Introduction to Operation OASIS

The massive waste water problem that currently pollutes our bathing waters costing £billions to process throughout the world can be used to irrigate and reforest desert coastlines to induce rainfall.

Our aim is to use the return ballast capacity of super crude carriers which currently transport sea water half way around the world at great financial and environmental cost. This ballast is discharged into the sea, often introducing invasive marine species which affects the stability of indigenous species of flora and fauna.

The E.U. is legislating against this practice and tanker operators will be forced to seek an alternative.

Operation OASIS offers an exciting opportunity for ballast water. Transporting treated waste water to irrigate and reforest arid coastlines to induce rainfall has to be the way forward.

One tanker loaded with 300000 cubic meters of treated waste water would support 57 hectares of forest for a whole year.

Reclaiming deserts to enable people to feed themselves and grow great forests will offset the carbon emissions from shipping.

With global food shortages upon us we are already feeling the strain on our pockets in the developed world and renewable resources are in rapid decline. Drought is affecting all major food producing countries and wells are running dry. Water scarcity poses major problems for us and our children. We need to act fast in order to avert a major global catastrophe.

When the mighty river Amazon dries up and it's fish stocks die it is time to take stock on how we manage our fragile environment. For more detailed information visit our website and forum at: http://www.operationoasis.com

Sunday 9 September 2007

I Have A Dream


Global Warming The Only Sollution! Reclaim Deserts To End Famin - Watch a funny movie here
I have a dream that waste water can be shipped in returning oil super tankers out to the desert coastlines and be used to breath forests and wildlife back into the barren waste lands and cause it to rain. Ironically the tankers currently transport sea water half way round the world for nothing before dumping it back into the sea, often contaminated with huge amounts of oil residues, and once dispersed it reeks havoc on the oceans ecosystem. A dream where we can reclaim the deserts and feed the starving millions who dance wildly while embracing the frequent raindrops in a land where they seldom fall. But this dream differs somewhat from the aforementioned recording system. This dream differs, because I know with absolute certainty that it will happen! I see a land of promise ahead for many people. I see people speculating on barren desert strips and purchasing them for a song,
I see beautiful homes being built in the regenerated lands and children playing in fields full of flowers, picking fruits that abound the trees. I see battery chickens being introduced to live in these lands as guardians, diligently singling out pesky critters and producing truly free-range eggs. I see soldiers becoming at ease with carrying baskets full of fruit from the trees. I see filmmakers queuing to tell the world about our pilot project. I see many more projects developing in many parts of the world. And when this happens, I see many of our present global environmental problems paling into insignificance. But this is not a dream. It is already beginning in many countries. Trees are now growing in many parts of the world where there where no trees, but painfully slow, as the main problem in these arid lands is an inherent lack of water, and they have yet to realise that it cannot be addressed without importing masses of nutrient rich waste water from Europe, who currently pour billions of tonnes of raw sewage into the oceans and rivers every single day!

I have met with Jasem Al Mubaraki at Kuwait Embassy and won his support. I have met with Mohamed Al-Sheddi at The Saudi Arabian Embassy and won his support. I have met with Pakistan Embassy and had many long conversations with Dr Eldaz, who seams in agreement with this logic. I have even won the support of Gideon Tzur the Water Commissioner for Israel, who loves this project, which I call Oasis Irrigation. I even won the interest of two major shipping companies, who began to see the logic of getting paid both ways instead of their current one way earner. I have received many publications in National and local press and even appeared twice on local television news with my dream. I even held a press conference at the Redcliff Hotel hear in Paignton Devon. Even David Bellamy went on BBC National Radio and said: I see a time in the future when great oil tankers will be delivering massive cargoes of sewage and waste water to the deserts in order to transform them into fertile places. He once also said that it would never catch on because we eat pork and there are nations that would not accept our sewage because of this. I still have his letters somewhere in the loft.

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