
Peace in the Families, Peace in the World
SAVING OUR PLANET Engineers Office is initiating and forwarding seminars and projects worldwide in connection with ecological and health innovations and transfer of technology adapting and fulfilling UN Environment Program (UNEP)’s program saving our planet. The aim is a balance of scientific exchange and practical performance in order to create work for the people in modern endurable technologies, at Regenerative Energies, environmental care, and imminent health protection with good economic effect and an endurable costs saving efficiency. The seminars and initiated projects are developing the survival basis of the country compatibly with ecology, environment and human health and giving people a positive perspective toward their future. This is saving and creating peace among and between people, peace in the families, peace in the communities, towns, cities, regions, countries, peace among and in between states, the continental regions, the continents, peace on earth, and global human survival. Since giving work for the people in an endurable healthy environment is the basis of SAVING OUR PLANET and its innovative impact, and so peace can grow, protected by people themselves everywhere in the global environment.
The Engineers Office SAVING OUR PLANET has already performed worldwide connections to universities, to scientists and engineers, to firms ecologically compatible technologies as well as on the political level. Project studies and consultations have been made in different countries with billions of U.S.-dollars project success already performed.
The Managing Director of SAVING OUR PLANET Engineers Office, Engineer Mohammad Sani, is a well-known environmentalist and lecturer on the habitat. He is an internationally famous figure who has been delivering lectures and trained environmental professors around the world for many years. Recently he held the floor as the first lecturer at the World Renewable Energy Congress in Kuala Lumpur. Back in Iran from the congress, after a successful lecture, he was invited by the Director General of the World Renewable Energy and Congress Chairman, Professor Ali Sayigh, to participate in the coming congress of WREC in 2000 and submit an abstract, which is to be held in Briton, UK.
Engineer Sani, a totally humble and noble man, has been entertaining Mr. Hans-Rudolf Kern, vice president and manager of business development and projects of Swiss Von Roll Inova Environmental Technology Ltd. Mr. Kern told the TEHRAN TIMES he was here to finalize an agreement with the Isfahan’s officials to set a project in motion with regard to waste treatment’. Von Roll Inova is a world technology and market leader in thermal treatment of waste, operating directly in Europe and Middle East, with licenses overseas, most important of which in Japan. More than 290 plants on all 5 continents treat more than 100,000 tons of waste per day. In response to a question posed by the TEHRAN TIMES reporter on the hierarchy of steps in waste management, Mr. Kern said, “There is a typical hierarchy of steps in waste management, starting with reduction of usage of materials, re-use of materials, recovery (recycling) of materials, thermal treatment with recovery of energy and finally disposal (landfilling).” He later said they (he and Engineer Sani) had also held talks with a few officials of Tehran to take measures in line with waste treatment. There are waste dump sites in southern Tehran where the wastes, including hospital wastes which are almost all contaminated, are discharged. The damage these wastes inflict on humans even exceed that of the pollution produced by cars, and in all, vehicles. Mr. Kern later said, in most of the cities around the world, the city officials had come to understand the necessity of waste treatment. “But this is not enough. They should take steps in this regard,” he added.
The managing director of SAVING OUR PLANET Engineers Office called on the investors from home and abroad to invest in Iran’s future environmental industry. He said he had his objectives ahead of him including: waste incineration, creating solar panels, wind turbines, and electric cars. “I’m determined now to work out the last two, wind turbines and electric cars,” he added. “Why not electric cars when we know they produce no air pollution and cost maybe half of fuel-powered vehicles.”