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Invest in ancient fig cultivars in Morocco, invest in the future

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figs from Morocco

Moroccan fig trees are a part of Ahmed Hakam. Until he was nine years old, Ahmed never ventured outside of his birth village near the northern city of Ouezzane. He vividly remembers the local fig harvest, when, every year, he, his mother and scores of women and their children from nearby villages would gather to dry figs on palm shrub leaves. While women worked, children were socialized among fig plantations.

“As children, we spent a lot of time playing, eating, singing in fig trees,” said Ahmed.

This experience, he says, greatly affected his life path. As a Ministry of Agriculture and Maritime Fisheries official, he has spent the greater part of his 32 year-long career on rehabilitating and securing value-added processing for Moroccan crops.

He places special emphasis on figs due to their rich biological heritage: here, farmers have been cultivating figs by breeding wild and domestic species for thousands of years, a practice that has allowed myriad types to evolve and thrive throughout the country.

RELATED: A recipe for fresh, baked figs

According to Yossef Ben-Meir, president of the Moroccan-American nonprofit High Atlas Foundation, however, this biodiversity is threatened by a lack of investment in community-managed tree nurseries, inefficient water use, and little value-accessed processing and sale. The Moroccan government indicates that farmers, unable to utilize value-added opportunities for figs, are relegating them to mountain slopes and other areas difficult to reach for transportation.

More accessible land, meanwhile, is used for resource-intensive crops like wheat, apples and pears. In some areas of Morocco, over 50 percent of fig cultivars have therefore disappeared, and figs decay, unharvested, on the tree branch. Ancient fig cultivars are being destroyed.

This decline in production, however, has led to increased domestic demand: fresh fig prices, says Ahmed, are now higher than those per kilo for bananas and apples.

Related: We travel to the High Atlas Mountains

Demand is certainly high internationally (in 2014, global fig demand reached 448 million U.S. dollars and grew 8 percent from 2007 to 2014, according to marketing firm Index Box), representing significant opportunity for Moroccan farmers and investors.

To access this market, Yossef says that farmers must first access the financial and knowledge-based resources to increase production and ensure consistent quality.

RELATED: Meet Morocco’s plant super-hero

The Moroccan government has decided to invest in fig production in partnership with the High Atlas Foundation, which is already active in organic almond and walnut production. Together, these institutions plan to build a nursery near Ouezzane, due to the region’s tradition of fig production and the threats regional fig plantations face from the neglect that has already extinguished indigenous plum varieties.

The partnership will support 10 varieties of threatened local figs and distribute saplings for free to farmers. The involved institutions will train farmers in organic-certified production and value-added processing, and spark a farmer’s coop to share knowledge and explore additional value-added opportunities. The partnership will also create a scientific teaching garden featuring all regional varieties.

This pilot program aims to benefit 35,000 rural Moroccans by extending fig crops by 1,000 hectares. Through it, the Moroccan government and HAF will support the government’s goal of increasing national fig production by 126 percent within the next five years.

Knowledge is deeply needed at a fig plantation near Ouezzane, where farmers lose out on economic opportunities due to lack of infrastructure and knowledge. There, farmers dry only their second crop, making it more valuable, and must sell their first, early-summer crop fresh, as its high water content counters effective drying. Due to a lack of cold storage, to generate the most profit from this delicate crop, farmers must harvest early in the morning and arrange transportation for figs to local souks by the afternoon.

While dried figs sell for the equivalent $1.80 to $2 per kilogram locally, fresh figs, at $0.80 to $1, present a roughly 50% loss.

At the farmers’ plantation, Hakam points to a large tree surrounded by many offshoots. Farmers tell him that this tree produces 300 kilograms of fruit per year. With some pruning, he says, it could yield twice that amount.

When asked what the farming community would do with extra revenue from increased structural support and efficiency, farmer Fatima Khaima, who left school at age 15, emphasizes children’s education. There is a well-attended primary school a kilometer and a half away, she says. Past age 12, however, roughly 30 percent of children drop out because they do not have the money for $1.20 worth of travel and food at the secondary school, 9 kilometers away.

Another problem, says Fatima, is road quality. The fig plantation is surrounded by steep dirt roads that are washed away in the winter.

“[Increased revenue from figs] will help us for our future,” said Fatima.

One person already benefiting from fig crops is Jamal Belkadi, a farmer in the nearby village of Asjen. Jamal began his fig plantation in 2000 with two trees, and, through traditional grafting of tree branches, grew his crop to 170. Starting “without a single dirham a day,” he now makes a $4,000 profit every year to support his wife and two young daughters.

Jamal says these fig trees mean the world to him. They are also significant for his community, where he creates seasonal agricultural jobs and to which he has dedicated three trees’ worth of fruit annually.

“I feel happy,” said Jamal. “My love are these trees. I work with them. I sweat over them… People come and eat, and say, ‘God bless your parents.’ I’m better with God.”

By investing in fig farming communities, the Moroccan government and High Atlas Foundation can spread Jamal’s expertise and make dreams come true for Fatima’s and Ahmed’s communities.

Ida Sophie Winter is a student at the Missouri School of Journalism and project manager with the High Atlas Foundation. She spent 2014-2015 in Morocco as a Critical Languages and Boren scholar.

Image of figs in Fez, from Shutterstock

Agratech from Dubai will grow 5 acres of space lettuce in Portugal

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hydroponics

Fresh greens and fresh anything are usually impossible to find in desert locations. But a new way of growing food on water, called hydroponics, is shaping up to be one of the latest exports from a Middle East country that has had to deal with lack of water. Hydroponics is working in Jordan thanks to the US Government and USAID.

Hydroponics, despite using only water and no soil can actually be extremely water efficient and productive. So much so, that the Dubai-based company Agratech which builds such farms, is now importing its technology to Portugal where it will build a 5 acre covered greenhouse.

Known as distributed agriculture, or controlled environment agriculture, hydroponics may very well be the only way that we can ensure a steady supply of fresh food in the future. Soil-based farming is extremely resource intensive, with only a fraction of the fertilizers used actually making it to the roots of the plants.

Hydroponics, on the other hand, bathes the roots in needed minerals so the plant gets exactly what it wants without having to search for food. This way the plant spends more energy growing fruit and less on root.

Portugal, like all the Mediterranean countries and States like California, is seeing a dire shortage of water.

According to press annual Agratech aims to be one of the largest operators of hydroponic farming facilities in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) and Europe from their strategic base in the United Arab Emirates.

Striving to improve the world’s food security imbalances with their technologically advanced farming techniques coupled with clean and ethical farming practices that produce fresh, healthy fruit and vegetables.

With the vision to educate, teach and develop the next generation throughout the globe with relevant farming and agricultural knowledge. They also continue their local-to-local philosophy to ensure job creation and economic safety throughout the region.

Dedicated to balance being a successful business as well as a socially responsible one, they aim to construct over 100 hectares of hydroponic farm land by 2020, but also to donate produce to the United Nations and World Health Organization.

Dubai’s Museum of the Future is short on sustainability

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Dubai Museum of the future

Construction has begun in Dubai on the $136-million Museum of the Future. Tucked between skyscrapers in Dubai’s financial district, just a seven-minute drive from the tallest building in the world, the Burj Khalifa, it will be more than an exhibition hall, cafe and gift shop.

Special “innovation labs” will be included where researchers and designers will work towards its official motto, “See the Future, Create the Future”. But will that future be sustainable?

UAE Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum said the museum will be “a destination for the best and brightest inventors and entrepreneurs.”

His government has proclaimed 2015 the “Year of Innovation,” investing aggressively in technology, and the private sector is jumping aboard with UAE telecommunications company Du recently partnering with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Senseable City Lab to explore how technology can enhance the cities of the future.

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The Sheikh explained, “The future belongs to those who can imagine it, design it, and execute it. Here in the UAE we think differently. While others try to predict the future, we create it.”

The Museum of the Future will open in 2017. Update 2020: Here is the website. Initial press releases were image-heavy, with glossy artist renderings of an elliptical doughnut, standing on edge. The structure’s center will hold a holographic billboard which will broadcast news on museum exhibits which will include robots,  holograms, and laser technology – at least according to those press photos.

Fully sheathed in silvery metal, lines of poetry penned by the Sheikh repeats in patterns across its exterior, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.

Daylight enters the building through that punctured facade. And while increased interior daylighting in a cornerstone of sustainable design, seems you could fry falafel on those sun-heated steel surfaces. And how will the shiny exterior deflect sun rays? It could make London’s car-melting “Walkie Talkie” … Take this inside, how have the engineers handled the resulting heat load to museum interiors? A month after groundbreaking – there is no publicly available information on how the building will perform environmentally.

The history of Dubai

Dubai is a part of the seven Emirates that make up United Arab Emirates or (UAE). Dubai was built from a small fishing village on the Persian Gulf. The small Kingdom had discovered oil. Since then the village has became one of the most important cities in the Middle East and well known around the world.

The Royal family who rule over Dubai knew they had to act fast to find another way to make revenue for Dubai. The ruler of Dubai made the city a household name by making it into the city built on investments from all over the Middle East and around the world. These new investments in the city helped make Dubai what it is today, and what it will become in the future.

In just a short amount of time Dubai has grown rapidly and new buildings are being planned and built. When beachfront land was needed the investors came up with an idea to build islands to make more building space.

It can be said that Dubai is at a time in its life where it is having a very big building boom buildings are popping up all over the city. Some of the buildings have been designed in a more modern look and others have been designed in a traditional way. As Dubai continues its building boom it has begun to focus on constructing buildings that can be more sustainable.

As an example, sustainable construction saves more water in a place like Dubai where water is precious. Using the sun to help make energy for the buildings would ensure the city does not have to burn more fuel that causes air pollution but use clean way to provide energy.

The questions that may be asked is can a city like Dubai become more sustainable? The answer is yes it can. Dubai has goal of becoming one of the top ten sustainable cities in the world by 2020.

In 2010 the goal came alive and started with government buildings, all 40 of which were abiding by the new law by the time it was rolled out across the country at the start of 2014.

Having new rules and regulations in building standards help to make sure the city is built in a more sustainable way. These codes of building have been proven to help create a city that has less of an impact on the environment by causing less of a carbon footprint.

The motto for the building is “See the future, create the future.” It strives to unite inventors, designers, and researchers for collaboration on technologies, including automobiles, robotics, genetics, and more.

The Museum of the Future is the latest in a burst of superlative projects from the UAE capital, which range from plans to erect the world’s tallest twin towers to designs for an Aladdin-inspired city in the oldest section of Dubai to the world’s largest shopping mall slated to debut at Expo 2020. The museum will stand adjacent to the Emirates Towers on Sheikh Zayed Road. The architect has not yet been announced.

The WSJ notes that Dubai is funneling increasing amounts of money into technology innovation, including funding competitions such as “Drones for Good” — a $1 million prize to find humanitarian uses for drones that was won by a collision-proof search-and-rescue model from Switzerland.

a few of these drones bumping around the interior of the Museum of the Future wouldn’t go amiss, but Dubai will need to showcase more than just foreign technology to live up to its grand claims.

Experience the (new, artificial, and made-in-America) Middle East! Coming to Dubai in 2018

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fox world dubaiAmerican media giant 20th Century Fox has teamed up with United Arab Emirates Al Ahli Holding Group to build a theme park in Dubai, set to open in 2018, that will feature attractions based on blockbuster movies such as “Aliens,” “Titanic,” “Ice Age” and “Planet of the Apes.”

So the UAE builds another resource-guzzling folly for audiences with high disposable income, hungry for US-themed fun. How long can this roller coaster ride last?

The Martian movie started as a book – here’s the review

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MARS housing

Imagine that you are a castaway on a dead planet. You only have provisions for a few days and you are absolutely alone. How would you survive? Andy Weir turned this question into his best-selling novel, The Martian. It is a tale of man versus Mars.

Can GM make electric cars the right way?

Chevy Bolt EV

Electric car fortunes have had their ups and downs; especially following the collapse of the Better Place electric car network that left hundreds of EV car purchasers with the possibility of being stranded without power over in ISrael. Although some electric car models like Nissan’s Leaf and Tesla sport EVs have made modest inroads, over all, electric cars have yet to capture a sizable share of the world car market.

America’s largest car maker,General Motors, introduced its Chevrolet Volt plug in hybrid model in 2010. GM now hopes to change the way people think about driving electric cars when it markets its new Bolt all electric car sometime in 2017.

In contrast to GM’s Chevy Volt, which has a hybrid engine (both an electric and gasoline engine) the Bolt is a total electric car that will have a driving range of “roughly” 200 miles (322 km). Resembling Chevy’s gasoline driven Sonic hatchback model in appearance and size, the 5 seater Bolt will cost around $30,000. This is after a $7,500 US government tax credit incentive to American EV car purchasers is applied. This will make it more affordable than other similar sized electric models.

A Bolt prototype model made a recent appearance at the popular Detroit Auto Show earlier this year. There, the Bolt appeared to be a better value than other featured EV cars, including Tesla’s new Model 3 and BMW’s i3. Without the government offered tax credit, the Bolt will cost around $38,000; still lower in price than other comparable models. GM does have a lower priced EV car on the market, the smaller Chevy Spark EV car that’s only available in two US states: California and Oregon.

Whether GM’s new EV models reach markets in the Middle East is still anybody’s guess. Israel’s EV car experience, where aging Better Place marketed Renault Fluence EVs are still seen on the roads, has shown that electric cars are not yet being accepted by the general public. The lower price of oil, makes gasoline and diesel cars more desirable, is also a factor, despite warnings by environmentalists linking fossil fuels to climate change and global warming.

For all EV models, including the new Chevy Bolt, the main issue will still be what fuels the power plants that supply electricity for electric cars.

Perhaps solar and other alternative energy’s time has come after all.

Read more on electric cars:

“Driverless” Tesla electric will test run on Israel’s Better Place grid
Happy 2013! A good year for electric cars
Middle East will remain “Leaf” – less as Nissan puts electric car efforts elsewhere

Photo of Chevrolet Bolt EV Car – autoblog/GM :

UBER Middle East delivers puppies on-demand in the most adorable fundraiser!

raining puppies in AmmanIt’s raining cats and dogs in Amman, Jordan now, closing roads (flooded underpasses), some schools, and many offices. It’s the usual drill for a city ill-equipped for atypical weather. Now online transportation giant Uber is helping to “rain down more dogs” for a limited time today in what could be the world’s most adorable fundraiser.

Crazy heat dome will mean no one can live in Arab Gulf by 2100

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Iraqi-thermometer-_3394699b

Just when we got excited about Dubai’s solar trees, seems like innovations like this will not be enough to save the Middle East. In 85 years the region will not be fit for human habitation.

Extreme Middle East weather patterns as a result of global warming and climate change  have become commonplace for some time in many parts of the Middle East. These weather patterns have already wreaked havoc on fragile Arab Gulf natural ecosystems due to extensive human commercial and private real estate development.

Very high summer temperatures have always been a problem for human habitation in Gulf locations like Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, and Dubai, with summer temperatures often surpassing 45 degrees Celsius, combined with high amounts of humidity.

This intense combination of heat and humidity is now resulting in a phenomenon known as heat domes with some of the highest summer temperatures ever endured by mankind in locations like Baghdad, Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

These heat domes, which caused heat indexes last summer to go up to over 80 degrees Celsius (178 degrees Fahrenheit) in Saudi Arabia may result in many parts of the Arab Gulf becoming uninhabitable by humans by the year 2100.

According to CNN the deadly combination of heat and humidity, known by scientists as the “wet bulb temperature effect” becomes deadly when the human body can no longer cool itself by sweating. The wet bulb temperature effect takes place when prolonged summer heat of 31 to 35 degrees Celsius is combined with high rates of humidity.

This is caused by hot drier desert air meeting up with heavy, humid air along coastal areas. Drier areas experiencing much higher temperatures, like Kuwait City for example, would actually be more survivable due to the body still being able to sweat; which is a natural form of ventilation in humans.

UAE builds solar powered retreat

More moderate climate areas of the Middle East, including Lebanon, Israel, Egypt and Jordan, also experienced summer heat domes lasting several days, combined with high humidity and dust.

This forced most people to stay indoors, running energy consuming air conditioning systems that are now an everyday necessity during the summer. Massive air conditioning systems have long been the norm in Gulf locations like Abu Dhabi and Dubai, where conspicuous consumption by wealthy fossil fuel enriched inhabitants  has resulted in such wasteful projects as indoor snow ski centers, high high rise commercial and residential complexes and artificial islands.

dubai_palm_island

All of these projects are built by large numbers of imported guest workers who endure extremely crowded and unpleasant living conditions; often without air conditioning.

Qatar, COP18, migrant workers, climate change, World Cup 2022, human rights, Doha

While the super rich in Bahrain, Dubai and Abu Dhabi can insulate themselves from wet bulb temperature effects in their glass enclosed bubbles, while doing conspicuous shopping abroad, those serving them cannot for the most part. This factor in itself may result in a massive decline in human habitation in the Arab Gulf, long before the projected date of 2100.

Dig deeper into human caused climate change effects in the Middle East:

When will the Middle East wake up to green roofs?
Climate change “worst” is yet to come, UN report warns today
Climate Change contributing to Mali-Algeria conflict

Photo of Heat Dome Thermometer AFP/Daily Telegraph

Suntan around these badass solar palm trees in… Dubai!

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3d-printed-solar-palm-dubai-6

Following Israel’s smart solar trees, the Dubai Municipality is rolling out a series of “community tech hubs” based on 3D printed palm trees that collect solar power. The stations are also where users can recharge their phones, tablets and laptops, enjoy free WiFi, and check in on local weather and news.

The Smart Palm initiative aligns with a UAE Cabinet decision to make 2015 the “Year of Innovation” and with Dubai’s overarching ambition to become the regional leader in digital Smart City technologies.

The oil-rich state has resources to make innovation reality, but why aren’t simpler versions of this basic tech going up as standard civic amenities everywhere?

3d-printed-solar-palm-dubai-5

These six-meter-tall solar-powered towers shaped like palm trees are the latest  city-sponsored convenience for tourists and beachgoers. Dubai Municipality installed the first Smart Palm at Zabeel Park in April. The second, which added a feature to give weather updates, sprouted in May at Jumeirah Beach near the Burj Al Arab Hotel. The Dubai World Trade Center received the third unit in June, and a fourth goes up this month at an as-yet unspecified location.

3d-printed-solar-palm-dubai

Viktor Nelepa, founder of D Idea Media, the company that designs and builds the structures, told Khaleej Times, “The fourth unit will be another milestone as it will be a unique structure created using 3D printing technology and it will be the biggest such outdoor structure [in the world].”

The newest Palm is made of fiber-reinforced plastic (FRP) instead of steel, making it lighter and more durable than earlier prototypes. It has added ultraviolet and humidity protection to reduce maintenance. All Smart Palms run on its own mono crystal solar panels, which provide up to 21 per cent efficiency and generate enough power for daytime functionality and nighttime lighting. The city plans to add them to all public beaches in Al Mamzar, Jumeirah and Umm Suqeim.

Nelepa said that in the first four months of operation the Smart Palms generated a total of 2.5 MW of green electricity. More than 2,100 devices were charged and – on the silly side – about 2,000 selfies were taken using cameras attached to the towers. The project grew from collaboration between Dubai Municipality, Smart Palm creators D Idea Media, du, Sun Tab Solar Energy and Promo Tech Gulf Industry.

Alya Harmoudi, Director, Environment Department, Dubai Municipality, said each unit can support 50 simultaneous over a radius of 53 meters. She added that the stations can display updates on beach events and serve as a public announcement system. They also show beach rules, guidelines, tips, and sea conditions.

The project took just ten months from conception to delivering the finished product.

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Smart Palm is designed in part to serve as functional public art that complements Dubai’s iconic architecture and scenic beaches.  As such, it would be a positive addition to all Middle East airports and touristic sites,  a necessary replacement for the ubiquitous telephone booths of the past.

If the makers would strip it down to its utilitarian components, production costs would reduce, enabling purchase by (or for) urban communities where people lack reliable internet connectivity or experience intermittent power.

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Imagine modified Palms installed in refugee camps.  That would be very smart. And for refugee design ideas see this – 10 refugee shelters we hate to love.

EU schoolkids build food waste charter includes doggy bags and free food

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rotten-tomato-food-waste

The European Charter against food waste was just presented at Milan Expo 2015, two weeks before the end of the six-month-long world’s fair which was focused on feeding the world.

Drafted by over 40 schools across seven European countries, and with advice from 50 municipal governments, it outlines concrete actions for cutting food waste from homes, supermarkets and restaurants. While Middle Eastern nations were not signatories, the guidance is applicable most everywhere.

Among the 80 suggestions to limit waste and promote sustainability are mandatory “doggy bags” at restaurants and public canteens and the use of glass water bottles, instead of plastic. Other recommendations include allowing supermarkets to redistribute food that is nearing expiration and turning schools into community food distribution centers.

The project is raising awareness to chronic food waste said Rita Biconne, the project manager of Felcos Umbria, one of the plan’s promoters.

Belgium, Cyprus, France, Italy, Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom all participated, but the project also strives to impact in developing countries by encouraging local authorities in Europe to sponsor joint initiatives to improve food security around the world.

An estimated third of all food produced worldwide for human consumption is lost or wasted – about 1.3 billion tons a year, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, with developed nations responsible for most of that figure. Rich countries waste nearly as much food (222 million tonnes) as the entire net food production of sub-Saharan Africa (230 million tonnes).

The impact of food waste goes beyond finances. Environmentally, food waste equates to wasted chemical fertilizers, pesticides and transport fuels. It depletes critical resources such as land, water, and human capital. Then consider that rotting food creates methane, a greenhouse gases that is 23 times more potent than carbon dioxide. (In the USA, organic waste is the second highest component of landfills, which are the largest source of methane emissions.)

The Universal Exposition in Milan opened on May 1 with the theme of “Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life”. Fifteen Middle East nations are among the 170 country and corporate participants who are exploring food safety and security, innovation in the food supply chain, and technologies to advance agriculture and biodiversity.

Green Prophet will report on how each nation is tackling world hunger, food waste, and agriculture in the face of climate change.

Image of rotten tomato by Joe Buglewicz/Fast Company Design 

– See more at: http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://www.greenprophet.com/2015/10/newly-released-eu-charter-takes-aim-at-global-food-waste/#sthash.dcqhkxQ4.dpuf

Lend your nationality and swap passports to those in need

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universal-conditional-vulpi
Dutch Design Week 2015 is a misnomer, the event actually runs over nine days across 100 locations displaying the experiments and ideas of 2400 designers, including works by students from the Design Academy Eindhoven. Participating designers often focus on environmental problems, but this year many tackled humanitarian problems such as the flow of refugees from the Middle East. As example, Eindhoven graduate Stefania Vulpi created a conceptual online system that allows a network of people to temporarily share nationalities.

Vulpi designed a website called Universal Unconditional that offers a hypothetical platform to allow people to swap citizenship. “It’s a crazy idea, but it’s also crazy wonderful to think about it,” Vulpi told Dezeen, “Of course I couldn’t make it real, but I wanted to see how it could work.”  Her design stemmed from her own frustration over the ongoing stream of refugees coming to Europe from the Middle East.

The website seeks to connect global participants willing to give up their national identities for a limited time to other people in need. Users could also ask to borrow specific citizen rights to healthcare, asylum, or employment, depending on their needs.

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Vulpi designed a suite of documents to go with the site, including official stationery and a passport that would clearly identify the holder as a member of the UNUN Embassy, with their lending and borrowing status noted.

“I think design has two ways of influencing or helping, and one is very practical – creating systems that can help or facilitate integration,” Vulpi said, “The other side is to create scenarios, question the rules, and question the system…shine a light on it.”

Vulpi’s design is provocative fantasy, but the practical aspects of her scheme are clear to anyone who has lived in a zip code populated by multinationals. I’ve witnessed the consequences of “wrong nationality” in business settings, where inability to get timely visas caused cancellations of conferences, training events, and trade shows. I’ve seen it affectrecreation, when couples or families with different nationalities fail to get visa approvals before their pre-paid flights leave. It prevents kids from competing in international school tournaments because they hold a passport with restrictive travel rights.

I can imagine the pandemonium swirling around embassies and airports if catastrophic weather events make large populations homeless, or disrupt power and water supplies – forcing immediate evacuation beyond national borders. And I haven’t even mentioned the millions fleeing war zones.

Her website site also offers services for people in need, bringing together professional citizens that can volunteer legal aid, translation or medical help.  This is a feature that has is being adopted by many NGOs including the United Nations High Commission for Refugees and International Rescue Committee which are adding platforms to their own sites to encourage personal involvement in their missions.

See this project displayed at the Design Academy Eindhoven graduate exhibition as part of Dutch Design Week 2015, which runs through 25 October

Curious about how your own passport stacks up? Check out these stats from Passport Index:

American and British passports are the jackpot of all travel documents, allowing visa-free entrance to 147 countries (out of a global country count of 196 nations – notional as there is debate as to whether statehood is officially recognized for all). Compare that to the limited travel for Iraqi nationals (38 visa-free travel destinations), Yemeni (41), Lebanese (44), Syrian (48) and Jordanian (49). People in Arab Gulf states fare better; Saudi and Bahraini (61), Qatari (66) and United Arab Emirati (104). (Did you know the UAE issues passports to its prize falcons?)

The worst passport privileges append to the Palestinian Territories (28), and the best in the region attach to Israel (127).

Images from Stefania Vulpi/Dezeen

Israeli Humus Bar promotes peace, one falafel at a time

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promoting Middle East peace

The rise of violence between Palestinians and Israelis has escalated this month straining a region where wider conflict is causing the largest human migration in history, and raising fears of a third intifada.  But headlines don’t ever tell a complete story. Check out how a tiny cafe is working to promote reconciliation by rewarding tables of mixed ethnicity diner with deeply discounted Middle Eastern meals.

Your sunscreen is killing baby coral reefs

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We’ve read reports that sunscreen can cause cancer (and that sunscreen doesn’t really work to prevent skin cancer), but yet –  doctors say you need sunscreen in the sun.

While the daily use of sunscreen with an SPF of 15 or higher is widely acknowledged as essential to skin cancer prevention, it is hurting the sea. The clincher is that you don’t need to swim for it to be damaging because it’s damaging the reefs through coastal sewage systems and runoff.

New research published in Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology finds that a common chemical in sunscreen lotions and other cosmetic products poses an existential threat — even in miniscule concentrations — to the planet’s corals and coral reefs.

“The chemical, oxybenzone (benzophenone-3), is found in more than 3,500 sunscreen products worldwide. It pollutes coral reefs via swimmers who wear sunscreen or wastewater discharges from municipal sewage outfalls and coastal septic systems,” said Omri Bronstein from Tel Aviv University, one of the principal researchers.

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The study was conducted by a team of marine scientists from Tel Aviv including the eminent Prof. Yossi Loya, from the Department of Zoology and the US National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration.

Gets deadlier at the beach

A person spending the day at the beach might use between two to four ounces of sunblock if reapplied every two hours after swimming, towelling off, or sweating a significant amount. Multiply this by the number of swimmers in the water, and a serious risk to the environment emerges, the study authors report.

“Oxybenzone pollution predominantly occurs in swimming areas, but it also occurs on reefs 5 to 20 miles from the coastline as a result of submarine freshwater seeps that can be contaminated with sewage,” said Dr. Bronstein, who conducted exposure experiments on coral embryos at the Inter University Institute in Eilat together with Dr. Craig Downs of the Heretics Environmental Laboratories.

“The chemical is highly toxic to juvenile corals. We found four major forms of toxicity associated with exposure of baby corals to this chemical.”

Forms of toxicity include coral bleaching, a phenomenon associated with high sea-surface temperature events like El Niño — and with global mass mortalities of coral reefs. The researchers found oxybenzone made the corals more susceptible to this bleaching at lower temperatures, rendering them less resilient to climate change.

They also found that oxybenzone damaged the DNA of the corals, neutering their ability to reproduce and setting off a widespread decline in coral populations.

The study also pointed to oxybenzone as an “endocrine disruptor,” causing young coral to encase itself in its own skeleton, causing death. Lastly, the researchers saw evidence of gross deformities caused by oxybenzone — such as coral mouths that expand to five times their healthy, normal size.

It only takes one application

“We found the lowest concentration to see a toxicity effect was 62 parts per trillion — equivalent to a drop of water in six and a half Olympic-sized swimming pools,” said Dr. Bronstein.

Iraq, first coral reef, war, pollution, Euphrates, Tigris, Shatt al-Arab River, Persian Gulf, global warming, climate change, nature conservation, marsh arabs

The researchers found concentrations of oxybenzone in the US Virgin Islands to be 23 times higher than the minimum considered toxic to corals.

“Current concentrations of oxybenzone in these coral reef areas pose a significant ecological threat,” said Dr. Bronstein. “Although the use of sunscreen is recognized as important for protection from the harmful effects of sunlight, there are alternatives — including other chemical sunscreens, as well as wearing sun clothing on the beach and in the water.”

Here – we show you how to make your own non-toxic sunscreen from tea

Natural tea and beeswax sunscreen recipe

 

The researchers hope their study will draw awareness of the dangers posed by sunscreen to the marine environment and promote the alternative: use of sun-protective swimwear.

Cosmic rays reveal the secrets of Egypt’s pyramids!

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cosmic rays pyramidSome of the mysteries surrounding Egypt’s great pyramids will be explored using space-age technology according to a statement released by the country’s Minister of Antiquities. The “Scan Pyramids” project will use cosmic rays to solve the enigma of the ancient pyramids at Dahshur and Giza, aiming to provide better understanding of their architecture and interior design.

London calling: Gulf elite caught in conspicuous consumption

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Middle East billionairesCritically acclaimed Scottish photographer Dougie Wallace has stepped on some well-heeled toes with his latest documentary project where he turns his lens to the rising economic power of the “one per cent”.  His current exhibition, entitled Harrodsburg, captures the ultra-affluent visitors that inhabit – albeit only seasonally – the super-rich residential and retail district of London’s Knightsbridge and Chelsea.  Most of his subjects hail from the Gulf states of the Middle East, and gauging from their reaction – they are not quite ready for their close-up.