Toast Chateau Ksara’s Traditional Wine Making in Lebanon

ksara-1.jpg

Jesuit brothers at the Ksara wine press in 1910: Lebanon’s oldest wine growing domain Following the footsteps of a wine trading tradition started by Phoenicians, modern Lebanese wine-making re-starts in 1857 when French Jesuit missionaries at Ksara (today the site of Château Ksara) introduced new viticulture and viniculture methods as well as new vines, from French-governed Algeria. Sixty years […]

Read more

Morflora’s Plant “Vaccine” Boosts Food Production Without Using GMOs

morflora-plant-vaccine-dotan-team-560x3091.jpeg

A new seed treatment could stop the use and need for GMOs. Even though organic agriculture and sustainable farming practices are on the rise, feeding a hungry world demands that commercial farmers rely on genetically engineered (GMO) seeds to boost production and fend off diseases. But environmentalists fear that GMO crops are a sort of […]

Read more

Will Radiation Danger Spoil Israel’s Electrified Train?

electrification-of-Israels-railways-Haaretz.jpg

And make it electric? Electrifying Israel’s railway system may cause too much electromagnetic radiation experts warn. Israel’s local and national rail services have often been featured on Green Prophet ever since Jerusalem’s light rail service was completed in 2010, and another light rail line proposed for the coastal city of Tel Aviv .Its national rail service, […]

Read more

Why Not Use Biofuel for Heating Syrian Refugees? Green Prophet Reports from Jordan Camp

syria-refugees-jordan-biofuel.jpg

Egyptian model for the Zabaleen could help heat Syrian refugees. Green Prophet’s Joseph reports from Jordan.  Zaatari Refugee Camp in Jordan: Walking through the vast expanse of white tents, dirt “roads” and masses of families huddled closely together for warmth, if you ask what they most need, the answer, without pause, is simple: blankets. In […]

Read more

Qatar Airways Praised for its Natural Gas/Biofuel Push to the Skies

airplane-sunset-qatar-airways-biofuel.jpg

Cheaper flights for all? If Qatar’s “Pearl project” can develop the natural gas industry for planes, it could translate into reducing overall costs for US carriers. Qatar Airways ambitious new plan to erect a $19 billion Pearl project that will be the largest gas-to-liquids plant in the world, is receiving massive praise and optimism over its future […]

Read more

Qatar’s Sahara Forest Project Grows Its First Cucumbers from Saltwater

sahara-desert-project-cucumber.jpg

The Gulf region is showing exactly why they are quickly becoming the top destination for renewable and clean technology in the world. A recent pilot project in Qatar aimed at growing cucumbers using seawater and solar power is just one of the more unique endeavors, and hopefully won’t have any Islamic leaders crying foul. According to […]

Read more

Egypt and Morocco’s Equator Prize Winners Preserve Environment through Tradition

egyptian-sifting-wheat.jpeg

The Medicinal Plants Association in Egypt helps preserve biodiversity and is one of the 25 winners of the Equator Prize 2012. Policy making within the realm of “development” is often burdened by an excessively westernized design resulting in unintended consequences on the welfare of local populations. For example, a previous Green Prophet article “Morocco’s Berbers […]

Read more

New Environmental Strategy On The Table In Israeli Elections

Israeli-elections.jpg

  On Thursday, Dec. 20, Tzipi Livni’s new party, The Movement, stated that environmental reforms will be key components of their platform in the January 2013 Israeli elections. They propose passing a Basic Law for environmental protection, and a long-term blueprint for the Israeli energy market. Livni presented The Movement’s environmental agenda together with Green […]

Read more