Our vision of RF Power Transmission at a distance, within the context of market needs and regulatory constraints continues to evolve, and is driving development and availability of our WattUp PowerBridge transmitter solutions at 1 watt and 5.5 watt conducted power.
We recently announced FCC approval for our one-watt solution, which complements our earlier European Union Regulatory Certification for unlimited distance wireless charging. Given this positive fraction, we are pleased to share that we have started production of our 1 WATT WattUp power bridge transmitters, to fulfill orders for our first WattUp wireless power network customer with deliverables beginning in Q4 of 2021.
We believe that our wireless power networks will broadly serve the power needs of the IoT Ecosystem, where wireless power networks will support numerous receiver devices in multiple vertical market segments from retail, to industrial, to healthcare, with their related tasks, sensors and CPUs. When receiving power wirelessly from an Energous power network, these receivers can be deployed with the smaller batteries, and even with no batteries at all, leading to greener, lower cost, and easier to maintain IoT deployments.
As an example, IoT wireless power receivers could support artificial intelligence processing at the edge of an IoT network for audio or video processing, improving device uptime, falling cycles, and timeliness of data flows.
Currently, many new features of IoT devices struggle to be implemented due to the limits of ambient Energous harvesting, their power demands and battery depletion cycles, injecting power wirelessly into these environments can greatly improve IoT device performance and deployment feasibility.
Looking at our financial performance, we are pleased to report that third quarter revenues rose to $200,000…$201,000 compared to $61,500 in the 2020 third quarter. Sequentially, third quarter revenues were up from $185,000 in second quarter. Bill will provide a more detailed breakdown of our financial results, including our balance sheet, which we recently further strengthened through our previously announced ATM financing.
Now, for an update on our operations. Our search for a CEO continues and we have no immediate updates. In August 2021, and now going into our agreement with Renesas, Renesas closed their previously announced acquisition of Dialog semiconductor. And as a consequence, Energous was notified during the quarter that Renesas wished to amicably terminate our system agreement with Dialog.
Our agreement provides for an orderly transition upon notice of termination, and we have begun transferring manufacturing operations back to our company for the 4 Energous devices that were part of the agreement, namely the EN 4100, which is our transmitter, the EN 3210, our one watt power amplifier, the EN 2223, and the EN 2210 receivers, which are all CMOS devices. I would like to point out, and it’s important to note that these 4 devices were 100% designed and engineered by Energous. And we own all of the IP, and we have exclusive rights to them.
Now, why is it important to point this out? Because, as designers and the team that actually engineered these devices, we have deep technical knowledge of them, and we have a deep understanding also of the Dialog processes, which will allow for a smooth transition of [indiscernible] and test back to Energous. We will use our existing production and test capabilities which we employ today for our other devices in our portfolio, and which by the way were not part of the Dialog agreement.
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| | 3 | | Energous Corporation Thursday, November 11, 2021, 4:30 PM Eastern |