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Can Flow Industries Make Oil Fracking Greener?

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flow industries, airshock gun, fracking, oil and gas
Can green and fracking ever be used in the same sentence?

Hydraulic fracturing – fracking — is one way to extract valuable shale oil and gases from deep underground by injecting a highly pressurized fluid into rock to pull out the fossil fuel. Those in favor of fracking say that it will help America become energy independent, while growing numbers against it are highly critical of the risks such as groundwater contamination, surface spills and even mini-earthquakes.

An established industrial plumbing company from Israel has a technology that may help bridge the divide between industry and environmentalism when it comes to the fracking debate. With a decade of sales and a clean and green track record in the industrial plumbing business, Flow Industries is looking to help make fracking greener and more efficient.

The company’s CEO Oded Rose says that the company is starting to work with fossil fuel companies to test the feasibility of its pressured air system. While the technology has been proven in multiple industries, it is not yet clear how it will perform in wells and channels that are up to five kilometers underground.

“To get at natural gas one needs to fracture the bedrock so the gas can flow to the wells,” says Rose. “Fracturing is a huge deal because it uses water and acids. Our technology could be applied to reduce environmental impact and to increase production of gas and oil.”

Flowing across the globe

“At the moment we have not done a lot with oil,” says Rose. “But with our leading technology in water, where we can go 100 to 300 meters deep, we are looking to apply in beta testing for oil companies drilling 1,000 to 5,000 meters underground.”

With major names in the water business such as Layne Christensen in the United States, and Veolia in France as clients, Flow Industries is already a game-changer in water. The business was created in 1987 to offer water flow solutions, but multiple industries have discovered that using highly pressurized air can be a green and safe way to address blockages of all sorts of materials — solid or liquid, hot or cold, says Rose.

Flow Industries works with industrial cement silos throughout the Middle East region, power plants and chemical companies of all kinds in Israel, India, Korea, Europe, and North and South America.

Its featured product is the Airshock “gun” developed more than a decade ago. It was invented by an Israeli hydrologist whose father and grandfather had both worked as well diggers.

Flow Industries’ Airshock system is a green alternative in hydrofracking.
The founder thought that there must be better ways to unplug blocked water pipes than using harsh chemicals or explosions. Hydrochloric acid was often used for this purpose, but it can leak into water sources and is toxic to workers handling the material.

Airshock doesn’t create explosions or require chemicals. It builds pressure using oxygen or nitrogen, depending on the application, producing a shock of air to break up an internal blockage that cannot be removed manually.

Blows like an air cannon
flow industries, airshock gun, fracking, oil and gas

The patented device operates in several phases. In the first stage it blasts a gas release down a channel, creating a small shock wave lasting five to 15 milliseconds. The rapidly expanding gas bubble creates a surge, breaking up scale and debris in wells and pipes. In the next phase, which lasts about one minute, the gas bubble contracts and washes out the debris that was causing the blockage.

While not extremely high-tech to operate — it does not include electronics or software – its approach is an innovative, unique technology, says Rose. Each Airshock model is priced for industrial maintenance companies and can cost tens of thousands of dollars up to $100,000 depending on the scale of the project.

Based in Omer, near Beersheba, Flow Industries employs 12 people, and outsources its production in Israel where the Airshock gun is assembled. The company is looking to establish business through partnerships and pilot plants in the gas and oil industry in the United States.

The company is also expanding its business with a patented technology to help companies working in the Alberta, Canada, tar sands deal with flow issues.

::Flow Industries

 

Saudi Smoking Grounds for Divorce

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arab men smoking old city jerusalem
Smoking can cause cancer, emphysema, birth defects, and – in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia – divorce.

Saudi Arabian authorities enacted a ban against smoking in government buildings, curbing a habit enjoyed by six million of its people. Smoking’s now banned at all ministries and government facilities in all provinces of the kingdom, according to the Saudi Press Agency (SPA). The ban extends to public places too, including restaurants, coffee shops, supermarkets and shopping malls. It also covers shisha smoking, which accounts for many of Saudi’s estimated 600,000 women and 800,000 teenage tobacco users.

Arab Spring Countries Face Increased Risk of Food Price Shocks in 2013

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arab girls holding basket of foodAccording to the latest findings by global risk-analyser Maplecroft, Arab Spring countries are at greater risk of rising food prices in the coming year

It’s no secret that the high price of basic food staples were a contributing factor to the revolts which began in Tunisia and Egypt and sparked the ‘Arab Spring’. The protesters took to the streets waving bread and asking for equality and an end to corruption. Today, however, it seems little has changed since those protests in terms of the cost of food. According to the latest food price forecasts for 2013 by global risk-analyser Maplecroft, food prices are actually likely to rise again in the region. What’s more: countries involved in the protests around the Arab world are particularly at risk of rising food price shocks.

Qatar’s First Solar-Powered World Cup Stadium to Break Ground Soon

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Al Wakrah Stadium, clean tech, solar power, World Cup 2022, Qatar

The tender for the first solar-powered World Cup 2022 stadium has been issued and the winners will be announced in November or December, the Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee has said. Construction should follow soon thereafter and if all goes according to plan, Al Wakrah stadium will be complete as soon as 2015.

Water-Producing Eole Wind Turbine Has Gulf States Drooling

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wind power, water-producing wind turbine, Eole Water, Gulf states, desert, clean tech, renewable energyEole Water from France has developed a water-producing wind turbine and Gulf states are drooling at the jowls to have at least one of their own. The WMS 1000 currently undergoing testing in Dubai following tests in France and Abu Dhabi captures moisture in the air that is then condensed and filtered to standards exceeding those listed by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Meeting three needs with as many blades, the turbine generates 30kW of energy and up to 1,200 liters of water each day without producing any kind of carbon emissions. While it is still uncertain where or how the firm will manufacture their turbines when testing is complete, several nations on the Arabian peninsula have already expressed a keen interest in the product.

Shai Agassi Leaves Better Place Board Over Dispute With Parent Company

shai agassi, fired, better place, board of directors

A few days after we praised the new Better Place electric car pricing model in Israel (a lease plus charge plus 1000 km for $510), the company’s founder and visionary CEO Shai Agassi stepped down, or was ousted as some newer sources would rather say. While company press releases attempt to break the news as a natural transition for a company that goes from start-up stage to business stage, apparently something else was brewing.

Egypt Environment Activists Fighting Back Over Sinai Red Sea Bridge

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red sea egypt sinai saudi arabia bridge, dive sites
 A bridge over troubled waters still being planned for Saudi Arabia and Sinai. About 20 dive sites will be lost, activists tell Green Prophet.

A grassroots environmental group of activists are continuing to put pressure on the Egyptian government to end its plans to develop and erect a bridge linking the Sinai Peninsula with Saudi Arabia. Praised by the government as a means of boosting trade, business and easing travel between the two countries, environmental activists are crying foul over where the bridge aims to be built: right on the Ras Mohamed National Park – one of Egypt’s natural wonders home to coral reefs, dive sites and endangered species. “If they build this bridge, coral reefs, endangered species and at least 22 dive sites will all be gone,” Ibrahim Mohamed, an activist with the anti-bridge group IBRedSea told Green Prophet.

Explosive Molotov Cocktail Recipe Teaches Terrorism in a Tunisian Children’s Magazine

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molotov cocktail, terrorism, Tunisia, children's magazine, recipe

 

Editor Update 2024. This was first published in 2010. In 2018 a synagogue in Tunisia was bombed with a Molotov cocktail. Molotov cocktails have been used to set fires to synagogues in Jaffa, Israel. And also to synagogues in Berlin. The kids who were raised with this kind of propaganda are now 12 years older, in their 20s. Imagine how this has impacted their worldview. 

Publishing a detailed recipe of how to make and then activate molotov cocktails is more suited to a militant underground leaflet than a publication intended for children, but that didn’t occur to the editors of a magazine in Tunisia.

Either desperate for readers or keen to ingratiate themselves with the hardliners emerging in post-revolution Tunisia, the kid magazine Kaws Kouzah not only listed all the necessary ingredients in their explosive recipe, but they also advised children exactly how to throw the cocktail to optimize its destructive outcome.

“Molotov cocktail – is a home-made incendiary weapon which consists of a glass bottle and a folded cloth dipped in a flammable liquid – oil, alcohol, petrol,” read the recipe.

“…the unit should be ignited and thrown at the enemy. After the initial contact, the bottle breaks and penetrates the target.”

And just to be sure that Tunisia’s children are completely sold on the legitimacy of this fun new game, which was published under the magazine’s knowledge section, a brief history was included in the brief.

“The name was coined by Finnish soldiers in World War II in honor of Vyacheslav Molotov, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Soviet Union during the Winter War, also known as the Soviet-Finnish war of 1939-1940.”

Fortunately the Ministry for Women and Family affairs discovered the unfortunate recipe and sued the magazine both for endangering children’s lives and inciting terrorism and vandalism.

We had hoped it was fairly obvious, but perhaps we ought to be more clear: don’t do this. Molotov cocktails are dumb. Instead, publish something a little more useful, like a DIY guide to building space rockets powered by trash maybe?

 

Help Make Palestinian Filmmaker’s Eco-Documentary A Reality

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eco-documentary-saeed-taji-farouky-there-will-be-some-who-will-not-fear-even-that-void-arcticAward-winning filmmaker Saeed Taji Farouky is looking for support on Kickstarter to fund an eco-documentary on the Arctic

Unless you have been hiding under a rock these last couple of months, the record loss of Arctic sea ice this summer will not have escaped your attention. According to the scientists, the Arctic ice melt broke all previous records (and not a small margin but by an an area larger than the state of Texas) and represents the clearest sign yet of global warming. So, what can we do? Well, lots but one interesting question that award-winning documentary filmmaker and photographer Saeed Taji Farouky want us to ask is ‘can art save the Arctic?’

Around a year ago, Farouky was invited to join an artists residency on a tall ship sailing around Norway’s Svalbard Archipelago for two weeks. During that trip he shot …Even That Void, a surreal, semi-fictional, sci-fi ecological documentary. Farouky now wants support to fund a full length documentary which will not only explore the loss of this last great wilderness but will turn the ecological documentary genre on its head. 

Dubai Confirms Commitment to Sustainable Environment, Energy

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shams 1 CSP dubai, solar energy united arab emirates

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) economic capital, Dubai, has reaffirmed its committment to sustainable energy and the environment as it pushes forward on massive growth projects. Dubai’s ruler and UAE’s Vice-President and Prime Minister Mohamed bin Rashid al-Maktoum said that as the city continues to develop, the environment and clean energy prospects remain at the top of the city’s agenda. In the preface to “The Business Year: Dubai 2012” al-Maktoum again confirmed his desire to see economic growth be in line with sustainable environmental practices and the promotion of clean energy.

Abu Dhabi’s Shams 100 MW CSP Solar Power Plant To Switch On … Soon

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shams masdar solar energy abu dhabi

Shams 1 will displace 175,000 tons of CO2 per year and its power output will be enough to power 20,000 homes.

Abu Dhabi’s push into clean energy is to get a massive boost by the end of the year with the Shams 1 Concentrated Solar Power plant going live in the emirate and will begin supplying solar power to residents in the city. Commissioned by MASDAR, Spain’s Abengoa Solar and France’s Total S.A. the $500 million USD plant will have a capacity of 100 megawatts of electricity, which the company said in announcing the plant’s functionality this past week, should be enough power to run 20,000 homes. Using solar parabolic trough technology is the largest such plant in the world and first of its kind solar power plant in the Middle East North Africa region.

PLUG-In Hebron: A Solar-Powered Civic Hub for Urban Renewal

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Hebron, West Bank, Israel, Palestinians, Open-Source, Vernacular Architecture, Recycling, Solar-Power, Clean Tech, Green Building, PLUG-In HebronPLUG-In Hebron is a dynamic new urban renewal project for the conflict-shorn West Bank city. Following years of what the designers call “reciprocal violence,” the Israeli military split Hebron into two separate zones. The latter, H2, which is under Israeli jurisdiction, contains the old city. Which means that the Palestinians have been isolated from an important aspect of their urban identity.

Building Sumud’s local partner has worked to reinvigorate residential and sacred spaces, but now they propose to renovate a traditional Mamluk building in the old city into a three-level civic and social center. It will be solar-powered and built with local, renewable materials, although great care will be taken to protect the vernacular architecture. And it will include a modular rooftop hub draped in patterned Hebronite fabric.

Egyptian Campaigner: ‘Corruption not Climate Awareness is Holding Us Back’

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sarah-rifaat-350-arab-climate-egypt-corruptionWe speak to Egyptian campaigner Sarah Rifaat about the environmental movement and why bureaucracy and corruption are still the biggest barriers to change in Egypt 

Sarah Rifaat, like many people in Egypt, suffered from childhood asthma caused by the high levels of pollution in her city. What Sarah did differently when she grew up however, is refuse to accept this as the norm. Sarah’s asthma was her first lesson in the importance of a healthy and sustainable lifestyle which led her down the path of environmental campaigning. Today, she works with 350.org as the Arab world co-ordinator and is also part of a new Arab Youth Climate Movement. I caught up with Sarah to find out more about her work and what she would change if she was Egyptian president for a day.

UN Report: 90% of Illegal Logging May be Linked to Organised Crime

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illegal-logging-deforestation-morocco-cedar-mohammed-attaouiIllegal logging is not only killing the planet – it is supporting organised crime too

Back in 2010 we reported on the case of Moroccan activist Mohammed Attaoui who was facing imprisonment for his stance against illegal logging. Living in the Moroccan Atlas Mountains, Attaoui insisted that ‘mafia-style’ corruption was behind illegal logging which threatened the protected cedar of Morocco. Weeks after publishing his expose Attaoui was arrested on trumped-up charges and given a two year sentence. Now, a new report by the UN states that around 90% of all illegal logging in tropical countries in the Amazon basin, Central Africa and South East Asia may be supporting organised crime.

Extinct Barbary Lions Used in Gladiator Rings Revived at Moroccan Zoo

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Barbary lion, Atlas Lion, Morocco, extinct species, gladiator lions, wildlife conservationThe recently renovated Rabat Zoo in Morocco claims to have bred three new Barbary lion cubs in captivity. The larger cousin of southern Africa’s plains lions, Barbary lions were slaughtered en masse in fights with gladiators in order to demonstrate the superiority of humans over nature and finally the last wild individual was shot by a French hunter in 1922.

However, Moroccan Sultan Mohammed V, grandfather to the current king, had a private collection of lions that were gifts of allegiance from nobles and peasant hunters. Using ex-situ breeding methods, the zoo reportedly used the genetic material from these animals to build up a captive population of 30 individuals, including Layth, Rose and Rosa, who were born in December, 2011.