
Before I examine what Krambu may or may not do at the Bonner site its considering for a data center, readers should know how Missoula County created specific zoning for these types of developments after a Bitcoin mining operation went south. From the link:
Saying it consumed a “grotesque” amount of energy, Missoula County this week unanimously adopted permanent zoning that regulates where the mining of cryptocurrency can take place, and the type of energy it can use to power the process.
Citing a moral imperative to address the climate crisis, the new regulations require any cryptocurrency mining operation within the county to either purchase or develop enough new renewable energy to offset 100% of its electrical consumption.
It’s also helpful to know the history of the Kerr Dam project and the backstory of how Energy Keepers Inc. came to operate this hydroelectric power source back in 2015, since Energy Keepers publicly denied there was any official deal made with Krambu as of yet.
The meeting last Friday was well attended by Bonner residents and the tension was palpable. When one of the guys pitching this project used the word “exploit” he quickly realized his word choice was a mistake, then brought MORE attention to this mistake by quickly using a different word. Too late.
When the data center pitch shifted to answering questions from the public about this project, many of the questions focused on water, which was good for Krambu, since this was one of the few areas of inquiry where they appeared to have an answer, and the answer was this: don’t worry, there’s new proprietary technology that uses a “closed loop” method of cooling the computing, so water use is no longer a problem. We’ll get back to this issue in a moment.
Other questions asked by the Bonner community had no satisfactory answers, like how much energy would be needed? Krambu couldn’t answer that question because they don’t know (or won’t say) who their prospective clients will be. Other questions were deferred to the role of local government to answer, and one question about the supposed non-existent threat to school kids in the community got ME, the uncouth citizen journalist, to speak up about Targeted Economic Development Districts and the county’s version of the Missoula Redevelopment Agency, which is called the Missoula Development Authority (MDA).
Krambu’s team on Friday DID, however, give me enough narrative tidbits to better understand why Travis Jank seems so happy about his startup’s future prospects, regardless of what happens in Bonner.

Brandon Jank, Travis’ brother, is also in this industry, and I found the Jank brothers, along with Steve Wood (pictured next to Travis in the first image), involved in something called “Archive Infrastructure“, which describes its “hybrid data centers” with jargon above my pay grade:

As I continued poking around Krambu adjacent companies and technologies, like Elkhorn Products, I started getting a better idea of what the Bonner data center might be used for, and the two areas I’m looking at are medical and military. Here’s why.

Dr. Mukesh Prasad hails from the Boston Institute of Sustainability and, after reading his bio info, emphasizes what Steve Wood said himself on Friday–medical seems to be their preferred area of development for prospective clients.
Dr. Prasad obtained his bachelor’s degree, with honors, in Government from Harvard College, with a focus on Economic and Social Policies. Dr. Prasad then went on to The Johns Hopkins College of Medicine where he completed his Doctorate in Medicine. He completed his Otolaryngology and Head & Neck Surgery training at New York Presbyterian and Memorial Sloan Kettering Hospitals, and then joined the Weill Cornell Medical College Faculty, where he currently practices. He also served as Chair of the Weill Cornell General Faculty Council.
Dr. Prasad is active at Harvard University where he served two terms on the Harvard Alumni Association Board of Directors, served as Vice President of the Harvard Asian American Alumni Alliance Board of Directors, and is the Alumni Director on the Harvard South Asian Institute Advisory Council. He has long served the community and was recognized previously by the city for his role in caring for first responders and was named an Honorary Member of both the FDNY and NYPD, one of a handful of surgeons to have shields from both departments. He served as an Advisor to New York City during the onset of COVID in 2020, helping with the city’s initial planning and in 2024 was honored by the Mayor of New York City with a Citation for over 20 years of service. Dr. Prasad is also a Member both of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Geopolitical Advisory Committee, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and serves as a Special Advisor to the US Department of Commerce for the Tech Hubs program. Dr. Prasad is married to BU graduate, Chandni Prasad (Class of 1993), and resides in New York City, where they raised two children.
How interesting is THIS context? Especially when you consider that Harvard is where our own Mayor, Andrea Davis, goes to get her marching orders, while that pernicious Jeffrey Epstein pops up as a generous donor to the Council on Foreign Relations, as reported by legacy media years ago:
A prestigious foreign affairs think tank will direct $350,000 to fight human trafficking after acknowledging it received that amount in donations over the years from accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.
Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, announced the funding decision in an email to members that also acknowledged that Epstein had been a council member from 1995 to 2009.
With these data points in mind, it appears Krambu is only two degrees away from Epstein money, maybe three if I’m being generous. Luckily only an unpaid blogger running a puppet Sheriff campaign is writing about Epstein’s connections to Big Sky Country, so Krambu is probably safe from this context getting out.
With Dr. Prasad’s bonafides running the COVID op, and Steve Wood’s professed excitement over medical applications for the data center he’s pitching to Bonner residents, let’s go back to the water question and, according to Krambu’s own website, the Elkhorn Products solution:

Will the “industrial symbiosis mission” include, perhaps, the Navy, and all the amazing WINNING America is doing right now in the Middle East, where the Iran war was been won at least a half-dozen times since it started?
No one will be surprised when I say the answer is a resounding HOORAH!

The Navy connection and Coeur d’Alene base of operations for Krambu makes more sense when you know that Northern Idaho is the home of the Farragut Naval Training Station, while Bonner is in relative proximity to the Bitterroot’s BSL-4 Lab and Missoula-based biotech company, Inimmune, which I’ve written about before and recently noted their new “staff” member:
A biotech company developing next-generation immunotherapies in Missoula appointed a new chief medical officer this week, taking a key step toward further growth.
Inimmune said the appointment of Ferdinand Massari as CMO and Ryan McMillian as head of financial strategy “strengthen the leadership team” and moves the company “toward key milestones and planned expansion into allergic asthma and food allergy.”
While Elkhorn goes onward to Phase II, and Inimmune “moves the company toward key milestones”, the next opportunity for the public to perform their noisy powerlessness to stop the Krambu Data Center project with the usual tactics will occur Wednesday, March 25th, at 3:15pm in the spot where County Commissioners meet inside the Missoula County Courthouse.
The idea I am forming as an alternative will be unveiled soon, and it’s brilliant because someone much smarter than me planted the seed. It’s based on water and using the worst tendencies of local government to imminent domain what they want to control and Tai Chi that shit into a real public benefit.
QUICK UPDATE: I almost forgot to mention that the mean woman who looked like local news anchor, Heidi Meili, once worked at Hanford’s nuclear site in eastern Washington. That data point is relevant to my larger research, and worth considering.
Stay tuned, and thanks for reading!























