This document outlines the context of a major international fraud involving the patents of extinguishing and blocking systems for oil wells, invented by Joseph Ferrayé and successfully deployed during the Gulf War in Kuwait in 1991.
These systems played a critical role in preventing an unprecedented global environmental disaster caused by the fallout of toxic soot, which could have affected the entire planet.
At the time, 5 million barrels of oil were burning daily, releasing 5,000 tons of soot into the atmosphere each day.
Despite their proven effectiveness, FERRAYÉ’s technologies were hijacked by political and economic actors — including figures from the French, Swiss, American, and Kuwaiti governments.
The patents were exploited without the inventor’s consent, leading to damages estimated in the trillions of dollars. The systems were sold globally to oil-producing countries at a price of USD 30 million per active well.
A formal claim was submitted to the Swiss Confederation for CHF 83.471 trillion in damages.
This affair involves betrayal, manipulation, large-scale corruption, and international money laundering — all disguised under the pretext of environmental action.