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28 ideas for hotel management to upgrade as eco, without huge costs

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Environmentally friendly hotels not only save money for the owner, but also resources for the world, while at the same time letting their guests continue doing good things for the environment. For some people, like us, this is super important.

In the lodging and hotel industry, green is the new black.

In hotel business, initiatives that are environment sustainable are becoming widespread. Environmentally-friendly initiatives help hotels to save money and resources without compromising on quality. In some cases these programs improve the stay.

Many guests will be attracted to the green hotel just because it is taking environmentally friendly steps. Whether it’s water or energy conservation, recycling, or reducing the consumption of natural resources through bulk amenities and newspaper programs, a positive impact can be made through simple steps.

Green hotels follow strict green guidelines to ensure that their guests are staying in a safe, non-toxic and energy-efficient accommodation according to local guidelines, customs and laws.

Below, the Princess Royale provides a list of actions properties of any size can take to stake their claim as an eco-friendly establishment. This is how they do it and what they advise managers to do:

  1. Monitor your hotel’s electric, gas, and water usage.
  2. Implement a towel and linen reuse program. (guests can tell housekeeping to leave these slightly used items to reduce water consumption)
  3. Start a newspaper-recycling program.
  4. Do staff training on implementing green practices.
  5. Provide information for guests on green practices.
  6. Install energy efficient interior light bulbs.
  7. Form an environmental committee to develop a green plan for energy/water/solid waste use.
  8. Install digital thermostats in guestrooms and throughout the hotel.
  9. Install 2.5-gallons per minute showerheads or less in all guestroom baths and any employee shower areas.
  10. Install 1.6-gallon toilets in all guestrooms.
  11. Start  a recycling program for hazardous materials found in fluorescent bulbs, batteries, and lighting ballasts through licensed service providers.
  12. Purchase Energy Star labeled appliances and equipment.
  13. All office paper products should have 20% or more post-consumer recycled content.
  14. Housekeeping should use non-toxic cleaning agents and laundry detergent.
  15. Supply 100% organic cotton sheets, towels and mattresses.
  16. Make your hotel a non-smoking environment.
  17.  Utilize renewable energy sources like solar or wind energy when available.
  18. Purchase bulk organic soap and amenities instead of individual packages to reduce waste. Explain to guests why their soaps look this way.
  19. Provide guest room and hotel lobby recycling bins.
  20. Provide on-site transportation with green vehicles.
  21. Serve organic and local-grown food.
  22. Use non-disposable dishes.
  23. Offer a fresh-air exchange system.
  24. Implement grey-water recycling, which is the reuse of kitchen, bath and laundry water for garden and landscaping.

So, how are hotels going green right now? One way is by prioritizing energy efficient awareness in their staff training programs. Housekeepers play a vital role in helping hotel businesses stay green because they have access to thermostats, lamps, and other electrical devices even before guests check in.

Opening curtains on sunny days during colder months helps heat rooms on the cheap. Even shutting off a light or dripping faucet really adds up over time. And those controversial thermostat temperatures that no one seems to agree on? Most hotels default to 68 degrees Fahrenheit as a comfortable temp for conservation-minded properties. Once training and education are provided it is amazing how hotels can creatively implement eco-friendly practices. Here are a few real life examples:

  1. Meeting and banquet facilities are using pourers for sugar, pitchers for cream and small serving dishes for butter and jellies.
  2. A Toronto hotel is recycling stained tablecloths into napkins, chef’s aprons and neckties.
  3. Bicycles are being loaned or rented to guests.
  4. Coins or chips are being used for car parking and coat checking instead of paper tickets.
  5. Hotels are making cloth laundry bags from retired sheets.
  6. Mowed landscaping is being replaced by ground cover. Lawnmowers are used less, so air pollution and noise are reduced.
  7. A Florida hotel bought a mulcher to chop up their garden clippings and create their own mulch. The mulcher paid for itself in three months.
  8.  A Wisconsin B&B has installed beautiful blue floor tile made from recycled automobile windshields.
  9.  Chief engineers have found that toilet tank fill diverters in older toilets save about ¾ of a gallon of water per flush.
  10. A Pennsylvania property has a 400’ garden and produces organically grown vegetables for its restaurant.
  11. Restaurants and bars in hotels are using daylight exclusively for as much of each day as possible.
  12. Solar energy is lighting signage and heating water for hotels in tropical areas.

Sometimes, making a difference can be as practical as providing environmental knowledge to staff, switching to greener energy measures, and considering small changes for large scale benefits. Hotels can succeed in ‘Driving business to its properties’ by being environmentally friendly and also offer healthy and sustainable options.

The most important factor why hotels are being environmentally friendly is the social responsibility that has reached a tipping point in the hospitality industry and is spreading awareness significantly.

International airports source local farm food in 30 countries

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Following an international trend pressuring large food chains to think local and source local food, Autogrill, the multinational company known for its motorway and airport restaurants in 30 countries, is partnering with the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (or the FAO) to do just that. The chain of restaurants will cut down food waste and losses and support the introduction of products of small-scale and smallholder farmers in developing countries, the UN agency announced today.

Under the three-year agreement, FAO will provide Autogrill with tools to track and reduce food losses and waste across its more than 4000 stores and design information materials and campaigns to raise awareness among Autogrill customers worldwide about waste reduction.

“We’re excited to collaborate with a major multinational restaurant chain like Autogrill on making its market chain more inclusive,” said Eugenia Serova, Director of the Rural Infrastructure and Agro-Industries Division at FAO.

“This is a new type of public-private partnership for FAO which could become a model for collaborations with other retailers in future” she said.

It is estimated that roughly one third of the food produced globally for human consumption – approximately 1.3 billion tonnes every year – is lost or wasted.

In recent years, restaurants and food and beverage stores worldwide have become increasingly aware of their role in making food chains more sustainable. Supporting local food producers and farmers makes economies resilient and in some cases encourages positive practices such as organic farming, permaculture farming and hydroponic farming.

“The public-private partnership belongs to the tradition of Autogrill. From today onward the leading global restaurants chain for the people on the move will continue that tradition jointly with FAO. Our social responsibility awareness will certainly be improved by the relationship we are beginning today,” said Luigi Troiani, European Public Affairs Manager of Autogrill Group.

Autogrill is the latest to sign on to the Save Food Global Initiative spearheaded by FAO to involve a wide range of actors along the food chain in common strategies to cut food loss and waste.

Locally grown hydroponic food in Thailand via Shutterstock

Bizarre phenomenon about women mapped in Saudi Arabia

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We’ve laughed and we’ve cried over stories in Saudi Arabia and women drivers. Let’s face it: what’s happening in Saudi Arabia is not about driving it’s about women’s rights. There is the No Woman No Drive video from a few years back. We’ve reported on Saudi Arabia holding the record for greatest number of deaths by driving.

Strangely as one Saudi Arabian artist points out with a new map and exhibit called Crash – more women are dying on the roads than men – and women don’t even drive.

The artist is Manal Al-Dowayan who created the above map Crash (2014). It’s a visual of the tragedy told through data points. She writes: “It’s become part of the tea-time talk in the majlis, the women’s area,” she says. “It’s always Oh, did you hear about so-and-so teachers who died in the so-and-so region? Oh those poor things.”

The reason why more women are dying in car crashes despite them not driving is because they often work as teachers in remote areas and since they can’t drive need to cram 6 or 7 together to get to a destination. Simply put: crashes with women involve more fatalities.

Since drifting doesn’t seem to be going anywhere soon, the story of Crash will likely get bigger. See the images created by Manal Al-Dowayan below.

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Via: Houston Truck Accident Lawyer Greg Baumgartner

Myswapp is like Tinder for old stuff – check out pics and trade up!

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trade Tinder app stuff

There are loads of ways to unload your junk. You can haul it away to the landfill, leave it at the end of your driveway or lawn for others to pick up – or have a garage sale.

When you go online you can go to Freecycle to give it away for free or navigate through the complex process and regulations and shipping at eBay. Big, fat hassle. Then the buyer complains, doesn’t pay, tries to stiff you with a fraudulent Fedex bill you need to pay. Says the stuff doesn’t arrive. Been there, done that.

There may be an easier way to swap, sell or trade your stuff, with people near you. It’s an app called myswapp. It’s kind of like Tinder, but for stuff.

The application downloaded to your iPhone or Android or tablet (get Myswapp here on iTunes) is geared towards helping us all be less wasteful while fulfilling our desires to get the stuff we want and need – now. Why buy a Kindle for new when you can find a perfect device second hand at a fraction of the price. It’s perfect for old books, toys, and even Xbox games.

The process is simple. You take a quick picture of something you don’t need anymore but which you want to sell: think device, once-read 50 Shades of Grey book, Gucci boots, and then post it to the app.

People close to you search through the images and post something they don’t want. If you want to make a swap, send a request and an anonymous chat opens up within the app. You can ask for more details, pics, and whatnot (was the book useful? the boots sexy? the device functioning?) They you coordinate the swap.

Fast, easy, efficient. No long description processes, detailed regulations to follow, heavy shipping fees and waybill slips to manage.

“It’s all about bringing back the barter system with a digital twist. It’s all free and always will be. We just want people to stop wasting and start swapping,” company developer Vivek Bedi from New Jersey tells Green Prophet.

One user said that he was able to swap an old iPhone for a college biology textbook. A pretty good deal for both sides of the story.

Read here for a previous article on the app.

::Myswapp Website

Elon Musk’s hyperloop one step closer to reality

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You have all surely heard of Elon Musk, the billionaire innovator of space travel and the electric vehicles industry. He was the man who made the electric car cool with the launch of the Tesla Roadster (named after Nicolai Tesla), an electric vehicle capable of outperforming many sports cars and have zero emissions at the same time.

Tesla Motors, Middle East, driverless vehicles, automated cars, Mobileye, Elon Musk, collision avoidance technology, green transportation

SolarCity, Silevo, New York city, renewable energy, world's largest solar panel plant, solar energy, photovoltaic panel factory, renewable energy,

Nikola-TeslaBesides his SpaceX team has designed space technology based on reusable rockets, vowing to make space travel affordable for the common folk in the near future.

Hyperloop is another project linked to his name.

He came up with the idea of a new way of transportation without the need of rails or wheels, immune to weather and completely safe, and also powered by solar panels, as a response to a projected California high-speed rail back in 2012.

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The Hyperloop could be used to transport cargo at high speeds, and people too.

His team put the concept of the Hyperloop on paper, and gave it away to the public, to “see if the people can find ways to improve it”. And the concept was popular among some engineers out there, some of them dedicating their time and effort to transforming it into reality.

This year Elon Musk has taken another step toward the transformation of this safe, fast and green means of transport into reality. Back in January he has announced that he will build a Hyperloop test track in Texas, which would allow teams of engineers to test their pod designs. The test track would be privately founded, and have a length of about 5 miles.

Furthermore, Musk’s SpaceX has also announced that it will build a one mile long test track next to its California facility to test pods designed by teams enrolled into a pod design competition. The contest was announced at the middle of June by SpaceX, and will see independent teams of engineers build a sub-scale Hyperloop pod.

The pods will not be suitable for human transportation at this time, and the competition’s goal is to find a viable, economical and safe way to transform this new way of transportation into reality: “While we are not developing a commercial Hyperloop ourselves, we are interested in helping to accelerate development of a functional Hyperloop prototype,” the SpaceX website states.

All information about the competition, just like the draft Hyperloop plans, will be open sourced.

There are currently two commercial companies in California – Hyperloop Technologies and Hyperloop Transportation Technologies – are working towards the building of the first tracks. SpaceX has no affiliation with any of them.

Dispatch from inside Masdar

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As an intern at Masdar Institute, I’ve witnessed firsthand how real and possible a drastically improved world is. Masdar serves as a real-life experiment of how our sustainable future might look like.

Solar energy generated by a 10-megawatt solar photovoltaic plant as well as panels mounted on the institute’s buildings provide nearly all of the electricity. Many ingenious techniques were used to decreasing the need for energy consumption. Masdar, which is the Arabic word for source, is also the name of the quickly developing sustainable city built with minimal Carbon emissions, and is where the Institute is located in Abu Dhabi, UAE.

The US department of Energy ranked the UAE 6th globally in petroleum production for 2014, and listed 6 Middle Eastern countries in the top 15. With fossil fuels as the lead emitter of greenhouse gases and the biggest contributor to Climate Change, the Arab World will be a key player this December, when the world will turn its eyes towards COP21 negotiations in Paris. (See coverage of COP20)

COP21, the 21st UN Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference of Parties, comes with a long overdue goal; to achieve a legally binding and universal agreement on Climate Change. It is crucial for nations around the world to raise their ambitions and shorten their timelines.

The effects of man-made Climate Change will not spare this region. In fact, according to a report released by the World Bank during COP18 which took place in Doha, Qatar, Climate Change effects in the Arab World will be dire.

The Arab region has the lowest freshwater resource endowment in the world. Climate Change is expected to decrease water runoff further still by 10% by 2050, while demand is projected to increase 60% by 2045 due to increases in population and per capita use. This, along with changing temperatures, will also decrease agricultural production.

Furthermore, more people are moving into urban areas already due to droughts and resources shortage. A recent study mentioned by a National Geographic article says that rural-to-urban migration helped spark the uprising and consecutive war in Syria, which has displaced millions and killed hundreds of thousands of people.

The Arab region is already very vulnerable to wars and security threats. Another report released by the Pentagon affirmed that Climate Change will have immediate threats to national security. This is true all over the world, as the number of climate refugees keep going up, and resources become scarcer.

A 2014 report released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) states that in order to limit the destructive effects of Climate Change, the world temperature rise will need to be limited to 2 degrees Celsius. The report states that in order to have a likely chance of limiting the increase by that much, we will need to lower global greenhouse gas emissions by 40% -70% compared to 2010 by mid-century, and to near-zero by the end of this century. This is no easy task and will require a “worldwide push over the next 15 years” according to experts appointed by the UN.

These alarming numbers and predictions are not to mention increasing floods, effects on tourism and historical sites, as well as larger gender equality gaps. Three years later since the publishing of this report, we are still short from having concrete action plans to contain these devastating effects, which the IPCC report says is still possible. The only way to avoid the worst is to act big, and act fast.

The scientific evidence is overwhelming: We are running out of time.

This is a guest post by Munira Sibai, an engineering student and environmental advocate who has attended the UN Climate Change negotiations in 2012 in Doha and in 2013 in Warsaw. 

UN: Innovation needed to feed people of the future

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Whole Foods, Bees, Xerces Society, Share the Buzz, a market without bees, world without bees, Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD)

Strong crop yields, higher productivity and slower growth in global demand should contribute to a gradual decline in real prices for agricultural products over the coming decade, but nonetheless, prices will likely remain at levels above those in the early-2000s, according to the latest Agricultural Outlook report produced by the OECD and the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organization.

Lower oil prices will contribute to lower food prices, by pushing energy and fertilizer costs down, and removing incentives for the production of first-generation biofuels made from food crops.

The OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2015-2024 projects that agricultural trade will increase more slowly than in the previous decade, while its share of global production and consumption will be stable. The Outlook points to further concentration of agricultural commodity exports among a few exporting countries, coupled with a dispersion of imports over an ever-larger number of countries – trends that make it imperative to ensure the smooth functioning of international markets.

The growing role of a relatively small group of countries in supplying global markets with key commodities could increase market risks, including those associated with natural disasters or the use of disruptive trade measures.

Major changes in demand are expected in developing countries, where population growth, rising per capita incomes and urbanization will increase demand for food, according to the report. Rising incomes will prompt consumers to continue diversifying their diets, notably by increasing their consumption of animal protein relative to starches. As a result, the prices of meat and dairy products are expected to be high relative to crop prices. Among crops, the prices of coarse grains and oilseeds, used for animal feed, should rise relative to the prices of food staples.

Presenting the joint report in Paris, OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría said: “The outlook for global agriculture is calmer than it has been in recent years, but there is no room for complacency, as we cannot rule out the risk of new price spikes in the coming years”.

“Governments should take advantage of the current conditions to concentrate on developing policies that raise productivity, boost innovation, better manage risk and ensure that robust agriculture systems benefit consumers and farmers alike,” Mr Gurría said.

Calling the Outlook’s projection that developing countries are likely to continue to improve the caloric intake of their populations “good news,” FAO Director-General José Graziano Silva also noted that least-developed countries “remain significantly behind advanced economies; this is cause for concern, as it means hunger in these countries could persist.”

“And malnutrition is an issue: developing countries now have to face problems of overweight, obesity and other diet-related non-communicable diseases,” he added.

Commodity Highlights

The build-up of high cereal stocks over the past two years, combined with low oil prices, should lead to a further weakening of cereal prices in the short term. Slowly rising production costs and sustained demand should strengthen prices again over the medium term.

Strong demand for protein meal will drive further expansion of oilseed production, according to the report. This should result in meal being very important in the overall profitability of oilseeds, and would favour further expansion of soybean production, especially in Brazil.

Higher sugar demand in developing countries should help prices recover from low levels, leading to further investment in the sector. The market outcome will depend on the profitability of sugar versus ethanol in Brazil, the globe’s leading producer, and could remain volatile as a result of the sugar production cycle in some key Asian sugar-producing countries.

Meat output is expected to respond to an improvement in margins, with lower feed grain prices set to restore profitability to a sector that has been operating in an environment of particularly high and volatile feed costs for most of the past decade.

Worldwide fisheries production is projected to expand by almost 20 percent by 2024. Aquaculture is expected to surpass total capture fisheries in 2023.

Exports of dairy products are projected to further concentrate among four prime sources: New Zealand, the European Union, the United States and Australia, where opportunities for domestic demand growth are limited.

Cotton prices should be suppressed in the short term by the drawdown of large stocks in China, but they are projected to recover and stay relatively stable for the remainder of the outlook period. By 2024, both real and nominal prices are expected to remain below the levels reached in 2012-14.

Ethanol and biodiesel use is expected to grow at a slower pace over the next decade. The level of production is projected to be dependent on policies in major producing countries. At lower oil prices, trade in biofuels should remain small as a share of global production.

Outlook for Brazil

This year’s Outlook contains a special focus on Brazil, which is poised to capture most of the trade expansion to be generated by import demand growth, particularly from Asia.

Brazilian agricultural growth is projected to be driven by continued improvements in productivity, with higher crop yields, some conversion of pasture to cropland and more intensive livestock production. Structural reforms and a reorientation of support towards productivity enhancing investments, for example in infrastructure, could foster these opportunities, as could trade agreements that improve access to foreign markets.

Brazil has made outstanding progress in eliminating hunger and reducing poverty. Prospects for further reductions in poverty through agricultural development are growing, for producers of some food crops as well as producers of higher-value products such as coffee, horticulture and tropical fruits.

The Outlook says that Brazil’s projected agricultural growth can be achieved sustainably. While additional supply will continue to come more from productivity gains than area increases, pressure on natural resources can be alleviated by environmental and conservation initiatives, including support for sustainable cultivation practices, the conversion of natural and degraded cropland to pasture and the integration of crop and livestock systems.

Khalifa hydroponic farm’s paying off

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As spring turns into summer, the Khalifa fund’s investment in Abu Dhabi hydroponic agriculture is beginning to pay off.

The Khalifa fund for enterprise development was Launched in 2007 to help local enterprise in Abu Dhabi. At the beginning of 2015, Ahmad Kalfan Al Romaithi revealed that Dh 130 million (approximately 35 million US dollars) had been approved for the funding of up to 130 hydroponic farms.

(Related: flux technology makes it easy for anyone to grow using hydroponics).

Ten farms were initially funded by this project and this number quickly grew to 40.

By mid-June, three of these farms had already begun supplying locally grown fruit and vegetables to union co-op markets in Dubai and Ajman. The co-op’s production of about 60 tonnes of tomatoes per month is expected to double when the remaining farms begin producing by the end of this year.

Hydroponics is an agriculture technology which doesn’t require soil. This technology can allow locally grown crops near cities and in other regions which are unsuitable for traditional farming. It’s space age science that promises to feed a hungry world, especially in dry climates.

Jupiter and Venus meet in Middle Eastern skies

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venus_jupiter_conjunction_2015_iranA celestial tryst between the CEO of Roman gods and the Roman goddess of love and beauty?

This seems hardly a match made in heaven. You might even say this relationship is star-crossed. But watch the western sky just after sunset on Tuesday, June 30th and you’ll see a rare conjunction between a beautiful bright greenhouse effected hottie named Venus and Jupiter, a gassy giant who only appears dim because he is so far away.

Archaeoastronomers tell us that the last time these planets were so close– in fact a fraction of a degree nearer was June 17, 2 BCE. Some say that Persian astrologers might have seen something in the symbolism of these two nomadic stars coming together as on in Leo, a constellation associated with kings and Jewish people.

Persians in the East who followed this star might have been led West, into the Kingdom of Judea.venus_jupiter_conjunction_2BC_iran

Seven month’s later, a lunar eclipse’s blood moon may have coincided with the death of a notoriously bloodthirsty King Herod. But many Christians believe that the star of Bethlehem is a miracle far beyond anything that could be explained by retroactive celestial calculations.

Many non-Christians are equally unimpressed with attempts to connect predictable orbits and historical events with biblical texts.

But if you find yourself under clear skies, look for yourself with binoculars and your naked eyes.

Now try to imagine watching these bright “stars” touching each other in those days nearly 2,000 years before cable televisions and halogen lights.

Enjoy the night, a leap-second will make June 30th, 2015 the longest day since 2012.

The images of the 2015 and 1 BC Venus-Jupiter conjunction were created by the author with the program Stellarium. Note that since zeroth century Romans hadn’t yet pilfered the number zero from their Middle Eastern neighbours, dates around the year zero are approximate.

Also ignore the American and Russian satellites appearing in the simulated image from 1 BCE. We’re quite certain that the Persian astrologers would not have seen these.

الطهي بالشمس في غزة

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تعرفوا على خالد بشير، أحد سكان دير البلح في قطاع غزة. قصته قصة كفاح في وجه الصعوبات، و عبقرية تلبي الحاجة

سئم خالد من انقطاع التيار الكهربائي في قطاع غزة لفترات طويلة. ففي أحسن الأحوال، يعمل التيار لمدة ثمان ساعات، ليعاود غيابه الطويل. سئم خالد أيضا من النقص الشبه دائم في الوقود، و طوابير طلابه اللامتناهية في حال وجوده. كجميع سكان غزة، يعاني خالد هذه الأحوال المنغصة للحياة بشكل يومي. و لكنه جاء بما يخفف من وطئة هذه الأوضاع – على الأقل، عندما يحين موعد طهي غذائه

بنى خالد أول موقد يعمل بالطاقة الشمسية في العام 2000، و كان ذلك قبل أن تقصف محطة توليد الكهرباء في غزة. فقد كان هدفه الأساس هو الطاقة المستدامة. يقول: هذا الموقد أفضل من نظيره الكهربائي أو الوقودي، فهو يتسخدم طاقة طبيعية و لا تكلف شيئا و متوفرة في سماء غزة على مدار السنة، عدى عن أنه يحافظ على نكهة و جودة الطعام، و لا يتسبب بإحراقه بما أن الشمس في حركة مستمرة

يطهي هذا الموقد الطعام ببطئ، إذ تصل درجة الحرارة في داخله إلى 140 درجة مئوية. و قد قضى بشكل كلي تقريبا على اعتماد خالد على غاز الطهي. يقول: أملئ جرة الغاز مرة بالسنة. أما الموقد فبإمكانه طهي كل شيئ تقريبا، ما عدى الشاي و القهوة. لقد آن الأوان لإشاعة هذه الطريقة بين الناس، لعلها تكفيهم عن الطوابير الطويلة و الاعتماد على الكهرباء و الغاز الشحيحين

حتى الآن، أشرف خالد على بناء 20 من هذه المواقد، معظمها لجيرانه. و قد قال أن ردات الفعل من الزبائن كانت إيجابية

حصل خالد على باكلريوس علوم الكيمياء من الجزائر في العام 1985، و ماجستير من جامعة بريتوريا في جنوب أفريقيا. و حصل أيضا على شهادة بالمراسلة من جامعة مكجيل في كندا. و هو هو خبير في الطاقة المستدامة من الموارد المتجددة، كالطاقة الشمسية، و قد عمل في وزارة الزراعة الفلسطينية لعدة سنوات

أما بناء الموقد الواحد فيستمر لمدة يمومين، و يكلف حوالي ال150 دولار، و يمكن تجنب هذه التكلفة إذا ما تم استخدام خشب أثاث و زجاج مرايا مستعملين

يختتم خالد قوله: أود أن أرى شباب غزة يتجهون إلى الطاقة البديلة. بيتي مفتوح و أنا على استعداد لمشاركة الجميع في هذا العلم

Earth is in the midst of its 6th mass extinction – wake up call, folks

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Is humanity as a species threatened with extinction? Is global warming resulting in irreversible climate patterns that are destroying animal and plant species at rapid rates, especially in the Middle East? These questions are causing great concern to scientists now studying the rapid extinction of many species of animals on earth during the past 100 years.

Sixth Mass Extinction

A group of scientists, led by Stanford University biology professor Paul Ehrlich, author of the controversial book Population Bomb, warn that the earth is now  embarking on its “sixth mass extinction” with animals disappearing about 100 times faster than they used to.

This is not the first time that Professor Ehrlich has warned that mankind is destroying life on earth. He predicted back in 1968 that by the year 2000, more than 4 billion people will have died from mass starvation; including 65 million Americans. Obviously, this failed to occur; and despite his dire warnings, the earth’s human population has now increased to over 7 billion.

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In prehistoric times, periods of mass extinction, including the famed Cretaceous-Tertiory mass extinction of 66 million years ago (said to have wiped out the dinosaurs), were attributed  to natural phenomena such as natural climate change, volcanic eruptions and massive asteroids.

According to Ehrlich, this new mass extinction period is largely human caused.

The “sixth mass extinction”, that Ehrlich and his colleagues are now warning is already occurring, deals with the large numbers of vertebrate animal species (396), ranging from fish to mammals, that have become
extinct during the past 110 years alone.

This rate is more rapid than at any other time in recorded history. Invertebrates, including insects, have also experienced significant decreases; with large populations of honeybees disappearing due to a phenomenon known as CCD or colony collapse disorder; and by bee colonies literally freezing to death, due to abnormally cold weather patterns.

Could the demise of bees be a part of Ehrlich’s sixth mass extinction event – now on?

In the video below Professor Ehrlich indicates his concerns over the reduction of numerous animal species, including honey bees.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmb5hn2X2ok[/youtube]

Regions with fragile ecosystems like the Middle East are experiencing reductions of wild animal populations at an alarming rate; with many species of mammals, birds amphibians, reptiles and fish either becoming endangered or extinct altogether.

As a result of  Ehrlich’s study, “rapid, greatly intensified efforts are needed to conserve already threatened species; and  to alleviate pressures on their populations — notably habitat loss, over-exploitation for economic gain and climate change.”

Where more can this apply than to the Middle East, where man caused catastrophes, including frequent warfare (see what ISIS did to Syria this week), are decimating entire regions.

There is hope, however.

Earlier, Ehrlich predicited that countries like England would not exist by the year 2000, due to man-caused ecological calamaties. The UK is still here; and so are most other countries as well. More intense effort is needed, however,  to prevent the “sixth mass extinction” from being so dramatic.

Read more on ecological issues caused by mankind:
Could global warming trigger a new ice age?

The wrath of global warming and the Middle East

Oceans Spiralling Downward, Threatening Life on Earth

 Image of Sixth Mass Extinction: Guardian LV

Alligator sneaks into Iranian gas facility “no man zone”

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Hey, it says ‘no man’, not ‘no alligator’ says this crocodilian creature caught on film by security at an Iranian gas production facility this month. It climbed onto a gas rig in Southern Iran, in search of food, say local personnel.

It was led back to the swamp.

Unlike in Canada, where police went crazy over a wild bear in Newmarket, Ontario, Iranians do not shoot scary wild animals, unless of course they are hunting for sport.

 

Iranian gives two decades of his life to the Oaks

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Bust all stereotypes you might have of Iranians: A retired teacher in Kohgiluyeh and the Boyer Ahmad Province has planted over 10,000 oak tree saplings over a two-decade period.

Mohammad Hossein Aria has devoted several years of his life to the protection and revival of forests, and believes that there is no room for famine or flooding in tree-covered areas and that since forests are a sanctuary for plants and animals, they also play a key role in the lives of people.

On what made him start planting the trees, Aria said, “Disappearance of some oak trees in the Zagros Mountains, in particular in my home province, and a film which featured once dense forests of the region galvanized me into action.”

As for difficulties he has faced in his efforts to plant trees, he said, “Once I got a flat tire and I had to walk 40 km.”

He concluded that as a teacher he had always tried to educate his students on the importance of forests.

 

Meet the High Atlas botanical superhero

high-atlas-mountains-botanyTwo cellphones. Three numbers. Thirty to forty phone calls a day. A road trip-based work life, which, for seven years, has been separated from luxuries like regular hours, weekends and sleep.

Needless to say, Dr. Abderrahim Ouarghidi, 40, is a busy man.

Abderrahim-OuarghidiOfficially the High Atlas Foundation’s director of programs in Marrakech, Ouarghidi, who focused his doctorate work on ethno botany and ecology in rural areas of Morocco and has worked with the Global Diversity Foundation, also advises additional HAF sites on issues like gardening and management. He meets regularly with funders, community leaders and HAF training workshop participants.

With this irregular, busy schedule, what keeps Ouarghidi going is his belief in HAF’s mission of helping rural communities develop themselves. As a scientist and development worker, he has a unique perspective both on preservation and community development.

“The object of being a scientist… is always to preserve resources,” said Ouarghidi. “Being a development agent, you always think about developing the community over the resources. If you’re in the middle, you can… (think) about the preserving and conserving of all the resources, but also (think) about how that can be balanced with developing the community. That’s the position I want to be in the middle, that I can bridge both sides.”

To fulfill this goal, he feels he must be available to local counterparts at all times.

“With (development) work, you can’t say after six o’clock that you’re done,” said Ouarghidi. “People might call you at 12. People might call you at five o’clock in the morning… you’re working 24 hours. Whenever people get stuck or there is an issue… they need to reach you. You cannot anticipate things.”

This availability, says Ouarghidi, creates more than an efficient partnership: it also lays the foundation for long-lasting bonds between HAF and its rural partners.

“We’re seeking to be close to the community. We’re seeking to be participatory, because (local counterparts) know that they can participate. They know that we’re giving them the chance and a place to express themselves, to make their own decisions, then realize their projects.”

For Abderrahim, this empowerment has also lead to deep friendships.

“People, when they love you, they really love you,” said Ouarghidi. “(This job is) something that you do with love. (Local counterparts) want you… they know that you are the solution (to certain problems.)”

Ouarghidi’s effectiveness may stem from his own ties to rural life. Ouarghidi, who is of mixed Arab and Amazigh descent, spent childhood summers in the mountains near Marrakech, where he learned Tachelhit. This connection gave him insight into the lives and struggles of rurally based Moroccans.

“Being in the mountains and seeing people’s struggles and difficulties and going to these fields, you know what people are facing because you’ve been there, and you know exactly what’s happening,” said Ouarghidi. “You know how to get connected to them, and to be connected to their problems, to their priorities.”

In the future, Ouarghidi hopes to focus on how water management affects rural gender empowerment.

“I was fortunate in life. I had a great education, great opportunity. My duty is to give, because I have lots that I have to give.”

This year, HAF has planted 320,000 organic fruit trees at 94 rural schools and community nurseries across Morocco.

Ida Sophie Winter is an undergraduate student of journalism at the University of Missouri. Currently, she is attending Al Akhawayn University in Ifrane as a Boren Scholar.

Solar ovens in Gaza

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Here’s a story about ingenuity and creativity. About a man who uses a solar cooker to prepare meals. If you wish, you can see it as a testament to how the human spirit prevails even under the toughest conditions.  If you’re willing, you can see it as an opportunity, a mutual interest, or a proposition for using a renewable regional source of energy for the greater good. The solar cooker was first invented by an American-Hungarian woman named Maria Telkes and since the idea has spread as an invention that can save fuel and reduce carbon emissions.

 

Khaled Bashir, 50, lives in Deir al Balah in the Gaza Strip, Palestinian Authority. Like all Gaza residents, he too has to contend with rationed electricity supply. Now, on a “good” day, electricity is on for eight hours and off for another eight.

Like all Gaza residents, he lives with the constant rattle of generators and the never-ending shortage of fuel. He too is well acquainted with the long lines with which one has to contend to buy a tank of cooking gas. Bashir endures all of this, but a little less than others. He has an oven that requires no electricity and no gas.

In 2000, long before Gaza’s power plant was bombed and years before the closure, Bashir built his first solar oven. “My initial objective was clean energy”, he told Gisha. “This oven is better than an electric or gas oven. It uses natural energy that doesn’t cost anything and is available in Gaza year-round. Solar cooking helps keep the flavor and quality of the food, and it never burns, because the sun is in constant motion.”

Slow Cookers Define Slow Food Movement

The oven heats up to 140 degrees centigrade, making cooking slow. “You can make everything in this oven, except tea and coffee”, says Bashir. The oven managed to end his dependency on cooking gas tanks almost completely. “I fill a tank only once a year. It was only this past year that I realized now is the time to tell people that there is an alternative to gas, electricity and fuel. Instead of waiting in long lines for a tank of cooking gas, they can rely on a source that’s available to everyone.”

So far, Bashir has overseen the building of about 20 solar ovens, mostly for his neighbors. He says the response has been very positive.

Khaled Bashir completed a B.Sc in chemistry in Algeria in 1985 and an M.Sc at the University of Pretoria in South Africa. He also completed a correspondence degree program through McGill University in Canada. He is an expert on sustainable energy using renewable resources, such as solar energy. He worked for the Palestinian Agriculture Ministry for many years. He now works for a company that manufactures construction materials, where he is oversees the materials used for insulating concrete. He makes his solar ovens with a relative.

“I’m not doing this for profit,” he says.

Maria Telkes and her solar cooker invention
Dr. Maria Telkes, “world’s most famous woman inventor in solar energy,” speaks with Dr. J.E. Hobson (left) and Thomas K. Hitch. Here she stands beside the solar oven which she invented with a grant to help provide food for people in developing nations.

To build an oven, all one has to do is come to him, or call him to come and oversee the process. It takes about two days to build the oven and costs about $150 dollars. The cost can be mitigated if recycled wood from unwanted furniture and glass from old mirrors are used.

“I want to see the young people of Gaza turn to alternative energy,” Bashir says. “My house is open, and I’m willing to share my knowledge.”