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Second Fattest Nation to Host 2016 World Road Cycling Championship

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Cycling, Qatar, Environment, Fitness, Obesity, GulfEven though Qatar is the world’s second fattest nation, it will host four international sporting events in the next decade, including the 2016 World Road Cycling Championship and the 2022 World Cup.

With Sheikh Saoud bin Abdulrahman Al Thani at the helm, Qatar’s bid committee spent years fighting to host this prestigious cycling event for two reasons: first, Al Thani thinks the presence of ultra lean athletes from other countries will convince Qatari nationals that physical fitness is more fun than shisha and McDonalds, and second, the State wants to send the message that bicycles are better for the environment than cars.

Solar Decathlon, Madrid

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Solar Decathlon Europe, Green Design, Solar Power, Clean Tech, Madrid, Sustainable Design, Prefabricated DesignGreen Prophet has been touring the 18 Solar Decathlon homes that made it to Madrid for this year’s international collegiate architecture competition, and we’re dazzled by what we’ve seen. Although the Egyptian team wasn’t able to construct their home as a result of delays back home and in Valencia, AUC will have another chance to display their design prowess with SLIDES at the next Solar Decathlon event in China.

In the ten years since the Department of Energy sponsored the first Solar Decathlon in the United States, both sustainable design and solar energy have undergone substantial developments. As our awareness of energy and resource scarcity expands, so too does our response, and a host of new solutions are on display here in Spain.

Check out some of the highlights from the event so far.

Solar Decathlon Europe, Green Design, Solar Power, Clean Tech, Madrid, Sustainable Design, Prefabricated Design

Team Rhône-Alpes from France won the Architecture award with their Canopea house, a modular home that is designed to become whole nanotowers. The rooftop solar system produces up to 12, 733 kWh per year, which is double what it requires. The surplus can be used to power their tiny electric vehicle or to feed back into the grid.

The upper canopy is a leisure area that it is doused with soft natural lighting. Adjustable blinds allow the inhabitants to control how much air flow and light permeates the interior on any given day. Currently, this home is in the lead.

Solar Decathlon Europe, Green Design, Solar Power, Clean Tech, Madrid, Sustainable Design, Prefabricated Design

Germany’s ECOLAR house received first place in the Engineering competition. This modular house uses three different kinds of solar panels to deliver a whopping pile of renewable energy. These panels also have other functions, including aesthetic and passive design.

All of the mechanics are stored in a super cabinet that can be moved to create enough space to make tuneups and the simple beam and column construction allows for a large variety of configurations. This house can be stacked, even, if the family grows.

Solar Decathlon Europe, Green Design, Solar Power, Clean Tech, Madrid, Sustainable Design, Prefabricated Design

Team DTU from Denmark won recognition for their unique integration of solar panels in this striking FOLD house. An open plan home that showcases the very best of Danish design, FOLD is constructed with strong Finnish Kerto wood and insulated with Rockwool Aerowolle. It generates 11,391 kWh energy annually and even boast a wall of LEGO!

Solar Decathlon Europe, Green Design, Solar Power, Clean Tech, Madrid, Sustainable Design, Prefabricated Design

Hungary has come a long way with their ODOO project. Their team explained that nobody back home really believed that they would make it to Madrid, but they did. And not only that, but they were one of only five teams that one five bonus points for completing construction on time! An interesting design that has vertical and rooftop photovoltaic panels, the home is organized around this central courtyard that has a kitchen and even a spot to take afternoon naps.

The ODOO house also boasts a unique technique to mitigate thermal loss: insulated water tanks filled with collected rainwater that are then connected to floor and ceiling pipes with a heat exchanger.

Solar Decathlon Europe, Green Design, Solar Power, Clean Tech, Madrid, Sustainable Design, Prefabricated Design

The French/Italian Team Astonyshine has had a run of back luck with their project, but we would like to give them a major shout out for daring to think big. While so many teams chose a safe, conventional route bound to rack up the scores, this team went for a very bold design.

Although the judges required them to keep the support beams as a safety measure, we love the use of stone and wood and iron in this swirling interior.

Their rooftop solar system is also unique; instead of sticking to flat panels, they opted for tracking technology that delivers a staggering 15,000 kWh per year.

Although some of the houses have taken a giant lead, everyone has worked very hard for two years to represent their respective countries at this prestigious event. And the sportsmanship has been fantastic. Last night the students cooked dinner with and for a competing team.

Young adults from China, Brasil, Portugal, Germany, Romania and elsewhere shared ideas and promoted international goodwill, although they didn’t always love the food that came their way! Winning’s nice but it’s temporary. Friendship and the exchange of world-changing ideas usually have a longer shelf life.

All images by Tafline Laylin for Green Prophet

UN: Control Dangerous Chemicals & Save The Lives of Millions

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chemicals-death-middle-east-un-environmentThe UN is calling for urgent action to reduce human exposure to chemicals and save the lives of millions of people

A couple of months ago, as part of my research for an article, I spoke to a young woman affected by a rather unique and misunderstand condition called ‘Multiple Chemical Sensitivity’. Also known as environmental illness or chemical injury or chemical sensitivity, MCS is defined as a condition where individuals have become neurologically sensitized to chemicals in the environment, including fragrances, car exhaust, pesticides, cleaning products, and building materials. Although there is debate in the medical community about its existence, the notion that the toxic chemical soup mixture that we expose ourselves to on a daily basis doesn’t have any impact seems outright illogical. Indeed, a recent study by the UN states that we are living in a world overwhelmed with chemicals and that better management of chemicals could save millions of lives.

Hooked on Hookah? It’s Worse than Smokes, Says Iran

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hookah pipe smoking woman
A 45 minute shisha session is the equivalent of puffing 100 cigarettes.

In a new study, Iranian researchers proved tobacco water pipes are as harmful as cigarettes, saying, “Our findings reveal profound effects of water pipe smoking on lung function, similar to the effects observed in deep inhalation cigarette smokers.” A student at Amman’s American Community School beat them to that conclusion by a solid six months.  The website he created as part of an 8th grade project presaged findings just published by Mashhad University scientists in the journal Respiralogy. The Iranian study, the first of its kind in the Middle East, also suggests that most females don’t cop to smoking shisha (or any other form of tobacco). Come on now, ladies, in the name of science, let’s be truthful.

The Middle East and the Unending Quest for Stability (Op-Ed)

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oil-arab-spring-environment‘The Middle East must stay stable or else the world will face impending economic and ecological doom’ – debunking the myth

My day job requires I read a lot on the Middle East and the environment – from the perspective of economists, environmentalists, political leaders, civil society and also a lot of commentary coming the rest of the world on the Middle East. One strand of thought that has really got me riled up recently is the notion that the Middle East by dreaming of democracy is causing instability which will not only threaten the economy but also the environment. A little dramatic right? Since when was the fate of the entire world in the hands of the Middle East? It short, it’s not. In fact, it’s completely in the hands of everyone else and the real threat is the economic model we live by which equate success with constant growth.

Egyptian Biceps Set New World Record Unsustainably

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Moustafa Ismail biceps
This Egyptian bodybuilder’s biceps aren’t sustainable, or even good for his own health.

Moustafa Ismail will appear in the 2013 Guinness Book of Records now that his 31 inch biceps have been confirmed as the biggest on the planet. The 24-year-old with arms as wide as a man’s waist began bodybuilding ten years ago. In 2007, when he failed to win a place on the Egyptian bodybuilding team, “Big Mo” relocated to the United States where he’d “have better access to gym equipment and could focus on training,” he told The Sun.

Tunisia’s Tallest Minaret Sprayed With el Seed Calligraffiti

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graffiti, street art, Quran, Tunisia, mosqueJara Mosque in Gabes boasts the tallest minaret in all of Tunisia and now it is covered in el Seed’s signature calligraffiti. Exactly one year after the Jasmine revolution, the French/Tunisian graffiti artist took on his largest project to date in creative protest against the intolerance shown by both artists and hard line Islamists since President Ben Ali’s infamous ouster. It is also the first time he has worked on a vertical wall.

Egyptian Mummy Gets a LEGO Heart at Cambridge Universtiy

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history, LEGO, ancient egypt, design, Cambridge University, mummy restorationAn engineering student used LEGO to help restore an ancient Egyptian mummy case at Cambridge University. The 10th Century BC Hor Mummy case excavated in 1896 from a Luxor temple had been languishing in a museum basement for the last fifty years.

Its face had been torn to pull out the mummy it previously encased, its chest sagged due to damp conditions and important parts of it were cracking and unstable. So conservators at the Fitzmillian museum called upon the university’s engineering department for help and 22 year old David Knowles rose to the cause. With LEGO.

Turkey’s Pamukkale: Step into a Mixed-Culture Soup PHOTOS

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pamukkale turkeyPamukkale is the most sensual and surreal of Turkey’s eleven World Heritage sites.

Seventeen natural hot springs pour a continual stream of mineral water down the enormous travertine steps of Turkey’s Pamukkale. It’s a Dali painting come alive.  Rock formations melt like liquid stairs dropping from hilltop Hierapolis towards the surrounding skirt of farmland. It’s located in Turkey’s Inner Aegean region, in the River Menderes valley, near the town of Denizli.

Fats Help You Lose Weight, Claims Israeli Researcher

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butter croissant fat weight hebrew university
There’s good news for butter lovers in the future.

Professor Oren Froy of the Agriculture, Food, and Environment department, Hebrew University, says that a high-fat diet may help weight loss. The trick is to include fats in regularly scheduled meals. We’ve written about different food theories here on Green Prophet, including a debate on if organic food is really healthier. Eating according to schedule, wrote Froy in an article published in the journal of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, helps the body  burn it up instead of packing it away in the tissues.

Considering how many obese Israelis and Americans and obese Gulf State citizens there already are, it’s great to hear of a way people can eat formerly prohibited foods, guilt-free.

Prof. Froy and his research team probed the current theory that obesity results when mammal’s metabolisms are disrupted by irregular eating, or when lots of  fats are eaten. It seems that they proved the first to be true, and the second questionable. Their conclusions are based on an 18-week study conducted on mice.

The researchers observed four groups of mice. The test group was given a high-fat diet and allowed to eat only at the same times and for the same lengths of time, every day. Of the control groups, one was allotted low-fat (presumably high-carb) foods, also on schedule. The second group received the same low-fat diet but was allowed to eat as much and as often as desired. The third control group ate a high-fat diet at will.

The mice eating plenty of fats on a schedule gained less weight than any of those in the control groups. Although allotted the same amount of daily calories, the mice eating a high-fat diet at will gained the most weight.  The scheduled high-fat eaters also metabolized their food more efficiently than any of the others; that is, they burned off fat in the intervals between feedings rather than storing it in their bodies.

Losing weight is less about cutting out fats, concludes Froy, than scheduling when to eat them.

This brings to mind the famous French Paradox of the  1990s, when many theories floated regarding the relatively low incidence of heart disease among the French, who traditionally enjoy conspicuous amounts of butter, cheese, and pork. Among the reasons found for this comfortable state of existence were the moderate amounts of red wine the French drink daily, consuming natural vegetable and animal fats while avoiding trans fats, smaller portions, low sugar consumption, taking time to savor food – and significantly, no noshing between meals. Apparently, like mice, humans burn up their food if they stick to breakfast, lunch and dinner and no snacks.

In the light of Prof. Froy’s theory, it seems that science is proving folk wisdom correct.

Now.

It’s exactly 7:00 a.m.

Breakfast! Pass the croissant and butter, please, and don’t forget the cream for my coffee.

More hopeful food ideas from Green Prophet:

Image of croissant with butter via Shutterstock.

 

 

ABC News Sued Over Pink Slime

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pink slime abc news, ground beef
Beef Products Inc says that the ABC network is to blame for its economic woes.

What’s in a name? Beef Products Inc (BPI) is suing ABC News for $1.2 billion, claiming economic damage from  the network’s use of the words “pink slime” to describe the mass of connective tissue ground together, washed in ammonia, and dyed to look like ground beef. South-Dakota based BPI uses the stuff as a filler to stretch out ground beef.

Used to use. BPI has stopped production of its cheap filler at three major plants. Its main customers, big supermarket chains like Safeway and Supervalu, won’t buy ground beef containing it. A successful social media campaign got beef  with pink slime out of school lunches.  The McDonald’s, Burger King and Taco Bell food chains refuse to use it. Lashing out at any culprit, and protected by a state law that allows agricultural companies to sue when their products are criticized, BPI claims that ABC News’s coverage has set the public mind against their beef. Nobody’s buying it anymore.

3D Printing Lessons from Ancient Egyptian Ceramic Art

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shawabi egypt art sculpture 3d printing

None of Egypt’s pyramids existed.  Khafre wouldn’t commission the Great Pyramid of Giza for another 1500 years.  But some time around 4000 BCE an Egyptian artist discovered the secret. This secret was the wonderful alchemy which transformed sand, ash, calcite lime, copper and fire into a lustrous blue-green gem worthy of the pharaohs.  Faience, also known as Egyptian paste, is the basis for the world’s first glazed ceramic.  The faience recipe improved and spread to Persia,  Turkey and througout the Indus valley.  Now researchers from the University of Western England believe faience may also be the key to better 3D printing.

Floating With Spencer Tunick to Save the Dead Sea

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naked dead sea 2011
A personal account of celebrating the Naked Sea event anniversary last Thursday night.

In September of last year year Spencer Tunick came down to the Dead Sea and brought along with him throngs of reporters, environmentalists and 1500 people loaded on buses from around Israel who bared all in the hot sun in the name of art, and brought attention to the plight of a world’s natural treasure, the Dead Sea. The event was exposed (no pun intended) to half a billion people globally and was what I and the masses see as the start of the movement. This year we returned with Tunick to float again.

Masdar Unveils Plan for a 100% Renewable Energy Micro-grid

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Masdar, clean tech, renewable energy, Abu Dhabi, micro-gridThe Masdar Institute (MI) has teamed up with the Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI) headed by Denmark’s former Prime Minister, and the Research Institute for Industrial Science and Technology (RIST) from South Korea to develop a 100% renewable energy micro-grid in Abu Dhabi. MI initially proposed the micro-grid idea to GGGI, which is chaired by Lars Rasmussen, in October, 2011, and has since received a pledge of $1 million from GGGI and POSCO – one of the world’s leading steel manufacturers to see it to fruition.

Washit is a Shower and Washing Machine in One

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Washit, Turkey, water conservation, green design, clean tech, eco-design

Four Turkish students collaborated to design Washit – a combined shower and washing machine that makes those 15 minute showers almost guiltless. Responding to the combined woes of water scarcity and excess water use in the bathroom, Ahmet Burak Aktas, Adem Onalan, Salih Berk Ilhan and Burak Soylemez created a shower box that collects, cleans, and recycles greywater, which is then used to either wash clothes or the next person to enter the box.