Home Blog Page 238

Climb Mount Kilimanjaro with Oola’s modesty-wear for Muslims

0

oola-head-covering

Amid news of France’s overturned ban of the full-body “burkini” swimsuit, Playboy and Women’s Running magazines featuring women in hijab for the first time the hijab is turning heads and making headlines. The hijab or face-covering for Muslim women needs to be comfortable and sport-relevant says Qatar-based founders of Oola Sportswear. They just launched an Indiegogo campaign that not only celebrates modest activewear such as comfortable head coverings and workout suites, but they bring much-needed athletic wear technology to the segment.

oola-head-wear

The Oola team launched a campaign Oola Sportswear: Activewear That’s Got You Covered on crowdfunding platform Indiegogo on Sunday morning (the start of the week in Qatar, where the team is based). With a goal of $15,000, the campaign offers elegant, functional, loose-fitting activewear and sports hijabs that finally make outdoor sports accessible to women who prefer coverage with their workout gear.

oola-head-wear-hiking-top

Most women’s sportswear is tight, short, low-cut, or designed in short-sleeved-only options. For women who value modesty out of personal values or religious practice — such as those of the Islamic, Orthodox Judaic, Coptic Christian, or other faiths — finding athletic wear that performs and comes in desired styles is a tiring hunt.

Good activewear, depending on the sport, is quick-drying, breathable, and/or water-repellent. Coming across attire that is made of suitable sports fabrics and enables a woman to stay covered fashionably in comfort is all too uncommon.

Experiencing this struggle themselves, Oola co-founders Haya Al Ghanim and Amina Ahmadi decided to design activewear that has all of the above. “While we were training for a Mount Kilimanjaro hike, we really wanted to train outside, but we were really struggling to find something to wear that was appropriate for training outdoors,” says co-founder Amina. “We knew at that point that we wanted to do something about it, but it was the experience of Kili itself that brought Oola to life. We made up our mind that we were going to go back home and do something about it.”

More about Oola Sportswear

Oola Sportswear is a modesty-inspired fashion brand that provides loose-fitting, contemporary activewear for women who prefer more coverage for outdoor activities. Our vision is to promote a healthy lifestyle by making outdoor sports accessible for our clients.

oola-founders

Oola believes that every woman possesses the strength to push boundaries, redefine limits, and overcome challenges. Equipped with the right tools, a woman can unlock her potential, achieving goals that may have seemed unreachable, enjoying experiences that seemed limited, and inspiring communities around them. Oola provides activewear that will enable women to push their fitness goals and challenge their limits. To plant a seed of empowerment is all it takes to lose one’s inhibitions. Oola is that seed.

Support Oola here!

City mapping for refugees locked in a concrete jungle

0

green-balloon-lebanon-2Palestinian refugees in Lebanon have been living in a concrete jungle for decades. Unlike the tents and temporary conditions of Syrian refugees in Jordan, Palestinian refugees in Lebanon have put down roots. More than 400,000 refugees live in a labyrinth of concrete structures, built one on top of the other.

It’s a mess, but volunteers now plan on making some “green” sense out of the madness.

Claudia Martinez Mansell has launched Citizen science in a refugee camp on Kickstarter to collect funds to help her create maps of the Bourj Al Shamali refugee camp.

We’ve participated in balloon mapping projects in the West Bank. The notion goes like this: how can we save or better a situation or environment if we don’t know what’s there? A low-cost to build accurate maps is by sending weather balloons up above the city, with an always on camera taking photos from multiple directions. These images can later be sewn together to create a comprehensive map.

We take maps of our towns and cities for granted, and applications like Google Maps has made us more aware and curious about locations far away.

But such maps don’t provide the resolution needed to give answers like: where should we build an urban garden? A playground for children? Recycling centers? How is power and water distributed through the city, if at all?

green-balloon-lebanon

bourj-al-shamali

Mansell, who’s been connected to the refugees for 2 decades reasons that when the citizens can make where they live, they can analyse, improve, green, and take charge of their environment.

building-community-garden

The Kickstarter campaign is looking to raise $12,500 for:

1. The completion and production of the map of the camp, building on several months of self-funded balloon-mapping that have already been carried out.

2. Funding the remaining transportation costs associated with bringing a few mappers to speak about this project at events in the United States.

green-balloon-lebanon-beirut

green-map-lebanon

green-balloon-lebanon-beirut-map

We like the idea, especially because we already see urban farms dotting the horizons of the refugee camps. Support the campaign here on Kickstarter. We did.

Read here about the bigger initiative.

Algae returns as fuel for our future

0

arabs, jews, algae, Kibbutz Ein Shemer, Eco-Greenhouse, agriculture, biofuels, wastewater treatment, food, medicine

Researchers at Tel Aviv University have revealed how microalgae produce hydrogen, a clean fuel of the future, and suggest a possible mechanism to jumpstart mass production of this environmentally-friendly energy source. Their results have been published in back-to-back studies in Plant Physiology and Biotechnology for Biofuels.

The research was led by Dr. Iftach Yacoby, head of TAU’s renewable energy laboratory, and Rinat Semyatich, Haviva Eisenberg, Iddo Weiner and Oded Liran, his students at the School of Plant Sciences and Food Securityat TAU’s Faculty of Life Sciences.

seambiotic-algae-pond-israel-560x413

Researchers in the past believed that algae only produce hydrogen in the course of a single microburst at dawn lasting just a few minutes. But Dr. Yacoby and his team used highly sensitive technology to discover that algaeproduce hydrogen from photosynthesis all day long. Armed with this discovery, the team harnessed genetic engineering to increase algae‘s production of this clean energy source 400 percent.

Increasing algae‘s output of hydrogen

Laboratory tests revealed that algae create hydrogen with the assistance of the enzyme hydrogenase, which breaks down when oxygen is present. The researchers discovered effective mechanisms to remove oxygen so hydrogenase can keep producing hydrogen.

“The discovery of the mechanisms makes it clear that algae have a huge underutilized potential for the production of hydrogen fuel,” said Dr. Yacoby. “The next question is how to beef up production for industrial purposes — to get the algae to overproduce the enzyme.”

algae-biofuel

Some 99% of the hydrogen produced in the US comes from natural gas. But the methods used to draw hydrogen from natural gas are toxic — and wasteful.

Answering the need for clean energy

“I grew up on a farm, dreaming of hydrogen,” said Dr. Yacoby. “Since the beginning of time, we have been using agriculture to make our own food. But when it comes to energy, we are still hunter-gatherers. Cultivating energy from agriculture is really the next revolution. There may be other ways to produce hydrogen, but this is the greenest and the only agricultural one.

“The world burns in just one year energy it took the earth over a million years to produce,” Dr. Yacoby continued. “We must stop being hunters and gatherers of energy. We must start producing clean energy — for our children and for our children’s children.”

Dr. Yacoby is now researching synthetic enzymes capable of increasing hydrogen production from microalgae to industrial levels.

Surf rising sea levels in a WaterNest home?

1

floating homeRemember that quirky Yael Mer inflatable dress that could save your life when disaster strikes? These floating homes go to the next level: Hurricane Matthew is bearing down on the Caribbean. Would the damage be less devastating if you lived in a floating home? Perhaps, but you’ll have to serve up more than pretty renderings to lure me aboard.

Italian architect Giancarlo Zema has designed an eco-friendly floating dwelling called the WaterNest 100.  The 100 square meter units are made of up to 98% recycled materials including its aluminum frame and laminated timber cladding. Sixty square meters of rooftop photovoltaic panels provide about 4 kWp of clean electricity, enough to power the needs of a one-bedroom dwelling or office function.

floating home

The interior of WaterNest 100 can accommodate a bedroom, bathroom, living room, dining area and kitchen. It can also be configured as an exhibition space or workspace. Large windows and skylights provide ample daylighting, and open air balconies maximize waterfront views while also allowing for an efficient system of natural micro-ventilation, minimizing the need for mechanically conditioned air.  So far so good, if this was This is the Architecture 101, the basics of decent residential design

floating homeThe units are available through EcoFloLife, a London-based business specializing in the design and construction of eco-friendly floating homes. Their website states, “The world around us is becoming increasingly chaotic and conformist…ongoing climate changes and the resulting sea- and river-level rises force us to ponder on the eco-sustainability of our housing choices.” Fair enough, but how do these floating homes actually work?

floating home

The 12 meter diameter units can be positioned along rivers, lakes, bays, atolls and calm sea areas. The EcoFloLife catalogue provides top-design eco-friendly furnishings that complement the design and meet most contemporary needs.

floating home

The world around us is becoming increasingly chaotic and conformist, requiring fully eco-friendly and recyclable housing units, which allow us to live in complete independence and in harmony with nature, while respecting and admiring it. The ongoing climate changes and the resulting sea- and river-level rises force us to ponder on the eco-sustainability of our housing choices. EcoFloLife is committed on the topic of environmental sustainability with its floating and eco-friendly residential units.

Images via EcoFloLife website 

Experiencing New York’s High Line revision

0

img_0020

Gotham’s green foliage projects in large urban communities like New York City and Chicago, not only produce year around vegetables; but also help preserve vestiges of former wild pastoral glory.

An excellent example of efforts made to put abandoned urban space to good use as a garden park is the High Line urban grasslands park in New York City’s Chelsea district. An abandoned above ground rail line has been converted into a public park and botanical garden, known locally as simply the “High Line”.

This green eco park stretches from West 12th and Ganesvoort Streets, all the way north to the Penn Central rail yards on West 34th Street. During a recent late summer visit to New York City, it was a pleasure to visit High Line and stroll along its long, winding route, interspersed with a multitude of trees, shrubs and prairie grassland plant species, many of which are nearly extinct in their native locales.

The various grasses, shrubs and other greenery planted there were indigenous to American prairies in states as far east as Ohio. Many of these prairie locations have long since disappeared, having been replaced by farmland and modern urbanization. For this reason, the idea of planting such greenery in the heart of America’s largest urban metropolis was conceived in the early 1990’s.

Walking through this modern day Garden of Eden, it’s easy to see that it offers something for everyone, including various art forms, food delights, scenic views of the Hudson River, pastoral greenery; and various views of New York City itself, especially the picturesque Chelsea neighborhood.

img_0015

The High Line project is an excellent example of what can be done to utilize a now abandoned rail transportation structure, instead of tearing it down. Similar green projects are now being undertaken in other parts of the city; including the river port area and former warehouse districts. A Low Line project in Manhattan looks to create new food sources from space age technologies.

In the Middle East, urban greening and farming projects are nothing new. Urban Egyptians have been engaged in urban agriculture projects for years.  Hydroponic greening goes all the way back to ancient Babylonians with their legendary Hanging Gardens of Babylon.

Read more about greening and farming urban areas:

Japan rents out hydroponic gardens to busy city dwellers

Chicago’s urban farming produces fresh veggies all year 24/7

Brooklyn’s Gotham Greens builds world’s largest rooftop farm

Egypt’s Urban Agriculture Movement is Growing

أبو الإبتكار – أمثلة لتقنيات رياحية و هوائية و شمسية جديدة

0

moroccan-solar-farm-2

إذا كانت الحاجة هي أم الإختراع، فالتكنولوجيا هي (أبو) الإبتكار

إن كان في مجال المواصلات أو تبادل المعلومات أو صناعة الأغذية و الزراعات، فإن الهدف الأسمى للتكنولوجيا هو إيجاد حلول للمعضلات التي نواجهها في حياتنا عموما، أو تحسين العمليات القائمة حاليا في شتى المجالات

و لكن، عادة ما يكون ثمن هذه التكنولوجيا هو أثر بيئي سلبي، يصعب علينا التخلص منه، أو اتقاء شره القادم من شرق أو غرب، من سماء أو من بحر. مثالا صغيرا: يتسبب صنع جهاز آيفون واحد بانبعاث حوالي 60 كيلوجرام من ثاني أوكسيد الكربون أو ما يعادله من ملوثات

و طبعا، تحاول بعض الشركات العملاقة الحد من آثار عملياتها السلبية على البيئة، كشركة نايكي على سبيل المثال، و التي أثبتت فعالية التدوير على نطاق واسع من خلال برنامجها لإعادة تأهيل الأحذية المستعملة -أعزكم الله-، أو شركة 1&1 لاستضافة المواقع الإلكترونية و التي تُعد مراكز بياناتها من الأكثر كفاءة عالميا، إذ تمنع عملياتها تسلل 30,000 طن من انبعاثات ثاتي أوكسيد الكربون إلى الغلاف الجوي. حتى القطاع المالي له مواقفه التي تُحسب له، حيث خصص البنك الدولي مبلغ 16 مليار دولار في 2016 لتمويل مشاريع و برامج مكافحة تغيير المناخ

و لكن، للشركات الصغيرة و الناشئة أيضا نصيبها الطيب من جهود إصلاح ما يمكن إصلاحه بيئيا. إذ تسعى هذه الشركات بتقنياتها الجديدة و المبتكرة إلى إنتاج طاقة نظيفة و تقليل الأثر الكربوني السلبي و تنقية مصادر المياه، و ذلك على سبيل المثال طبعا، لا الحصر

و أذكر هنا ثلاث من هذه التقنيات لكل من الرياح و الهواء و الشمس

أولا: توربينات الرياح

energy-bladeless-wind-tower

على الرغم من شعبيتها في إنتاج الطاقة المستدامة، لتوربينات الرياح سلبيات متأصلة لا يمكن التغاضي عنها، كحجمها الكبير و ضجيجها و تعطيلها لحركة بعض الطيور في الطبيعة. و لحل تلك المعضلة، ابتكرت شركة فورتكس بليدليس توربينات هوائية مستغنية عن الشفرات الضخمة التي تدور لتنتج الطاقة، و إنما تتم عملية الإنتاج عن طريق الذبذبات الناتجة عن هبوب الرياح في اتجاهها. و من المتوقع أن تخفض هذه التقنية الأثر الكربوني بنسبة %40 مقارنة بنظيراتها التقليدية

ثانيا: أبراج تنقية الهواء

smogfree-project-air-roosegaarde4

تعاني العديد من المدن من تلوث مزمن في هوائها، كبيكين في الصين و دلهي في الهند. و قد أدرك ذلك كل من دان روزجارد و بوب أورسيم و قاما بابتكار و تشييد برج يبلغ طوله 7 أمتار و يقوم بشفط الهواء الملوث من حوله و تنقيته و من ثم إعادته إلى الجو كيوم هبط نقيا على الأرض. باستطاعة هذا البرج أن يقوم بتنظيف 30,000 متر مكعب من الهواء في الساعة، و حاليا يحل البرج ضيفا على مدينة روتردام في هولندا

ثالثا: أسقف الطاقة الشمسية

elon-musk-solar-roof

منظر الألواح الشمسية أصبح مألوفا في جميع أنحاء العالم. و لكن إيلون ماسك، عبقري التقنيات المبتكرة، أسس شركة تدعى سولار سيتي تسعى إلى صناعة الأسقف المنزلية (أو المعمارية عموما) التي تنتج الطاقة من أشعة الشمس بذاتها و بدون الحاجة لتغطيتها بتلك الألواح الزرقاء. هذه التقنية، و بالشراكة مع تقنيات أخرى ابتكرها إيلون، ستسمح للبيوت بالتخلي التام عن الشبكة الكهربائية التي تمد المدن بالكهرباء حاليا

دبي و أبوظبي في صدارة المدن المُستدامة عربيا بحسب مؤشر أركاديس – أما عالميا فأين؟

0

masdar-incubator-building-green-prophet-5

على الرغم من احتلالهما المركزين الأول و الثاني في الشرق الأوسط على مؤشر أركاديس للمدن المُستدامة للعام 2016، لا تزالا دبي و أبوظبي بعيدتين عن المراكز الأولى مقارنة بالمدن العالمية الأخرى. و طبعا، حلول دبي و أبوظبي في المركزين ال52 و ال58 على التوالي يعد إنجازا يُحسب لهما و مثالا يُحتذي به، و لكن لا يزال المجال مفتوحا للتحسين و التطوير في كلتا المدينتين، كما صرح  بن خان، و هو مدير تطوير الزبائن لشركة أركاديس في الشرق الأوسط.

و قال خان تحديدا أن المدينتين تستهلكان كمية كبيرة من الطاقة و بالتالي لا تزال الانبعاثات الكربونية تتدفق بنسب عالية فيهما، و ذلك بسبب عوامل المناخ و ضخامة التطوير و الاعتماد على المحروقات التقليدية للطاقة. و أكد أن المدينتين هما في صدد إيجاد حلول لهذه الأسباب

united-arab-emirates-green-building

و إذا ما نظرنا إلى كل مدينة على حدا، نرى دبي بمبانيها في خضم استعداداتها لاستضافة إكسبو 2020 و عرض ما تملك من تكنولوجيا و أفكار في مجالات الاستدامة المتعددة. عدى عن هدفها بإنتاج %5 من طاقتها من مصادر مستدامة بخلال العام 2030. ذلك بالإضافة الى المعايير الخضراء التي تفرضها على تشييد المباني الجديدة، كمساحات تخزين الدراجات و المواد العاكسة لأشعة الشمس و زراعة نباتات محلية. و يبقى السؤال، هل هذه الخطوات كافية لتحسين أداء الدولة ككل في مجال الاستدامة؟

masdar-city-completion-image

يبقى أن ننظر إلى العاصمة أبوظبي للإجابة على السؤال، و خاصة من منظور مدينة مصدر الشهيرة، و التي احتاج بناؤها إلى أكثر من 10 سنوات بهدف جعلها مدينة متكاملة و خالية من الكربون في آن واحد. ففي الوقت الذي كانت على موعد مع 50,000 نسمة يملؤوها حياة في 2016 كما كان مُخطط لها، لا يتجاوز عدد سكان مدينة مصدر 500 نسمة اليوم، معظمهم من الطلاب و العاملين في معهد مصدر للعلوم و التكنولوجيا. و تعليقا على هذا الإخفاق، قال مدير التصميم في مصدر كريس وان لجريدة الجارديان البريطانية أنه لن يحاول أن يفرض كمية معينة من إنتاج الطاقة المستدامة بسبب أو بدون سبب من داخل أسوار المدينة، و أن مشروع ضخم كهذا يجب أن يأخذ مجراه و وقته ليكتمل. و أكد أن المدينة قطعت نصف  المسافة حتى الآن في طريقها إلى الاستدامة الشاملة

siemens-leed-platinum-headquarters-masdar-city-25

و بالتأكيد، لن تتخلى أي من أبوظبي أو دبي عن أهدافهما في التسريع بعملية التحول إلى الاستدامة، خاصة في ظل تطور المدينتين المضطرد و تصدرهما مؤشرات المدن المستدامة في الشرق الأوسط. و تبقى التنافسية في التطوير الذكي الذي تنتهجه المدينتين، من تشييد حدائق صديقة للبيئة أو أنظمة مواصلات ذات كفاءة عالية على سبيل المثال، هي دافع في الاتجاه الصحيح لتحقيق ذلك الهدف المنشود عالميا

The death of the modern car park

0

carsharing_parking

We thought we’d never get to say it, but car parking may be becoming dead. It’s already happening in China. It’s become kind of a cliché that there’s never enough parking spaces no matter where you go. We’ve all got anecdotes about circling car parks three or four times looking for a space to back that up, but statistics don’t seem to support that idea, and cities across the world are actually looking to reduce the amount of parking in an effort to go green and encourage people to try alternative modes of transport.

In the past, many municipalities have had minimum parking requirements for new developments or other laws that encourage the creation of spaces—in Japan, for example, motorists must prove that they have access to local parking just to own a car. But studies show many cities are using more space than necessary for public parking. Tippecanoe County, Indiana had more than two spaces per registered vehicle in 2010 and maybe that’s not surprising; people drive to and from work and they need places to keep their vehicles for hours at a time.

But this may actually create more congestion—drivers on the hunt for parking clog up urban roadways, adding time to their journeys and creating a lot of additional air pollution.

Parking and leisure activities underground in Amsterdam

San Francisco has aimed to fight both these problems by eliminating unused parking spaces and using the room created for bike lanes and other public improvements to make alternative forms of transport more viable. By reducing spaces, you will inevitably reduce cars, leading to lower levels of pollution.

A big motivator for this change is a drive to reduce pollution. In Paris, which has suffered a number of instances of smog in the past few years, there have been a number of moves to improve air quality. Older models of cars with high emissions have been banned from the city, and for one Sunday a month the Avenue des Champs-Élysées, normally a major east-west thoroughfare terminating at the famous Arc de Triomphe, is kept free of cars. Around a third of the city was closed off to motor vehicles on the 25th of September this year, with exceptions made for buses and taxis, leading to noise levels dropping by half and air pollution being reduced by up to 40% in some areas through startups helping people find parking spots faster. This means less circling around looking for the cherished parking spot.

Cities like Tel Aviv have an enormous crisis with cars. As the people earn more in startup salaries from high-tech the premise of owning a car in the city becomes a liability. Where to park it if you need to leave for a few moments and then return? It can take you an hour to find a spot come free.

Seoul, South Korea has tried a similar experiment and both cities are looking to repeat them with increased scale and regularity. They are not the first to try making their cities car free but they might be the first to attempt making it more than an annual event, and this is an encouraging step for those who envision a future of clean and peaceful car free cities.

A lot of other cities around the world like Copenhagen and Norwich, England are even pedestrianizing shopping districts and high streets, some of which were once their main automotive access routes. This is also happening in Israel in cities like Jaffa.

But some places have also been trying less direct methods to reduce the number of cars on their streets. The London Congestion Charge Zone, introduced all the way back in 2003, and similar schemes in Durham, Milan, and Stockholm are all aimed at making traffic more manageable. Moves like this to lower car use also have the advantage of lowering oil dependency, contributing to falling prices on the commodities market, which have dropped by as much as 77.48% in the last five years according to trading platform IG.

Naturally, if there are fewer cars in cities we will require far less parking, which will hopefully lead to greener, more spacious cities we can all enjoy.

Ezme, the Turkish tomato salad recipe you will long for at home

0

tomato and pepper recipe

Tomatoes are full of lycopene, the cancer-busting carotenoid responsible for the reddish colorations in vegetables and fruits. Red peppers are packed with phytochemicals and beta-carotene, which flood your system with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory benefits. Meet a delicious concoction that combines both in an ancient Middle Eastern recipe with decidedly modern health benefits.

Science says the sense of smell is the most potent conjurer of long-ago memories.  I say that taste runs a close second. A recent dinner with a great friend in Jaffa hurled me back to a Manhattan apartment circa 1982 and a dish whipped up by the exotic Moroccan boyfriend of my then-best pal. It sent me on a week-long hunt to replicate it.

red pepper recipesI recall how Laurent speared plump red peppers on a tin fork and roasted them above the flame on my ancient gas stovetop. He chucked them into a brown paper bag (plastic had yet to infect 1980’s NYC) and the peppers steamed inside, loosening their charred skins. He chopped the peppers, adding tomatoes, onions, and garlic, explaining in swoonable French-accented English that this was exactly how his ancient grandma did it.

(I now live in Amman, Jordan where our only bags are plastic, so I recruited some manila envelopes to stand in for brown paper bags.)

tomato recipeThat ’80s meal consisted of his deep red relish, smeared on Italian bread, washed down with many bottles of wine. Undoubtedly, a Rolling Stones record spun in the background.  I suspect Goat’s Head Soup.

Back to the future in Jaffa, Karin laid out an incredible spread of Levantine dishes, including one standout that she called a Turkish Salad.  A mushy confit of tomatoes, onions, and red peppers served up cool on a warm summer night.  The vibrant tastes triggered a taste bud explosion. She waved off our raves saying she picked it up at a local shop. A week on, I am still jonesing for that flavor. So the internet hunt began.

Google’s result for “Turkish Salad” brought up the how-to’s for what looked like a basic chopped salad. I love me a vinegary medley of minced cukes, onions, and tomatoes, but this was not the Turkish Salad I was searching for. Sweet tomato Turkish Jam (recipe here) was also off the mark.

Digging deeper, I hit the jackpot, finding two different recipes for the ruby red dish.  Seems the term “Turkish Salad” is specific to a condiment (סלט טורקי) commonly served up in Israeli restaurants. It’s typically presented as part of a trio, served side by side with humus and tahini.  Like Italian marinara, and Indian curry, there seem as many versions of Israeli Turkish Salad as there are people who make it.

So I set out to experiment on my own, using slight variations on two different recipes, just to see which would send my taste buds into delicious reverie. Here are two ways (of many) to make Ezme, or Turkish Salad, a Sephardic savory jam.

Version #1Deep red tomatoes are kicked up by piquant spices and a hit of harissa (hot chili pepper paste). Pulse the mixture in a blender if you prefer a less chunky sauce.

Ingredients for Ezme Recipe Version #1:

  • 3 small onions, roughly chopped
  • 8 garlic cloves, finely chopped
  • 4 tbsp olive oil
  • 4 large tomatoes chopped into 1/2″ pieces
  • 1/2 red bell pepper finely chopped
  • pinch of cayenne pepper
  • 1/2 tsp cumin
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1/2 cup chopped parsley
  • 1/4 cup chopped cilantro
  • 1 tbsp harissa

Heat oil on medium flame. Add onion, garlic, and red bell pepper. Sauté about 5 minutes or until onion becomes translucent. Add tomatoes, harissa, and all spices. Sauté about 5 minutes, stir occasionally. Turn off the flame, add parsley and cilantro, mix well and allow it to cool down. Serve at room temperature, or cold.

Version #2 – Much more work, but a fantastic result.  Smear it on bread or pita, eat it plain, or accompanying omelets, chicken, grilled meat, or fish.

Ingredients for Ezme Recipe Version #2:

  • 6 red bell peppers
  • 6 large ripe tomatoes
  • 6 cloves of garlic
  • 4 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon kosher or sea salt
  • ½ teaspoon coriander
  • 1 teaspoon cumin
  • ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper

Char the peppers over a grill, or spear them on a fork and carefully roast over a stove top flame. Place blackened peppers in a paper bag, close the bag to allow them to steam. Boil water in a large saucepan (sized to fit 6 tomatoes). Cut a small X in the bottom of each tomato. When the water boils, place tomatoes in the pot for 2 minutes. Remove the tomatoes from the boiling water and set aside.

Once cooled, remove the peppers from the paper bag and discard all stems. Peel off the charred pepper skins. (Skip the temptation to scrub them under water, as washed peppers will lose a lot of their flavor.) Slice them open, and remove white membranes and seeds. Dice the peppers with a sharp knife.

Peel the blanched tomatoes, starting at the bottom X cuts. Cut the tomatoes in half and scrape out the seeds. Remove the green stems too. Dice the remaining tomato pulp to a similar size as the peppers.

Mince the garlic. Add olive oil to a large non-stick sauté pan. Cook the garlic, peppers, and tomatoes – stirring constantly – on high heat.  When the mix begins to bubble, turn the heat down to medium. Season with salt and all spices. Let the tomatoes and peppers cook down to the consistency of a spread, stirring occasionally to avoid burning as the liquid evaporates. As with Version #1, allow the ezme cool. Ezme is similar to but not the same as Moroccan matbucha which does not incl

End note: Serve it up as a sandwich spread, a dip for bread or veggies, or as a brilliant topping for pasta, fish, or chicken. Store leftovers in the refrigerator in a non-reactive glass jar. It also freezes with good results.

Which version do you prefer? And – as importantly – what music do you like to eat it to?

humus via Unsplash

Want more dips and spreads? Try hummous and ful mesdames from Lebanon.

France’s new ban on plastic throwaways should be extended globally

0

France bans plastics

France has passed a new law that bans cups, cutlery, plates, and takeaway containers made from plastic. It’s The part of the nation’s Energy Transition for Green Growth Act, which will also carry out a ban on plastic bags in grocery shops and markets beginning in July. The law comes into effect in 2020.

French President Francois Hollande says the law aims to make France ‘an exemplary nation in terms of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, diversifying its energy model and increasing the deployment of renewable energy sources’.  Viva la France! But why stop at its borders?Arash Derambarsh, a municipal councillor for the commune of Courbevoie in Paris, has called for the ban on single-use plastics to be implemented across Europe. Derambarsh is an environmental action figure; he previously led a successful campaign to ban French supermarkets from throwing away unsold food products.He told The Independent, “This problem of recycling exists in all European countries. We have to pass the same law in all European countries to tackle this very important problem of waste.”  He describes the new law as one part of a circular economy of waste disposal, one of several legislated measures to reduce waste production and divert remaining waste from landfills.

The law requires all plastic single-use items to be made from biologically-sourced materials that can be composted after use.

It’s not rocket-science. Bans on free-issue plastic shopping bags have been on national law books for over a decade. The Republic of Ireland (enacted in 2002), Denmark (2003), Belgium (2007), Mexico (2010), Wales and Italy (2011),  Scotland (2014), and England (2015) all tackled the problem with legislation.

China, Bangladesh, South Africa, Uganda, Somalia, Rwanda Botswana, Kenya and Ethiopia have enacted total bans. The United States does not consider it a federal issue, instead leaving it to states, counties, and cities (since 2013, at least 17 states, and 98 cities and counties have enforced bans).

The Middle East has been slow to join in, despite having many of its main touristic venues and natural habitats seriously polluted by uncollected plastic garbage. EcoMENA reports that some governments have tried to raise public awareness and incite behavioral change, but full-bore bans – with rigorous enforcement – have not been enacted.

In 2009, the UAE Ministry of Environment and Water launched the “UAE free of plastic bags” initiative. Dubai Municipality launched a “No to Plastic Bags” campaign to eliminate 500 million plastic bags from circulation. Smaller scale efforts in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Kuwait encourage clean-up campaigns in seas, deserts and cities, but do not deter usage of disposable plastics.

In 2014, Jordan announced plans to ban plastic bags and wraps used in food sales, but two years on there is little evidence of policy enforcement. In 2017, two years after the initiative was first raised, Israel passed a law that halted free issue of plastic bags at all large supermarket chains.  The law also imposed a full ban on very thin plastic bags (less than 20 microns).

Hurghada, Egypt became the first plastic-bag-free governorate with a 2009 ban which also generated employment opportunities for women who create reusable cloth bags to replace plastic ones.

The French law moves beyond bags to include food industry single-use plastics. France is the first nation on the planet to do so, an action that could be repeated everywhere to forcibly halt our culture of waste. Predictably, the law faces opposition from the European packaging industry, who claim that the ban violates European Union rules on free movement of goods and protection of manufacturers.

Pack2Go Europe, a Brussels-based trade organization representing manufacturers, has said it will fight the new law and work to prevent its adoption by the rest of the continent. “We are urging the European Commission to do the right thing and to take legal action against France for infringing European law,” Pack2go Europe secretary-general Eamonn Bates told The Associated Press. “If they don’t, we will.”

Bates believes there is no proof the biologically-sourced materials are more environmentally beneficial and that the ban might exacerbate pollution worse as people may increase littering, thinking the products degrade instantly when exposed to natural elements. It’s a view shared by Daniella Dimitrova Russo from the Plastic Pollution Coalition (read her Op Ed on the matter – link here).

Perhaps edible plastics are the way to go? Feed the world by literally eating up potential litter. There’s an idea to chew on.

Image from Metro UK

Human activity causes a new geological epoch. Rock on!

0

justin guarigliaSay hello to the “Anthropocene”, a new geological epoch brought about by humanity’s impact on planet Earth. A team of geologists say that ash from fossil fuels, plastic waste, rising seas (which are triggering a dramatic increase in upland erosion), and radioactive particles littered by nuclear bomb tests are all contributing to permanent changes in Earth’s rocks. Not necessarily something that warrants a party, people. But a New York City artist marked the event with a new tattoo.

Skittles, Risk and Statistics

0

skittles-louisiana-candyI’m going to thank Donald Trump Jr. for providing a simple way to visualize our decisions regarding human refugees. He said that we should pretend that “those people” are skittles, not someone we could ever imagine being a loved-one– capable of thought, compassion, joy and loss as we believe of ourselves.

In junior Trump’s analogy, a bowl full of skittles represent men, women and children who somehow escaped bombings and other violence in their home and who somehow avoided drowning and starvation as they made a perilous journey across the Mediterranean, through Europe’s muddy hinterlands into your candy bowl. Now we are to imagine that there is one poisonous terrorist skittle in our candy bowl. Eat this and you will die.

Assuming we can stomach a moral worldview which equates human lives to candy, there is another problem– and another bowl of skittles.
syrian_refugee_with_hand_knit_hat_laurie_and_bradbury

Bowl #2 is a mandatory skittle bowl. You must eat from this one even though you know that many of its skittles are poisonous. How many? Well, let’s get back to bowl #1.

If each skittle represents a Syrian refugee taken into the US this year, there are 10,000 skittles. And how many are poison? Should we assume that the LA shooters and the Boston bomber brothers, the Orlando gay hater, the Jersey bomber and Saint Cloud stabber all belong in bowl #1? No, none of these were among the Syrian refugees the US took in this year but since we’re pretending, let’s assume that we can count all of them. That’s 8 poison skittles out of 10,000. So to fit Trump junior’s analogy, we need to resize our bowl to 1250 skittles, one of which is poison.

But we still have our mandatory skittle bowl #2.  Sticking with Trump junior’s skittle-human life equivalence principle, lets assume there are 300 million red, white and blue skittles in bowl #2.

The poison skittle in bowl #1 represents death from a terrorist. The poison skittles in bowl #2 represent death from other causes. In the US these deaths are tracked by the Center for Disease Control (CDC.) So we know that for each terrorist poison skittle in bowl #1, in bowl #2 we would need:

At this point I’m going to pause and say that I wish the U.S. government could shift a tiny fraction of its $5 trillion anti-terrorism spending into developing a cure for cancer and heart disease. Together these diseases are about 70,000 times more deadly than terrorism. But sadly, they are not the only cause of non-terrorist deaths. Bowl #2 must also contain these poison skittles:

  • 4700 poison alcohol skittles
  • 2000 poison car crash skittles
  • 2000 poison gun violence skittles
  • 2000 poison suicide skittles
  • 452 poison HIV skittles

And a few hundred other poison skittles representing deaths from bathtubs, furniture, prescription drugs and various other causes that other countries might classify with the catch-all  “death by misadventure.”graphic_novel_from_syrian_refugee_child

If you’re reading this, you’ve already survived mandatory skittle bowl #2 and now you have a choice. Do you take your next mandatory skittle straight from mandatory bowl #2? Or do you save thousands of lives by first pouring in the contents of bowl #1, infinitesimally increasing your risk by adding one more poison skittle to mandatory bowl 2 which already contains 80,000 poison skittles? You’ve got to ask yourself, ‘Do I feel that unlucky?’

Images by Jene Bradbury, Green Prophet’s Laurie Balbo. The drawing is by a Syrian refugee child at Zaatari camp in Jordan.

Internet of Things – From Smart Fridge to Smart City

0

BioThink, biomimicry, Iran, Mohammad Ghezel, green transportation, hybrid energy, solar energy

Like Cloud, Big Data and other technological buzzwords, the definition of the Internet of Things (IoT) is often stretched to fit a corporate sales pitch. IoT. But what is it? The internet of things connects ordinary objects to the internet. So now we can Google missing luggage and use an online dating service to match our socks? The reality of IoT is only slightly less imaginative. IoT promises to become the technological bricks and mortar that helps us build smart cities.

Want to build your career in IoT brick by brick? Check the Intellipaat Internet of Things training to get ahead!

nest labs google

Someone peeked inside the refrigerator. A jar tilted against the rubber seal preventing it from re-closing tightly. The door was slightly ajar for only about an hour. But the incandescent refrigerator light bulb had done the damage. Ninety-five percent of its 15 watts went into heating the well-insulated box and spoiling $50 worth of food. It had happened before. It would happen again. So I jury-rigged an alarm that squeals every time the fridge light comes on. The alarm annoyed my family, but a neighbor asked me to make one for him. A photoresistor, a battery and a piezoelectric beeper shouldn’t cost more than $5. But when I researched these 1970s vintage components, I learned that they had evolved into microprocessors and eventually the internet of things.

I found a $5 device capable of measuring temperature and humidity and transmitting the results over WiFi. It could post,“Hey stupid, you left the fridge open again!” on my Facebook wall when it detects a temperature rise.

I showed this to an Iraqi architect who immediately saw how it could be used to improve the curing of pre-stressed concrete– a process that should rely more on science and less on gut instinct and luck. What else can be done with this internet of things?

When Ireland squandered too much of most abundant resource (rain) — smart water meters were installed on millions homes. These devices measure water consumption, detect leaks and transmits its findings via a smart-meter network to a monitoring truck which passes this information to the billing department. My electricity meter does the same thing.

Worldwide the growth of this technology is approaching the frantic pace of PCs, smart phones and the internet itself.  IoT is already implemented in some cars to put drivers in touch with mechanics and tow companies in the event of a break-down or crash. Cars can also notify each other of road hazards and traffic congestion.

smelly fridge

SamTech of U.A.E. uses IoT to track buses, taxis and other vehicles. GreenQ of Israel uses IoT to track garbage.  Silicon Oasis is installing IoT for smart streetlights in Dubai. flux is using it to listen to the health of plants. Smart thermostats like Nest can adjust the temperature of your home when it detects that your smartphone (and presumably you) are nearing the house. And last but not least, IoT is being used for refrigerators. Refrigerators can send a recommended grocery list based on what my family has used and at what rate and remind them when they are eating too much unhealthy food. It can even show its contents via a video display so there is no longer a need to open the door and peer inside and risk leaving the door open.

The Silicon Valley for agriculture to be built in Denmark

0

denmark-food-park

We all need better food in our lives.

Now Denmark is putting its stake in the ground and ploughing ahead with new ideas. It’s working with leading architects and is making investments in a making huge investments in a balanced whole-systems and ecological approach to growing our food.

agro-food-park-william-mcdonough-partners-2-889x589

William McDonough + Partners, GXN, 3XN Architects, BCVA and Urland have put together the master plan the Agro Food Park (AFP), which is built on an existing hub of agricultural innovation center. The firms designed a connection between research and business and urban agriculture to the needs of food of tomorrow can be me without further degrading our planet.

agro-food-park-william-mcdonough-partners-9-889x357

The original food park opened in 2009 and is owned and run by The Danish Agriculture & Food Council. William McDonough + Partners said it is expected to “create synergies among the many existing tenants while building an ecosystem inviting new entities to further strengthen products and expertise developed within the hub.”

Related: Creating a food and expert network for urban farmers

agro-food-park-william-mcdonough-partners-3-889x489

“Embracing Agro-Urban Ecosystem Design, the AFP treats urban and agricultural development together as a unified, productive and restorative ecosystem,” said William McDonough + Partners.

agro-food-park-william-mcdonough-partners-4-889x623

“By integrating the carbon cycle and other ecological processes into large scale urban systems and their surroundings – buildings and energy flows, water cycles and wastewater treatment, land use and food production – the AFP creates economic value within the urban and agricultural infrastructure.”

Meet the Mad Men for urban and small-scale farmers

0
Farmed Here special hydroponic growing project
Have a special farm, growing hyper-nutritious food? Nick Burton, Founder of the State of the Soil agency helps small business farmers craft the messaging and media to sell what’s grown at a profit.

Urban farming. High-tech farming. Modern farming, or maybe it’s traditional farming? However you call it, farming in the US is shifting against the tide of large-scale monoculture, chemical company-controlled mega farming, where farmers measure success by operating at smaller loss than the year before. The farming industry is on the verge of collapse. Oil prices are dropping, seedstock prices are quadrupling and with mega billion dollar mergers like Bayer and Monsanto looming, US farmers fear the absolute worse is yet to come.

We know the world feels what happens to the US: the current breadbasket to the world in many staples such as corn and wheat.

Thousands of new farmers in the United States are revolting against the system in their own gentle way, by farming with dignity and doing things differently than factory farming. They are creating small business farms in all shapes and sizes from hydroponic greenhouse farms to one acre organic specialty crops farms.

The problem for these farmers isn’t growing. They learn what to do, they love it, and they grow successfully. Their problem, says Nick Burton, in the green business for 20 years and a hydroponic farmer for 3, is now building a media and branding services to modern farmers –– because most do not know how to market and brand themselves.

Burton (pictured below) started a new business growing hyper-local greens for Texans and has nailed the packaging, email lists, and is growing a booming business out of Paris, Texas called the Victory Lunch Club. Burton’s company supplies artisanal salads to your office desk.

nick-burton-state-of-the-soil
Burton gets behind your urban farm or smallhold farm brand, and tells your story to your market

He found marketing and media was his calling, his purpose for changing the world and has since created a new business, State of the Soil. It is intended for growers and farmers of all stripes, using any medium and system for farming. State of the Soil is like your Mad Men advertising agency if you are a small or medium sized farm business holder.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yniY6lB3fBE

As the company builds out, it will be building conferences and events, starting with an online speakers event this coming January – register here.

The company will support community growers through social media, it will create events, and will provide educational resources to the people who have started farming and want to learn more.

Services will be affordable and not multiples of thousands of dollars, which the conventional ag industry has normally changed for its events and services, so no one but managers of chemical companies and financiers could afford to attend.

Burton is putting farming back into the hands of men and women. If you are keen on joining the urban farming movement, get your message and story right for the farmer’s market. Burton will show how it’s done –  sign up here.

Meet Nick at NYC AgTech week happening next week September 19 to 24.