home    |    the project    |    research    |    background    |    events    |    news archive    |    about us    |    contact us    |    sponsorship
13th October, 2008
Watford Pubwatch backs world recovery

Humanity's greatest threats can be turned back into the natural resources we have plundered over the years.

On Saturday 29th November 2008, pubs and clubs across Watford will encourage their patrons to give generously to secure our own future and that of the world we will leave to our children.

Few will have failed to notice the bad news that seems to escalate everyday - economic turmoil, climate chaos, the food and fuel crises, new diseases, pollution… The good news is that all these problems have a common root cause, and therefore a single potential solution, which has been identified by a team of 30 experts who worked for 30 years, producing a blue-print to recover our ravaged planet, before we hand it over to our young people.

At a Watford community workshop, "What for Watford", run in June 2007 by the FREdome Visionary Trust, a team of young people aware of this research, felt strongly that the work should be published and put into action, before it is too late for them, or for even today's adults.

The youth contingent, FREdome-YEA (Youth Encouraging Adults) have since formed themselves into three groups to raise awareness and funds for the cause. One group organises dances once a term and every half-term in Area Nightclub, the venue being donated by manager, Matt Gamon. These have attracted numbers rising from 550 to over 900, and have all gone completely smoothly. The other two groups are starting to organise shows and concerts to support the cause. They have used social networking, such as MySpace, and now have over 10,000 young supporters, watching how the world of adults will react to their campaign.

The research recognises that over the years, humanity has systematically plundered the earth's resources, such as fossil fuels, and turned them into excess CO2 in the air, leading to, for example, climate chaos and the energy crisis. Key nutrients, which we fail to put back into our depleted soil, have been washed out to sea, leaving us increasingly vulnerable to modern diseases, such as cancer. The solution is to convert sunlight, excess CO2, and sea water rapidly into a nutrient-rich plant biomass (marine algae / seaweed) to refertilise the world's wastelands and deserts (75% of the world's land) and grow more than enough ethical biofuels and highly nutritious superfoods, etc, reversing climate change and stabilising the world economy in the process.

The research team, led by global generalist, Harry Hart, formed a charity called Green Deserts, which at one time had over a quarter of a million supporters. Two world-wide recessions made people stop giving money. The charity collapsed and all the findings were hurriedly taken into storage, where they remain today. It would be a tragedy if so much valuable work, concerning such serious problems, conducted by so many experts, over so many years, were lost to humanity. To recall key members of the original team to work for a year to analyse and prepare the material for publication would cost £120,000 - a tiny fraction of the sum sunk into bailing out our banks.

Greg Peachey, founder of the FREdome Visionary Trust, said "I'd like to give credit to Matt Gamon - Manager of Area Nightclub - for instantly recognising the significance of this work and bringing it to the attention of Watford Pubwatch, who did the same. Watford could soon be leading the way towards world recovery. There is real hope for the future now."

What can you do? Give generously on 29th November and sign our on-line petition.

Press enquiries

Postal address
43a Napsbury Lane
St. Albans
Hertfordshire
AL1 1DU

Tel: 0845 2253005
eMail: (click here)