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Carbon Capture the Saudi Way

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oil well oil drum for carbon capture in saudi arabia

Saudi Arabia has a lofty goal of storing CO2, known as carbon capture, by increasing oil recovery and reducing waste. 

Carbon capture utilization has become one of the most innovative means of recycling and reducing greenhouse gas emissions across the globe, but has largely remained an untouched endeavour in the Middle East. Until now. Saudi Arabia’s Aramco research and development center believes that it has the ability to establish new technology that will facilitate carbon capture (also known as carbon sequestering) to dispose of the greenhouse gas emissions in a meaningful manner in its depleted oil reservoirs.

According to a local report published by The Peninsula in early December, the country and its national oil company hopes to implement an innovative system that will capture CO2 from industrial facilities across the Gulf Kingdom.

tropical rainforests trap carbon

Chief Technologist at Aramco’s Carbon Management and Hydrogen Production Team Mohammed Al-Juaied said the country hopes to launch the Saudi Arabia Carbon Capture System (SACCS).

The move aims to enhance oil production in underground reservoirs. Basically, what happens is that through carbon capture, large quantities of the gas is taken and injected into oil depleted areas, which can then increase oil recovery and reduce waste from such facilities.

“The main objective of such a method is to safely and permanently store CO2. This is the only commercially viable technology for CCS and it has the potential to be greatly expanded, enhancing efforts to reduce CO2 emissions while enabling additional hydrocarbon recovery from mature fields,” wrote The Peninsula.

According to Al-Juaied, “it will give long term benefits.”

The engineer believes that removal efficiency can reach as high as 90 percent and will reduce oil-related pollutants that enter the air and are harmful to people’s health.

While this new technology is largely new, in Germany it has been used successfully to reduce harmful greenhouse gases from entering the atmosphere and furthering climate change destruction across the planet. The German government is hopeful that this will help reduce waste.

The thinking is that by capturing CO2 from major emitters, such as factories or refineries, and transporting to storage sites it can then be deposited into areas underground, such as Saudi’s idea of using it to jumpstart largely depleted reservoirs. In doing so, the CO2 remains outside the atmosphere and prevents the release of large amounts of CO2 into the air, a major cause of climate change today.

Saudi, like Germany and other countries, believe that this technology will help mitigate their contribution to fossil fuel abuse and emissions, enhance its oil recovery and create the means to limit their global footprint of GHG.

Update, in 2022 Saudi Aramco signed

Saudi Aramco signed a joint development agreement with SLB and Linde to establish a carbon capture and storage hub which will potentially be able to safely store up to 9 million tonnes of carbon dioxide a year by 2027, the company’s CEO, Amin Nasser, said. Aramco is set to contribute around 6 million tonnes, with the rest to come from other industrial sources.

The facility will be located in Jubail on the east coast of Saudi Arabia with a goal of making a significant contribution to the 44 million tonnes the kingdom plans to capture by 2035.

Read more on carbon capture:
Saudi Arabia holds out for carbon capture
Masdar’s carbon capture plan could cause comas
Masdar to and US DoE to Collaborate on Carbon Capture and Storage
Masdar and the Dicey Science of Carbon Credits

Biomax to Launch First-ever $40 Million Biofuel Plan in Saudi Arabia

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egypt falafel cooking oil for biofuelFalafel anyone? Saudi Arabia and Indian company will erect a biofuel plant based on used cooking oil.

Biofuel is coming to Saudi Arabia. After much success in neighbor Egypt in low income areas, Saudi Arabia hopes that a new joint venture between Jeddah-based Middle East Environment Protection (MEEP) and the India-based Biomax Fuels will help spur the renewable energy source for the Gulf Kingdom.

The announcement last week comes on the heels of a number of ambitious solar and wind energy prospects for the country, and with global oil expected to see drops in the coming decades as resources are depleted, Saudi wants to position itself as a leader in renewable energy. With Biomax entering the market, it could do so, and quickly.

Souk: Lebanese Street Food Served in Contemporary Athens

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street food, mashrabiya, islamic design, contemporary design, urban design, minimalism, Lebanese food, souk, greeceA new trend is emerging throughout the Mediterranean and we kinda like it: a growing number of food artists and restauranteurs are bringing street food indoors. There’s a new joint in Cairo that serves Egyptian classics in a fresh, contemporary setting and now there is Souk – a vibrant space in Athens, Greece that serves up delicious Lebanese dishes around the clock! Designed by K Studio, this delightful eatery combines industrial-chic design with Islamic accents, creating a friendly, warm atmosphere.

Warning: This Picture May Cause Climate Change

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climate change denial pie chart

A quiet little technology blog called Upworthy just posted a pie chart that, despite the solid pedigree of its source data, is likely to provoke debate so heated it may accelerate climate change. Kudos to Luigi Montanez, the site’s founding engineer, for recycling that ancient truism “a picture’s worth a thousand words”.  Let the arguments begin.

Image from Luigi Montanez on Upworthy

Palestinian Villagers and Israeli Environmentalists Join Forces to Protect Ancient Artefacts

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battir palestine wall separation israel friends of the earth middle eastPalestinian villagers have joined forces with Israeli environmentalists to stop the separation wall from destroying ancient agricultural artefacts which will soon be declared a world heritage site by UNESCO

Ancient stone-walled terraces and a unique natural irrigation system in the village of Battir near Bethlehem may have been spared destruction from an Israeli metal and concrete separation barrier. This is particularly good news as the unique agricultural landscape is soon to be declared a world heritage site by UNESCO. In a provisional ruling last Thursday, the Israeli High Court of Justice agreed that the Israeli state must come up with an alternative to constructing the separation wall through the village in order to prevent damage to its ancient agricultural terraces. Friends of the Earth Middle East and the residents of Battir both filed a petition stating that the concrete separation wall would cause irreversible damage to the unique agricultural terraces.

Palestinians Celebrate Green Innovation

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innovation, alternative fuel, recycle, Ramallah, Gaza, environment, science, fair, festival, event, Palestine, green energy, food, health, mobile technology, Palestinian women, students

Last week was the annual ‘Made in Palestine 2012’ fair showcasing local Palestinian innovations. Now in its seventh year, the fair was co-sponsored by the Swedish NGO Diakonia and by Al Nayzak, a Palestinian organization. There were two exhibitions, one in the West Bank, at the Ramallah Cultural Palace exhibition hall, and one in the Gaza Strip. Together they showcased over 20 scientific innovations, including green technology, agricultural tools and mobile applications related to food and health.

One participant, Afnan Hamad, a 23-year-old chemical engineering graduate from An-Najah National University in Nablus, told IPS that he hopes to someday be the first supplier of alternative fuel in Palestine. “We designed a device to convert plastic waste into gasoline, kerosene and diesel fuel,” he said.

Israeli Fuel Company Tries Out Gasoline – Green Methanol Fuel Mixture

 methanol gasoline fuel in IsraelA woman fills up car in Haifa with methanol and gasoline fuel mixture.  More bang for her buck? Photo: Haaretz/David Bachar

Alternative car fuel mixtures have been talked about for years. Many gas stations in the US incorporate ethanol into their blends, all the way to fuel made from human and animal “poop”. More recently, there’s been biofuel made from recycled McDonald’s fast food cooking oils which flew their UAE fleet vehicles more than 800,000 miles!

Now methanol biofuels, made from natural gas and mixed with unleaded gasoline, are the subject of a test project being conducted in Israel by Dor Chemicals and Ten Petroleum at one of their gas stations in Haifa.

Coal-Fired Stoves Cause Hundreds of Carbon Monoxide Deaths in Turkey

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A family was found dead on Thursday in Istanbul, reports Turkish daily Today’s Zaman, after carbon monoxide fumes from their coal-fired heating stove leaked out and poisoned them.

Since 2002, carbon monoxide poisoning has claimed approximately 350 lives in Turkey, according to Turkish Interior Minister İdris Naim Şahin. In the southern province of Gaziantep alone, 2,771 residents were exposed to carbon monoxide poisoning last year, with 21 dying as a result.

Gulf Nations Among Most Attractive Renewable Energy Markets

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solar, clean tech, wind, ernst & young, renewable energy, mosqueThe Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and its neighbor the United Arab Emirates have been included in the Ernst & Young Renewable Energy Country Attractiveness Indices, which evaluates the renewable energy markets of 40 countries across the globe.

Two of the top oil producers on earth, the KSA and UAE each possess the requisite capital and government-backed renewable energy drive to inspire confidence among investors, according to ]imer AbuAli, MENA Head of Cleantech, Ernst & Young. With large scale wind and solar projects already underway, both Gulf nations are adamant to diversify their energy mix with a sizable portion of renewables.

Israel’s High Court Spares West Bank Agriculture

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FoEME, law, environment, separation barrier, Israel, Palestinian territory, Green line, agriculture, ancient farmingIsrael’s high court has ordered the state to come up with an alternative to a separation fence that would have threatened valuable agricultural land in the West Bank. The fence was planned for an area near Battir that Palestinians have been farming for hundreds of years using traditional techniques, but in a historic provisional ruling, the court has given the state 90 days to establish a Plan B.

10 Creepy Fetish Jewelry Upcycled Gifts

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fetish jewelry teeth

Holiday shopping can be challenging but need it also be horrifying?

In Jordan, import duties bloat retail prices. Clay pots and intricate mosaics are too unwieldy to mail, and puppies gestate in less time than it takes for a package to ship back to the States.   With these limits on local shopping, I turn to the internet for holiday gifting.  Handmade is good; up-cycled’s appealing and what’s not to love about supporting small business?

But a stroll through handmade marketplace Etsy turns up some cringe-worthy crafters.  Read on, if you dare.

1.  Etsy seller bonejewellery makes rings from human teeth, sealed in protective polymers and set into an adjustable-for-all metal base (see photo above).  If you desire a particular type of tooth (small, large, more or less decay), this seller will aim to please, or send in your own teeth for a discount.  Even at full price (under $20) this item won’t take a bite out of your wallet.

2. NaturePunk  encourages extreme recycling.  Why toss a part of yourself into the bin when you can become jewelry?  This seller urges shoppers to ask their dentists to hand over the extracted choppers.  Dampen the pain of getting your wisdom teeth pulled with the prospect of walking off with a new pair of earrings or cufflinks.  Perfect if all you want for Christmas is your two front teeth.

fetish jewelry teeth

3. Nothing says style like a necklace made of mink skulls and rattlesnake vertebrae. Ossuaria Jewelry apt213 offers jewelry crafted from real animal parts, and claim that all their creatures have died “due to natural causes, or carelessness of others”.  Roadkill to retail, there’s resourcefulness.

fetish jewelry teeth

4. Prefer your bones with a touch more glamour?  Then check out that same vendor’s glass neck ornament: vintage orbs stuffed with tiny ribs and toes and vertebrae. I’m scratching my head.

fetish jewelry teeth

5. FetidFashion has an ideal accessory to match your favorite fur coat: earrings made from mink jaws. They’re the dangle-y kind, suspended from copper hook clasps. Not quite your taste? No worries, these can also be made with silver or gold clasps.

fetish jewelry teeth

6. Zhon of The Nature Cave posits, “how often do you have the opportunity to adopt the King of the Jungle?”  He’s selling an 8 foot long pelt of an adolescent lion to anyone looking to make a rug, or wall hanging, or as Zhon suggests, buy it just to “”snuggle up next to”.  This former zoo-cat has been turned into $6,000 of skin and fur that’s “soft and cuddly for any craft”.

fetish jewelry teeth

7.  Want to look “fly” at your holiday office party?  Head back to bonejewellery for this pair of earrings made from the skeletal structure of Short Nosed Fruit Bat wings.
fetish jewelry teeth

8. If you need a bit more backbone to face your New Years’ resolutions, opt for this necklace made from rattlesnake spine and topped with a Green Crested Lizard skull.  Murder Jewelry assures shoppers, “all of my bones were only used once”. Twice by my count, if you consider the original owners.
fetish jewelry teeth9. Fishers are medium sized mammals living mostly in the North American Pacific Northwest, larger than minks and are smaller than wolverines.  Seller Lunalura says this genuine Fisher paw is the “perfect gift for an animal loving friend”.  I’m going bald from the head-scratching, I tell you.

10. Boomer2563’s shop was the end of my shopping trip.  After seeing the coyote, bobcat and raccoon “faces” he offers for sale, it was time to turn off the computer.

My holiday enthusiasm’s evaporated.  I really feel sick. This year for Christmas, I think I’m giving everyone hugs.

All images from each cited seller’s Etsy site.

Calling All Green Bloggers – Masdar Competition Wants Your Ideas!

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masdar blogging competitionFancy the chance to win an all-expenses paid trip to attend Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week in the United Arab Emirates? Well, here’s how.

Masdar, the renewable energy company based in Abu Dhabi, has launched an international blogging contest to raise awareness of the critical issues of water security and energy. “This is your chance to share with the world your thoughts, or a call to action for how to address the water – energy nexus,” they explain. “And a winner will be selected to travel to Abu Dhabi this January to participate in the largest gathering on sustainability in the Middle East [The Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week].” To enter all you have to do is write and publish a 400-600 word blog on what you think individuals, businesses or world leaders can do to address water and energy challenges. Post the link to the Masdar website by the end of this month and then get your friends to vote for you!

Unrecyclable Biodegradable Plastic Bags Enforced in Gulf Country

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plastic, biodegradable plastic, unrecyclable plastic, United Arab Emirates, Gulf Country, pollutionIn a well-meaning effort to rid Dubai, Abu Dhabi and other emirates from plastic bags, the United Arab Emirates government has banned the use of non-biodegradable plastic bags. Instead, it will be mandatory for business across all seven emirates to offer their clients the biodegradable variety starting 1 January, 2013. But critics worry that these bags, which are said to break down faster than conventional plastic bags, can’t be recycled.

Bahrain’s Temporary Market 338 Beats Out Glitzy Shopping Malls

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recycled materials, green design, sustainable design, Bahrain, Market 338, eco artDespite the many stereotypes about residents of Gulf countries, many people prefer creative, sustainable boutiques to shopping in big glitzy malls, though their options are typically fairly limited. Which might explain why Bahrain’s Market 338 has become such a popular destination.

Inaugurated by Al Riwaq Art Space, the temporary souq in Manama’s Adliya district started with just a handful artists showcasing their contemporary recycled designs. Three years later, the hub attracts roughly 40 designers from across the globe.

Mayan 21 12 Apocalypse Deflated by NASA’s Early GOTCHA Video

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mayan 21 12 nasa video gothchaNASA issued a video “told-you-so” in advance of  the much-hyped Mayan calendar “end of the world” prediction.

There are plenty of Jordanians who think the Mayans and their 21, 12 end of days prediction may be on to something. No manic preparations can be seen, no one blasting Prince’s “1999”, but I’ve heard more than a few folks say in Jordan where I am living, “It may happen, insha’allah it won’t, but there’s nothing we can do.”

America’s National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) uploaded a new video on their website debunking this week’s anticipated wrap-up of all earthly experience.  A bit of scientific showing off? (I bet NASA already sent out all their Christmas cards and have finished their holiday shopping too.) Check out debunking video below.

There’s not much restraint on voicing personal opinions here in Jordan.  I’m talking on a social level: at parties, on the job, among friends.  In the past year, I’ve met three people who maintain the Holocaust is fiction.

Two others believe there are no gays in this kingdom. I’ve been told Canadians are the only North Americans who hold passports.  No Jews died in the World Trade Center collapse.  Dogs are dirty devils. And no one landed on the moon. Of course, these beliefs are not the norm.  These are exceptional opinions in every possible sense.

After years in Manhattan, where the buffet of cultures and religions and political viewpoints mandates that you watch your tongue (at a minimum, to win friends and influence people…at the other end, to avoid a punch in the kisser), I was initially stunned by these provocative statements, delivered uncensored and with absolute confidence.  And it’s not only local Ammanians who make loose with the viewpoints: foreigners living here quickly shed inhibitions. Lately I just marvel at the limitless range of human beliefs.

The Tower of Babel is where God is said to have confounded language: but there’s no geographical constraint when it comes to confounding ideas.

So back to the world’s end.  The NASA video may leave the Mayan crying. And it wouldn’t be the first time people were sucked into believing a doomsday scenario.  In fact, you can gauge your maturity but the number of kill-the-world bluffs you’ve endured.  This one is my daughter’s first bout with rumors of global annihilation: it’s about my twelfth. If you want to know some advice about navigating the future you might as well as well ask Yoda.

List-making website Ranker has a fine, uh.., list of the “Top 12 Greatest End of The World Prophecy FAILS”.  NASA takes a more proactive tack, with a web advisory telling exactly why you’ll wake to see December 22.  So it seems we’ll live to see another day.  An opportunity for us to share more of our wacky ideas with one another. Sir Winston Churchill once said, “A fanatic is a person who can’t change his mind and won’t change the subject. ”

Bring on December 22nd,  and throw some light on the next nutty idea.

Warning: do not watch the clip on the eve of the predicted apocalypse.  It’s narrated by a gentle-voiced guy who is so comforting that if NASA proves wrong, you may fall asleep and snooze through humanity’s  grand finale.