Actually Alexander Mayer refers to possible application in fusion research two pages later on “The strong force”:
The foregoing discussion is not simply academic. It suggests the possibility of a new approach to the technological problem of producing usable energy by the process of nuclear fusion. It would appear that a very particular impact velocity (i.e., p-wavelength) of nuclear interactions might be calculated that would increase the probability of a fusion event by many orders of magnitude. If this is correct, a machine might be constructed which somehow controls the impact velocity between nucleon projectiles and their designated targets within a very narrow tolerance of the calculated optimum interaction wavelength.
And also some stuff about room temperature fusion (but I don’t buy into that).
If dense plasma focus is sufficiently controllable (not with conventional design, but with Aaron Blake’s and Eric Lerner’s coil around the DPF), this would give an additional boost.
Additionally he is writing a book which might be quite similiar to “Big Bang Never Happened” with the tilte “The Many Directions of Time”, attacking the conventional Big Bang cosmological model. See: “New Cosmology”