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Jewish Girls Gone Wild? Marijuana Lab Found in Haredi School

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marijuana, jewish girls gone wild, pot at haredi school in israel, environment, news, illegal drugs, medical marijuana, israelWhen authorities discovered a lab full of marijuana plants in a bomb shelter beneath an all girls Orthodox Jewish school south of Tel Aviv, they proposed that outsiders must be responsible – because Haredim girls would never smoke pot, right?

The Real Jordan River Will Flow from the Sea of Galilee Once Again


The Lower Jordan River, the baptismal river of Jesus, has been dead at its source for some time. For the first time in ages, Israel is releasing native waters via a pump back to the historic waterway.

Big Oil’s Saudi Aramco Builds LEED Certified Homes in Riyadh

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LEED, saudi arabia, aramco, oil, King Abdullah Petrolum Studies and Research Center (KEPSARC)
The irony here is clear: the first international LEED certified housing complex is built by an oil research facility in Saudi Arabia.

Dubai Readies Law to Let Home Owners Feed Energy to the Grid

homes in dubai
With Dubai’s government close to finalizing legislation, property owners in the Emirate may soon have the option to feed solar power into the grid so they can make money from feed-in tariffs.

As of recently, there has been much encouragement from industry sources for the use of solar power on rooftops. Mounting photovoltaic panels on rooftops of residential and office buildings or industrial facilities can be beneficial for they can provide electricity and create a surplus that can be fed into the grid.

“In the next 12 months, we will see a constant increase of solar infrastructure. Not only standalone facilities, but to actually power our villas, our parks, our residential communities,” said Ivano Iannelli to The National. He is the chief executive of the government-owned advisory company Dubai Carbon Centre of Excellence.

However, the legislation may reach some hurdles. Other countries that receive solar energy from small-scale sources, suppliers receive a feed-in tariff from the government. This is a tactic that is under consideration in Dubai. Feed-in tariffs are usually above the market rate, making installation for the solar technology profitable.

“Feed-in tariffs are part of the different activities that are being looked upon,” he noted.

Despite the tariffs being under consideration, industry players are still interested in the appeal for Dubai’s move towards solar energy. SolarWorld, one of Germany’s biggest solar panel producers, opened a showroom in Dubai Creek where its product will be sold by local distributor PTL Solar.

Reliant on fossil fuels, solar energy is a possible alternative energy source for Dubai to take advantage of. The Emirate is already seeking to generate five percent of its electricity from the sun by 2030 and last year, the Dubai Supreme Council for Energy announced its plans for the Mohammad bin Rashad Al Maktoum Solar Park; the contract was awarded for the first plans to take place in October.

Solar energy will also divert attention away from Dubai’s power plants’ reliance on natural gases, which are imported.

The expense is especially high during the summer months when air conditioning is frequently used and the emirate must turn to costly liquefied natural gas.

This expense is then passed on to consumers with a fuel surcharge. Fortunately, solar panels are becoming cheaper as the technology advances and fierce competition controls the prices.

Thanks to the emergence of solar energy, Dubai can also reach its goal of reducing the carbon footprint of its power generation – like Abu Dhabi, which launched the Shams1 Concentrated Solar Plant (CSP) in March 2013.

Shams, impressively, at 100 megawatts, is the largest solar installation in the Middle East. Green Prophet visited Shams earlier this year and you can see pictures here. This installation will contribute to the Emirate’s plan to derive seven percent of its electricity from renewable resources by 2020.

We are rooting for them.

Solar Mamas Shows Sustainable Engineering for Bedouin Women (Film Review)

Refea, solar mamas, barefoot college, Bedouin woman in Jordan

They can’t read or write but a couple of brave Bedouin women from Jordan travelled far and wide to help their villages become solar powered.

Powerful Middle Eastern Graphics from Kuwait’s Mohammad Sharaf

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Saudi Women Riding Bikes Mohammad Sharif

Kuwaiti graphic designer Mohammad Sharaf serves up powerful pictures based on current events, salted with modern Middle Eastern humor and instantly provocative.

Nir Meiri’s Marine Light is a Sustainable Seaweed Lamp You Can Eat

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Tel Aviv’s Nir Meiri recently unveiled Marine Light – a curious lamp shade made entirely of seaweed wrapped around a spindly metal frame.

Eaten by coastal people all over the world and prized for its gelatinous and nutritional properties (see bottled algae superfood), and its use is being investigated for seaweed as biofuel, marine algae is harvested for everything from dental moulds and wound dressings to deserts.

Green lighting, Israeli designers, green design from Israel, seaweed lamp, Marine Light, Nir Meiri,


But we’ve never seen a seaweed lamp shade before.

“Ancient cultures have appreciated and utilized seaweeds for different uses,” Meiri says on his website.”Today, seaweeds are cultivated and harvested on a commercial scale, as a result of a growing interest driven by environmental concerns.”

Meiri encloses the shade’s metal frame with seaweed that is still wet, according to the designer. Then, once it dries, the marine algae shrivels down and conforms to the shade’s shape. 

Once dry, he applies a preservative to the seaweed so that it doesn’t completely rot or flake off; the resulting lamp shade produces a luminescent glow that brings the sea indoors.

“Through the unconventional use of seaweed as a main material for a domestic environment, the product plays on the tension between the artistic and the commercial,” says Meiri.

Green lighting, Israeli designers, green design from Israel, seaweed lamp, Marine Light, Nir Meiri,Materially, the Marine Light is a sensible environmental choice as well since there are no algae shortages in the world and it reproduces very quickly.

This is the second funky lamp we’ve featured this week. If you haven’t already seen it, check out this clever lamp powered by the kinetic energy of shifting sands.

:: Gizmag

Why the 400ppm CO2 Milestone is so Important

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climate change, global warming, carbon dioxide emissions, highest level of CO2 in human history, environment, news Charles David Keeling began recording CO2 levels at Hawaii’s Mauna Loa Observatory in 1958, back when concentrations hovered at around 315 parts per million. Five decades later and that number has soared to 400ppm and his son told Yale Environment 360 we’re unlikely to stop it from rising any time soon.

Turkey, Iran, Syria Top List for Worst Journalism Countries

Journalists in prison, journalism middle east protestors
Journalists in the Middle East can’t report facts because when they do they go to jail or disappear

How can change occur if we’re not free to write about sensitive issues like human rights and the environment?

According to the 2012 census by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), there are 232 journalists in prisons worldwide, over half being held in the Middle East, the most of them surprisingly in Turkey. The online ‘zine Foreign Policy posted its “worst countries for journalism” with the Middle East grabbing three of the Top Ten slots.

As we scour the media, we already see how this fares for environmental reporting which is practically non-existent in the Middle East.

Bahrain = 1

Saudi Arabia = 4

Israel and the Palestinian Authority = 3

Iran = 45

Syria = 15

Yemen = 1

Uzbekistan = 4

Kyrgyzstan = 1

Iraq = 1

Turkey = 49

Read about this region’s biggest muzzlers of free expression, below:

Journalists in prison, Turkey

The world’s most repressive country is showcase Muslim democracy and NATO darling, Turkey.

A New Yorker article published last year stated, “According to the Journalists Union of Turkey, 94 reporters are currently imprisoned for doing their jobs. More than half are members of the Kurdish minority, which has been seeking greater freedoms since the Turkish republic was founded, in 1923.”

CPJ’s 2012 census counted 49 jailed reporters, but The Friends of Ahmet Sik and Nedim Sener (named after two imprisoned writers) maintains a list of 104 journalists currently imprisoned there.  Another 800 face charges, and scores more have left their jobs because of government pressure.

“The government wants to set an example; it wants to intimidate,” investigative journalist Ertugrul Mavioglu told The Guardian. “Journalists are being told, ‘There are limits on what you are allowed to say.’”

Andrew Gardner, Turkey specialist at Amnesty International, added, “This prosecution forms a pattern where critical writing, political speeches and participation at peaceful demonstrations are used as evidence of terrorism offenses.”

Attorney Meral Danis Bektas said Turkey’s Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, openly threatened journalists and dictated what they wrote. Bektas said: “All of the defendants stand trial for doing their jobs. Free press and freedom of expression are cornerstones of democracy. Without them, democratic political participation becomes impossible.”

The government denies the journalists were arrested for their work as members of the press, instead citing terrorist offenses.

Journalists in Prison, Iran

Iran earns the silver medal for jailed journalists, with 45 behind bars as of December 2012.

The government controls all television and radio broadcasting, banning coverage critical of specific topics and events including national nuclear policy and the economy.

Internet access is skyrocketing, but content is restricted and censored and users risk persecution for online activity.

Social media (Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube) was blocked following the 2009 election and the number of disabled political sites grows exponentially. A 2010 Computer Crimes Law legalizes government internet surveillance and criminalizes online expression.

Cybercafes are obliged to record customers’ personal data and browsing histories. Last year, a national intranet was finalized, aimed at cutting Iranians’ connection to the worldwide web.

In 2012, Iran banned 250 ”subversive” books and closed the professional association “House of Cinema” that supported 5,000 Iranian filmmakers and artists. Don’t count on reading Lolita in Tehran, and forget about seeing the movie.

Journalists in Prison, Syria

Journalists receive reporting licenses at the pleasure of the prime minister. According to the CPJ, 28 licensed writers were killed in 2012 and 15 more were incarcerated by the end of that year.

Syria’s 2001 Press Law gives the state full control over all print media.  It forbids reporting on issues of national security and allows the state to determine whether information is factual or not.  Violate the law and face up to three years in prison with fines reaching $20,000.

The 2011 Media Law guarantees the “right to access information about public affairs” and bans “the arrest, questioning, or searching of journalists”, yet ironically bars publication of content that affects national unity and security, and incites public unrest.  Guess who makes the determination?

Bonus: Journalists in Prison, Saudi Arabia

Not so many. They are just killed instead.

Chillout Cafe: Dubai’s First Ice Lounge Makes its Chilling Debut

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Chillout Cafe Dubai, ice lounge in Dubai, Dubai tourism, travel, Ice hotels are fairly commonplace in northern countries where temperatures regularly fall below freezing, but that didn’t stop the Sharaf Group from opening an ice lounge in the middle of the desert.

Indonesia Opens to Geothermal Power

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Bacman geothermal project S. of LuzonTapping into the earth’s vast geothermal energy reserves to create electricity in countries like the Muslim country of Indonesia, which has frequent volcanic activity, is becoming a very ecological friendly way to solve energy needs.

Geothermal energy is also being tapped in Middle Eastern countries like Jordan, which recently completed the Middle East’s largest geothermal system. Besides Indonesia, another South Asian country, the Philippines, is expanding its geothermal energy “reserves” and presently creates around 27 percent of its total electricity from these sources.

In a recent CNN Eco Solutions program, Richard B. Tantoco, President and COO of Energy Development Corporation (EDC) , the country’s largest energy development company, said that the decision to exploit the country’s geothermal energy resources came out of necessity due to the increasing cost of oil and other fossil fuels.

“Oil became much more expensive in the 1970’s; and following the Yom Kipper War and Arab oil embargo it increased in price six times. As a result, we had to look for other energy sources and found that we had an ample supply of geothermal energy reserves,” said Tantoco.

The two main EDC geothermal plants in the Philippines are Bacman I and Bacman II. Both plants cover an area of 18,870 hectares (7,636.58 acres) and include the boundary of Legaspi City, Sorsogon City, Bacon District of Sorsogon City and the town of Manito Albay in the Bicol Region, South of Luzon.

Geothermal in Jordan

Total electricity output of the two plants is 130MW. By contrast, the MENA geothermal plant in Jordan, said to be the largest of its kind in the Middle East, is producing around 1.7 MW.

The Philippines development of geothermal energy has resulted in it being the number two developer of this energy source in the world; behind only the USA. Due to very little polluting energy needed to develop geothermal energy, it is very ecologically clean, says Mr. Tantoco.

“Countries that are using geothermal energy import less oil, gas and coal” he adds. EDC, which initially received help from the New Zealand government, is now exporting this technology to other countries; and now has exploration projects in Indonesia, Chili, and Peru. To make the geothermal energy process even more environmental friendly, steam distilled from the turbines and the water is sent back into the ground by a process known as “resurgence”.

In addition to these geothermal projects, EDC also has projects involving hydro-electric and wind power. “We have now been involved in ecological energy for more than 40 years; and have gained a lot of experience in doing so” says Tantoco.”

Read more on geothermal energy:

MENA – Geothermal’s Largest System in The Middle East is Complete

Iceland’s Prez Promotes Geothermal at Masdar’s World Future Energy Summit

Gulf Inventor Creates “Alma” – a 20 Square Mile Saltwater and Dew Collector

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Abdullah Al Shehi, alma dew collector
Abdullah al-Shehi from the United Arab Emirates has shown his worth in environmental technology by patenting his sea-borne water collector that he hopes will help deliver clean water to desert regions across the Middle East and the world.

2013 Aga Khan Architecture Awards Betters Muslim Communities in Iran, Morocco and Lebanon

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Maria Grazia Cutuli Primary School, Herat, Afghanistan

The nominees for the 2013 Aga Khan Award for Architecture were recently announced: 20 candidates – half hailing from the Middle East – all vying for a million dollar prize.

UN: Eat Beetles and Crickets to Fight World Hunger

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UN FAO, edible insects, world hunger, eat insects to fight world hunger, locust recipe

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) recently issued a report calling for wider uptake of insect for food and feed.

IMF: Cut Energy Subsidies and Reduce Global CO2 by 13 Percent

IMF, Nemat Shafik, Global Leaders Lecture Series, energy subsidies, Middle East energy subsidies, public debt and climate change, reducing carbon emissionsClimate change is one of the most urgent issues of our time, yet most countries in the Middle East and North Africa continue to subsidize energy derived from fossil fuels. Seeking solutions, The Guardian launched a three part Global Public Leaders Series and sent us this recent lecture by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).