As to reports of the media North Pole is going to disappear after 10 years` time. This will turn out to have big effects on our climate and will shortly interfere with our life. Do not rely on the government in the situation! Be active yourself! Replace the lacking raw materials and crude oil  by the oil of the Jatropha. Make deserts become meadows. Neutralize CO2 and start your fight.

Jatropha curcas is a several years’growing plant originating from the  Euphorbiaceae family which grows a bush or tree in tropical or subtropical zones. It is robust and little-demanding concerning soil and climate. It can survive in desert regions and  is able to store up a lot of water. Jatropha makes desert regions become green again. Traditionally Jatropha is used in rural areas as a plant to grow hedges for the farmers` fields and vegetable gardens. It cares for shadow and protects from erosion. Jatropha grows chestnut-sized fruits for a period of months which in turn let ripen capsules with seeds inside. That is all to it!  You can press the seeds to get vegetable-oil which regarded from a technical point of view is of high quality. It is not really a nutritious oil but is of an excellent soapy condition. Thanks to its content of fatty acid and storage ability it can best be used as substitute for diesel in power engines and vehicles of all kind. By professional oil mills and clean filtration you can get Jatropha oil whose value of phosphotides is below 7 milligrams to the kilogram. In spite of  long lasting storage it contains fatty acid of below 1 mg only. This is within the official limit of  DIN V 51605 of vegetable oils provided for fuels. This of course will enjoy  every direct injector of power stations or trucks. In addition common-rail engines could be programmed excellently when  wanted by the producer.

Jatropha is not in competition with other nutritious plants but in the contrary gives the latter ones as a hedge plant protection from animals and aridity. As proved in Nepal by the Recast Growing Project (Tribhuvan University, University College Northampton, Oxford Brookes University) Jatropha can well last in the undergrowth and enrich the flora.