HPP of cooperation and support to institutions in compliance with the healthy circular economy with the regeneration in favor of critical raw materials and strategic resources such as precious metals and clean hydrogen just required by the Critical Raw Materials Act, aims to implement with its own technology, a recovery and regeneration strategy to guarantee sustainable support for supply and make it safer.
An opportunity to the attention of the institutions to regenerate the increasingly compromised environment, generate new services for citizens, develop the territory in a better way and recover Strategic Materials from everything that has been thrown away and made unusable and polluting. Materials that every nation needs to support the life and economy of its territory but which it is still forced to buy from third countries at prices that are sometimes exorbitant enough to then affect the costs of living.
With the cooperation of HPP, critical raw materials lost in the territories can be recovered and regenerated in order to determine less demand from third countries, less money spent, and regenerate one's own state.
Governments do not just need studies, they no longer need hubs or networks of collaborations of thought which have often proven unproductive, governments, policies and territories need zero impact technologies immediately and today which in true recovery do not create new pollution and do not create new damage nature or even consume water and air.
The time has come to stop keeping our heads in the sand like ostriches do, those who represent the territories do their utmost to defend the territories and do everything to improve it in the right way, also because lately, humanity has been subjected to " natural growing pains." In fact, since the end of the 1980s we have witnessed a growing conflict between economic and political systems and social and ecological systems. A sort of multi-systemic crisis, out of control, which has threatened and still threatens the healthcare system, communities, the education system, transport systems, supply chains, financial systems and the main economic and geopolitical sectors.
This mega - crisis strangely also offers a unique opportunity to promote the evolution of humanity as a whole, now we must be united and act if we care about our health and evolution, as well as the continuity of life on Earth, we must seize this opportunities to transform and improve – individually and collectively – and co-create a regenerated society for the future that we hope so much on paper but which we stubbornly demonstrate an inability to create.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, regenerate means "to be reborn", so we can understand a regenerated society when it "restores the best existential state to the territory with its inhabitants".
But regeneration includes sustainability, and goes further, since it must respect the fundamental rules of the Circular Economy. The strength of regeneration really lies in "doing more good", and it is not just about "doing less damage" or minimizing negative impacts, as some sustainability policies claim.
The term sustainability aims to reduce the negative footprint of mankind, while regeneration focuses on creating positive footprints, not just “treating the symptoms”, but treating the root causes of the problem, restoring the entire system.
This means that we have a duty to meet human needs in a way that is not only less harmful to the community, but also serves the systemic health of the entire planet: soil, atmosphere, glaciers, forests, oceans, animals, plants, and all people of every nation.
To be reborn it is necessary to be coherent and compact, this implies reconnecting to everything that supports life for greater self-respect. Instead of building walls, we could use this state of global malaise and design structures to improve the future, from education to transport to truly zero-impact energy, in order to respond to a circular economy to regenerate a "wellbeing economy" serving both nature and humanity.
These are the questions that do not need answers but concreteness from governments - policies - and investors:
How could cities improve the environment instead of impoverishing it?
What is the role of current societies in leaving a better world for future generations?
How can it be redesigned to produce clean energy, breathable air and unpolluted water?
How can consumer goods be produced in such a way as not to degrade but rather renew territories and societies?
How could this help advance the vision of Agenda 2030 and see beyond?