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Yours & Mine Eco-Fashion Arrives in Amman

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Amman On Line Dress Shop

A new Amman clothing retailer is hitting all the green lights on the fashion runway: Yours & Mine makes sustainability chic, selling locally sourced, recycled garments in a virtual store. 

I’ve been stylin’ used clothes for decades: it’s old hat  in New York City to personalize your wardrobe with key finds from an Army & Navy store, charity thrift shop or “antique” clothing emporium.  But that tolerance for recycled fashion doesn’t transport all over the world. I’d spent years in Ireland, where the Celtic Tiger transformed a healthy hand-me-down tradition into a lust for only fresh off the rack.  Urbane Dubliners view used clothes as admission you can’t afford new.  It was heartbreaking to dump barely worn (but outgrown) items into the bin.

I left that environment for Jordan, where there is a potential (and willing) home for anything you care to discard: charities solicit clean, used clothes for a myriad of causes.  I’ve given practical, warm garments to Palestinian and Syrian refugees, Jordanian orphans, and gypsy camps.  But what to do with extra handbags? Dress-for-success business suits?  Western-style dresses and (too) short skirts? Now there’s a new solution. 

Abu Dhabi’s New Market “The Souq” Harkens Us Back to Disco Days

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The Souk Abu DhabiEverything old is new again in Abu Dhabi’s Central Market “The Souk” where developers are inspired by the emirate’s  not-so-distant past.

Kinda crazy that the 1970’s can be viewed as olden times, but in the rapidly developing United Arab Emirates, thirty years represent radical transformation. Nestled in the base of the Emirate’s new World Trade Center is a marvelous modern souk (market).  A wood-screened atrium houses bright new shops and food outlets, with tiled walkways bathed in dappled sunlight.

The Souk sits atop one of the oldest developed sites in Abu Dhabi,  the former Central Market which once hosted the city’s original one-story souk, sprawled over 12 acres. That market began in the 1970’s. While the western world was doing “The Hustle”, a thousand emirati traders were hustling their traditional wares. It’s where the modern city of Abu Dhabi began.

Earth Architect Nader Khalili’s Book: Racing Alone

Nader Khalili founder of Cal-EarthIn the book “Racing Alone”, Nader Khalili pursues his own revolution using fire, earth, air and water.

In “Racing Alone”, the late Iranian earth architect Nader Khalili who died in 2008 recounts the years leading to the realization of his dream; building a dwelling that infuses Persian culture, history, art, and  ingeniousness, and a structure that promises the utility of withstanding the tremors of earthquakes and revolutions, heat and cold.

His material: fire, air, water and earth.

Burj Khalifa Resident Arif Mirza to Slum it in Dubai Reality Show

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Burj Khalifa, Dubai, Slums, Scrap collector, lifestyle, culture, povertyJust 37 years old, Arif Mirza is one of the few people in the world who can afford to live on the 35th floor of the towering Burj Khalifa. Never mind the building’s crappy human waste management system, this is luxury that some people dream of having. But Mirza plans to give it all up for 33 days.

As though arriving in Dubai for the first time with nothing but $272 in his pocket, the Pakistani-Canadian entrepreneur will first get a job as a scrap collector and then work his way up from there. He will live with eight or ten other men in squalid conditions – like so many do in Dubai – and document the entire process with a three-person film crew. 

Climate Change (Officially) Contributed to Somalia Famine

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climate change, drought, Somalia, nature, global warming, Horn of Africa, climate, refugeesUp to 100,000 people died in Somalia during the 2011 famine that devastated the Horn of Africa, and British scientists have reported that climate change is partly responsible. The short rains at the end of 2010 failed as a result of natural variations in weather caused by La Nina, Peter Stott of Britain’s Met Office told the Associated Press, but the early 2011 long rains that typically occur around March and April are said to have failed because of climate change. 

Why Earth Hour Still Matters

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Earth Hour in Abu Dhabi UAEMarch 23 at 8:30 PM marks Earth Hour. Will you switch off?

Writing for Slate magazine, Bjorn Lomborg argues against what he believes to be the futility of Earth Hour. But Mr. Lomborg’s inability to see the value in such collective environmental efforts makes a compelling case for why we need them. As I pointed out here in Green Prophet, modern electric lights are thousands of times more efficient than ancient candles. Mr. Lomborg is also correct that today’s centralized coal power plants are unable to efficiently cope with a short-lived drop in demand. But this points to a failure our energy infrastructure, not in the Earth Hour concept. So, what is the true value of Earth Hour?

Chemical Waste Destroying Turkey’s Historical Bafa Lake Reserve

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bafa-lakeTwo thousand years ago, Lake Bafa was a bay in the Aegean Sea, known as the Gulf of Latmus. The remains of ancient Byzantine monasteries can still be found on its islets and nearby mountains. Today, the lake in Turkey’s Muğla Province is home to remarkable biodiversity: 261 bird species, 25 plant species, 22 reptile species, and 19 mammal species. But all that is under threat. The lake’s waters have started turning green and foamy thanks to salinization and polluting discharge from factories and fish farms.

3 Ways Eco-Consciousness can Improve Your Love Life

love peace hand holdingWhen you think of being eco-conscious, does your love life come to mind?

There are few things more natural than making love. For all the time we might think about it or dedicate to the discussion of it, how many of us consider the connection between the environment and intimacy? That is changing. As more environmentalists are finding their ‘E-Spot,‘ and learning about ‘Ecosex‘ – terms made popular by activists in the US – the message is being heard around the world: how we treat the planet and how we treat ourselves shows up very much in our most private experiences.

With spring upon us, and all that means for romance and love, here are 3 ways being eco-savvy now can improve your relationships for a lifetime.

Japan Mines Seabed “Fire Ice” – The World’s Most Dangerous Source of Energy?

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burning methane hydrate fire iceJapan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation, a Japanese state-owned prospecting company says it has successfully extracted methane gas from an undersea methane hydrate deposit in the Nankai trench south of Japan’s main island of Honshu. This marks the first successful extraction of methane from such deep sea deposits. The team expects their pilot rig could extract up to 10,000 cubic meters of methane gas per day. Deep sea methane hydrates could supply Japan’s energy needs for 100 years.

For a resource-poor country still recovering from the aftermath of the March 2011 tsunami and Fukushima nuclear disaster, this sounds almost too good to be true. But methane hydrate mining carries unique risks which could make this one of the most dangerous sources of energy.

Markus Kayser’s Sun Cutter is Low-Tech Laser Cutter Powered Entirely by Sun

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Markus Kayser, solar power, clean tech, laser printer, Sun Cutter, desertAnyone who loved the 3D Solar Sinter that uses the sun’s energy to turn sand into functional glass objects will love the Sun Cutter. Also designed by Markus Kayser, this homemade laser cutter carves pre-programmed industrial designs into a variety of materials – including cardboard, paper and even thin slabs of plywood  – and it is entirely solar-powered.  

Summer World Cup in Qatar Doesn’t Thrill FIFA Medical Chief

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Qatar, Summer, 2022, world cup, FIFA, soccer, solar stadiums, sportsAfter months of debate about the wisdom of holding the 2022 World Cup football tournament in Qatar during the height of summer, FIFA’s medical chief has announced that he is not thrilled with the idea. Michel D’Hooghe told The Associated Press that while he has received strong assurances that the solar-powered stadiums and training facilities will be climate controlled, D’Hooghe expressed concern for the thousands of fans who will have to contend with “elevated” temperatures

Anti-Tobacco Images Fail to Sway Jordanian Smokers

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If new anti-smoking images slapped on Jordan’s smokes don’t help puffers kick the habit, maybe Jordan should look Down Under for greater motivation: Beginning this year, as part of Jordan’s obligations to the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), the Ministry of Health asked cigarette companies to feature graphic anti-smoking images on cigarette packs. These images are too graphic for us to post. Google will ban our ads here if we do.

ANti-Smoking Campaign in JordanSo packs sold in Kingdom now contain very small pictures of a damaged lung, or a coughing child (see image at left), or a cartoony-fetus in its mama’s womb.

The change aims to sharply raise awareness of  tobacco-caused diseases and the dangers of second-hand smoke.

According to smokers interviewed by The Jordan Times, it’s not working.

Musa, who’s smoked for 16 years, told the paper, “Whatever they are going to place on the tobacco packs, I will not quit smoking, unless I want to.”  George, another interviewee, said, “These pictorials have no effect. I open the pack and smoke without paying any attention to the images.”

Cigarettes sold in duty-free shops or on the black market don’t bear the no-smoking imagery.

A study conducted by the King Hussein Cancer Center’s cancer control office had indicated that the graphics would motivate an estimated 25% percent of smokers to quit.

“I don’t care what pictures they put on the cigarette packet,” Mohammed told the Times.  “I started smoking when I was 18, and I haven’t stopped since. I don’t think a picture would make me stop smoking.”

Female smokers said they weren’t put off by the  photos. Raeda noted that kicking the habit was a personal choice,  saying, “Nothing, neither placing ugly images nor increasing cigarette prices would encourage me to quit smoking unless I want to.”So she says, but steeply raising cigarette prices with hefty taxation does prompt even long-term users to kick the habit.

Last year the Department of Statistics reported that Jordan’s cigarette spending was on the rise, with total spending on tobacco products reaching $678.7 million in 2010 (compared with $497.4 million in 2008). The Heath Ministry reports that smoking cost the country $1.4 billion last year, including money spent on money spent smoke-related diseases.

Smoking similarly smacked the Australian economy, with annual health costs at $33 billion and an estimated death toll of 900,000 over the last 60 years. So in 2012, Australia took it up a notch: the High Court ruled that all smokes must be sold in uniform packaging with minimal branding or logos on a drab brown background. The packs feature a range of eye-popping (and stomach-turning) imagery of a gangrenous foot, a cancerous mouth, or a cadaverous cancer sufferer;  in-your-face reminders of the risks of lighting up. See image above for an example.

“They’re so horrifyingly ugly that they are magnificent,” Fiona Sharkie, executive director of anti-smoking campaigner Quit Victoria told Bloomberg News.  She said callers to its hotline said the packaging was the “final push” they needed to stop smoking.

Approximately 29% of Jordanians above 18 are smokers, in addition to 14% of kids between ages 13-15, one quarter of whom smoke sheesha. According to WHO, tobacco  is killing about 6 million people each year. It contains over 4,000 chemicals of which 60 are carcinogens, in addition to addictive nicotine.

Scary statistics warrant scary warnings. Jordan would be wise to adopt the new Australian packaging and pull no punches when it comes to tobacco addiction.

Turkey Plans to Introduce Emissions-Based Tax on Motor Vehicles

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istanbul-traffic

There are currently 1.6 million automobiles on Istanbul’s roads, according to Embarq Türkiye — and each day, 640 more are registered.

Following British and German models, the Turkish Finance Ministry has begun designing a new scheme for taxes on motor vehicles and their purchase, reports Turkish paper Hürriyet Daily News. Under the plan, the taxes will be based on the amount of pollution emitted by a vehicle, rather than the engine capacity and age of the vehicle, as used to be the case.

Ethical Oil, Gas and Mining? EITI is the LEED of Fossil Fuels

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EITI, IIED, oil gas, natural resources, ecocide, corruption, oil, gas, extractive industries, miningRoughly half of the world’s population lives in resource-rich countries, and yet the same number survives on less than $2.50 per day. How can this be? Partly, the answer lies with irresponsible resource extraction. Giant corporations move in to communities, suck up their oil, gas, or minerals, make shifty deals with corrupt governments, and leave behind a big mess.

Rivers are polluted, air quality destroyed, and a way of life for people who survive on those natural resources is often irrevocably destroyed. But what if there was a better way? What if companies try to lessen their environmental impact and regenerate the landscape? What if they voluntarily ensure that communities also benefit from the wealth obtained? Cue the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI).

Masdar CEO Appointed Minister of State

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masdar, CEO, minister of state, Dr. Sultan Al Jaber, clean tech, renewable energy, Shams1, CSP, UAE, Abu DhabiBy appointing the Chief Executive Officer of the country’s leading renewable energy initiative as Minister of State, the oil and gas rich United Arab Emirates sends a very clear message to its own people and the world that they are serious about cleaning up their overall energy portfolio.

Last week the UAE rearranged its cabinet, appointing several new ministers, including Dr Sultan Al Jaber – CEO of government-backed Masdar. The cabinet reshuffling took place just days before Masdar announced that Shams 1 – the world’s largest Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) plant outside of Abu Dhabi – has finally gone online. Dr Al Jaber has led the organization since its inception in 2006.