AquaX

New Era Water Sports LLC is pioneering the future of aquatic adventure and eco-luxury transport with a groundbreaking innovation: the personalized water-launch mini plane. Designed for thrill-seekers, explorers, and elite adventurers, this vehicle blurs the lines between aviation and water sports.

We’re not just selling gear—we’re creating a new lifestyle.

THE VISION

To revolutionize water-based recreation and travel by developing sleek, sustainable, and accessible personal flying crafts that take off and land on water—bringing freedom, adrenaline, and elegance to the modern adventurer.

PRODUCT CONCEPT: The MiniPlane AquaX (working name)

Features:

Water take-off and landing capabilities

Compact design for personal use (1-2 passengers)

Hybrid-electric propulsion system (sustainable tech ready)

Custom interiors and body styles

Easy dock-and-store system with existing marinas

Use Cases:

• Island hopping

• Oceanfront property access

• High-end resort experiences

• Water sports competitions

• Emergency response for remote water locations

TARGET MARKET

High net-worth individuals

Luxury travel & resort partners

Tech-savvy adventure consumers

Private aviation enthusiasts

Eco-conscious explorers

REVENUE STREAMS

1. Direct sales of personalized aircraft

2. Licensing and IP for the design + propulsion tech

3. Collaborations with luxury resorts and tourism companies

4. Branded gear, accessories, and wearable tech

5. Subscription-based maintenance and upgrade service

WHY NOW?

• Surge in personal aviation interest

• Growth in luxury experiential travel

• Tech advancements in lightweight materials & electric propulsion

• Rising need for eco-conscious adventure options

A visionary holding company focused on innovation, cultural empowerment, and legacy building across industries. New Era is the tech-forward branch of this network, set to shape the future of high-performance recreational tech.

Investor Return Statement for AquaX Manufacturing Proposal

We are seeking strategic capital partners to support the manufacturing and deployment of the AquaX — a luxury, high-performance, electric-powered, amphibious personal aircraft designed for elite use and potential defense contracts.

Investment Overview:

Target Sales Price per Unit: $1.4 million

Initial Production Run: 900 units

Primary Market: Ultra-high-net-worth individuals, tactical/military agencies, and coastal infrastructure partners.

Capital Request:

Funding required will cover design finalization, team assembly, advanced materials, fabrication, flight testing, compliance, and go-to-market execution.

Investor Return Model:

For more information of to receive a complete brochure in person/by mail contact us right away.

Clean Ocean Accountability

Several studies and expert estimates (like those from The Ocean Cleanup or National Geographic) suggest that a few billion dollars — sometimes cited as around $7 billion — could significantly reduce ocean plastic pollution using existing technology.

So why isn’t it clean yet? Here are key reasons:

1. Fragmented Efforts

• Many organizations and countries work independently rather than through a unified global initiative.

• There’s competition for funding, branding, and influence, which can dilute collective action.

2. Funding Gaps

• While $7 billion is relatively small compared to global military or tech spending, philanthropy and government support often fall short or are tied up in bureaucracy.

• Some large donors are skeptical about impact, effectiveness, or long-term sustainability.

3. The Flow Is Constant

Over 11 million metric tons of plastic enter the ocean every year. Even if we cleaned it all today, the pollution would start again tomorrow.

• Without addressing upstream sources (like poor waste management systems in developing nations), cleanup is just a Band-Aid.

4. Technological & Logistical Hurdles

• Ocean plastic is dispersed across remote and deep areas, and much of it breaks down into microplastics.

• It’s harder to remove than it seems, especially from the seabed or tiny particles in the water.

5. Political Will & Prioritization

• Ocean cleanup isn’t a top priority for most world governments.

• Climate change, economic stability, and wars often take precedence in national budgets.

6. Corruption & Mismanagement

• Some nonprofits and fundraising campaigns lack transparency or efficiency.

• Donor fatigue and skepticism increase when there’s little visible progress.

Despite all this, there has been real progress, especially with innovations like The Ocean Cleanup’s interceptors and international bans on plastic items. But without a coordinated, well-funded global push, the oceans will likely remain polluted.

Here’s our practical framework for building a campaign that actually drives real ocean cleanup while staying sustainable and impactful. 

The Joseph Network: Clean Clean Coast Project”

A regenerative ocean & shoreline cleanup campaign focused on plastic, textile, and corporate waste in West Africa and beyond.

Core Objectives

1. Remove and repurpose plastic, textiles, and dumped waste from shorelines and waterways.

2. Create local jobs in waste collection, sorting, and upcycling.

3. Hold polluting corporations accountable through digital transparency and global exposure.

4. Turn waste into value (products, art, building material, fashion).

5. Educate communities and inspire climate-conscious behavior through music, storytelling, and wellness experiences.

Tangible Solutions

1. Textile Waste Upcycling

• Set up local collection hubs for clothing and fabric dumped by foreign companies.

• Partner with tailors, artisans, and eco-designers to:

• Make upcycled bags, fashion items, accessories.

• Use shredded fabrics for eco-bricks, insulation, or mattress stuffing.

• Offer workshops teaching youth and women how to create sellable products from textile waste.

2. Corporate Waste Accountability

• Track and document branded waste using mobile photos and geotagging.

• Create a “Name & Shame” digital map of companies whose logos appear frequently on dumped trash. Hold accountable nonprofits and companies for misappropriation of funds meant for ocean clean up initiatives 

• Launch campaigns urging companies to fund cleanups and support local recycling infrastructure.

3. Eco-Innovation & Jobs

• Hire locals (especially youth and fisherfolk) for:

• Cleanup crews

• Sorting stations

• Product-making teams

• Provide training in waste entrepreneurship.

4. Coastal “Regeneration Stations”

Build simple structures (containers or wood-frame hubs) where trash is:

• Sorted

• Washed

• Repurposed or stored for sale/export

Add a wellness twist: include yoga/art spaces to promote community healing and education.

• Upcycled goods

• Merch (branded shirts/bags made from ocean or textile waste)

Corporate social responsibility sponsorships

YouTube and music monetization through storytelling content

Partnerships with green brands, eco-tourism groups, or influencers

Pilot Idea: “Clean Clean Africa”

Launch on the same beaches where you lived.

• Monthly cleanups with youth and wellness events

• Train tailors to upcycle foreign clothing waste

• Partner with local schools, churches, and traditional leaders

The bigger issue with ocean pollution — especially in places like Ghana — isn’t just plastic or lack of cleanup funds. It’s a global system of environmental injustice, where:

1. Wealthy nations offload their waste

• Tons of used clothing (often low-quality fast fashion), broken electronics, and industrial trash are exported to African nations, falsely labeled as “donations” or “secondhand goods.”

• Local infrastructure can’t handle the volume, so it ends up dumped on beaches, burned in the open air, or buried in informal landfills — causing health, economic, and ecological damage.

2. Corporations escape accountability

• Many companies profit from selling polluting products without investing in cleanup or circular design.

• Poor countries don’t have the power or tools to demand accountability — so the same brands that greenwash in the West are polluting communities in the Global South.

3. There’s no global enforcement

• There’s no international law with teeth that prevents this kind of transboundary waste dumping.

The Basel Convention was supposed to help, but enforcement is weak, and many loopholes exist.

My experience in Ghana, immediately spotlighted that it isn’t just an environmental problem — it’s a colonial pipeline of waste, and our project touches on climate justice at its core.

Ending Waste Colonialism

A project of The Joseph Network

Restoring our coastlines. Reclaiming our dignity. Resisting corporate pollution.

Core Message

Africa’s beaches are not dumping grounds. For too long, foreign corporations and wealthy nations have treated African coastlines as invisible landfills — exporting toxic plastic, rotting clothes, and corporate trash under the disguise of charity and trade.

We say no more.

We’re not your landfill!

Pillars of Action

1. Expose the system:

• Document foreign-branded trash and clothing.

• Create a digital map and media campaign holding polluters accountable.

2. Empower the people:

• Hire and train locals in cleanup, upcycling, and advocacy.

• Convert waste into fashion, art, and building materials.

3. Regenerate the land:

• Launch coastal wellness hubs with yoga, healing, education, and creativity.

• Replant mangroves and native flora where possible.

4. Retell the story:

• Through music, video, and stage art, show the journey from waste to wellness.

• Inspire the world to shift from apathy to action.