Who is Paul Elvere DELSART.pdf

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I am Paul Elvere DELSART, and I invite you to take part in this great endeavor. The future will not be written in
Brussels, Washington, Paris, or Beijing. It is being written today in our villages, in our fields, in our minds, in our
hearts, and in our actions. The time has come for the Municipalities to counter-attack. The time has come for small
towns and villages to win the war of peace.
C - The inter-municipal cooperation sub-program ‘THE MUNICIPALITIES COUNTER-ATTACK’
The sub-program THE MUNICIPALITIES COUNTER-ATTACK (in Spanish, EL CONTRAATAQUE DE LOS
MUNICIPIOS, and in French, LES COMMUNES CONTRE-ATTAQUENT) is part of the ambitious global societal
transformation program called EL4DEV, designed by Paul Elvere DELSART, founder of the Think and Do Tank LE
PAPILLON SOURCE EL4DEV. This sub-program focuses specifically on inter-municipal cooperation and targets
small towns and villages, particularly those with fewer than 5,000 inhabitants, although it also extends to those with up
to 7,000 inhabitants.
This sub-program proposes a new form of inter-municipal cooperation based on social and solidarity criteria,
aiming to promote financial autonomy, local self-financing, and the international role of these small territorial
entities. Its operation relies on the creation of a Societal Economic Interest Group at the national level (one group
per country), made up of several small towns and villages that choose to unite in order to jointly fund large-scale,
high-impact projects.
The action mechanism includes operational contracts between this national group and the Think and Do Tank LE
PAPILLON SOURCE EL4DEV. Through these agreements, the participating municipalities fund the creation of vertical
agro-climatic, tourist, educational, and ecological structures called Vegetal Calderas, which are integrated into the
LE PAPILLON SOURCE experimental complexes.
The sub-program includes a mixed financial component, involving public funds from municipal investment
budgets and participatory financing mechanisms, including international micro-sponsorship campaigns. This model
ensures that economic returns are not dependent on private capital or shareholders, as the profits are distributed
equitably among the participating municipalities, regardless of their size or economic contribution.
At a practical level, the sub-program allows a municipality to fund projects even outside its own territory, provided there
is a justified local interest. This establishes a decentralized dynamic of territorial cooperation, in which collective
benefit takes precedence over traditional administrative boundaries.
The Vegetal Calderas built under the program function as multifunctional ecological towers that generate atmospheric
humidity, emit beneficial electromagnetic fields, serve as habitats for local wildlife and pollinators, and are used for
tourism, agriculture, education, and scientific purposes. These structures form the core of the LE PAPILLON SOURCE
complexes, which are educational and agro-climatic parks designed to promote sustainability, experiential learning,
and food self-sufficiency.
The Vegetal Calderas are not merely autonomous structures with high ecological and educational value. They
are also designed as the fundamental links of a strategic territorial network: the Bioclimatic Corridors, whose
function goes far beyond simple local development. Once activated by the installation of the Vegetal Calderas, these
corridors become vectors of large-scale climate transformation, contributing to the creation of artificial Flying
Rivers, a phenomenon inspired by the natural water cycle and atmospheric biogeography.
Thanks to their terraced green architecture and circular irrigation processes using condensed atmospheric
water, they create a humid microclimate around them, even in arid areas. This moisture released into the air is then
carried by the winds, forming true atmospheric flows of water vapor, comparable to the natural ‘Flying Rivers’
observed in the Amazon rainforest.