platform can generate power at the point of use, reducing reliance on centralised grids while offering round-the-clock output for customers that need uninterrupted supply.

That positioning is aimed squarely at the soaring power needs of artificial intelligence data centres, as well as mining, heavy industry, transport, farming, desalination and municipal projects. Clean World Ventures has also said it is already in talks with hyperscale data centre operators, underscoring how closely the deal is tied to the broader scramble for dependable, low-carbon energy capacity.

The transaction still faces due diligence, regulatory and shareholder approvals, along with about $5.5 million in pre-closing third-party financing. Of that, $2 million is set aside for the SOBRsafe operating business, which the company says it will continue to assess for possible monetisation as it looks beyond its legacy alcohol monitoring technology.

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Source: Noah Wire Services