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How Unsustainable Water Policies Crippled The Assad Regime (INTERVIEW)

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We speak to Shahrzad Mohtadi about the devastated drought that crippled Syria’s food centre and shook Assad’s political stability

The link between climate change and political instability may still be ambiguous, but recent research is uncovering a connection between sustainable water and food policies and the survival of governments. Shahrzad Mohtadi found that whilst a prelonged drought in Syria may not have caused the political uprising, the Assad regime’s failure to deal with it effectively certainly did. “Assad promoted water intensive crops such as cotton, while not providing efficient methods of watering such crops. There were many such policies that created a scenario where the drought’s effects were even more devastating than they otherwise would have been,” say Mohtadi.

“So one can’t say climate change will create a domino effect of instability and migration whatsoever – but Syria’s case is a warning that developing nations… should create sustainable agricultural policies.” I spoke with Shahrzad Mohtadi to find out more about the devastating drought in Syria and what other Middle Eastern nations need to do to protect their dwindling water resources – and their political stability.

Google Doodle Salutes Razi – the Persian Father of Modern Bedside Manners

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Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi google

Google does it again: sliding big history lessons into my idle internet surfing.

This week in Jordan, the Google image was of Middle Eastern pharmacist, physician and alchemist, Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, the preeminent man of science of his time, and beyond. If Guinness doled out world records in Razi’s day, this 9th century Persian would best swimmer Michael Phelps in a stack of  “firsts”: but Razi’s events were in the pool of medical research, clinical care and chemistry.

Razi dabbled in alchemy and discovered numerous compounds and chemicals, including kerosene.  An early proponent of experimental medicine, he was one of science’s most prolific authors and arguably the most original of all the world’s physicians. The Encyclopedia of Islam said,”Razi remained up to the 17th century the indisputable authority of medicine.”

Educated in music, mathematics, philosophy, and metaphysics, Razi chose medicine as his day job.  He differentiated smallpox from measles, and made distinctions between curable and incurable diseases.

Camels for Milk and Look Who’s Buying

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nursing camel milk
Dubai’s dream of exporting fresh camel milk to the rest of the world will soon become reality.

Green Prophet’s been doing alot of yakking about camels lately.  Prepare to hear a lot more as the camel products go commercially global. Camel milk is a healthy alternative to cow milk; Camel milk is for good for diabetics. Camel milk’s been sold in supermarkets throughout the United Arab Emirates (UAE) for several years, and it may soon be approved for export to the European Union, but this means that the UAE’s two commercial dairy camel farms must quickly gear up to meet expected demand. Extracting camel milk is tricky business. These “ships of the desert” are rock-star temperamental.

Israel’s Sol Chip adds Solar Power to Microchips

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sol-chip solar chip
Sol Chip’s technology will allow small devices to run indefinitely without replacing and disposing of those silly lithium batteries.

A tale of two wafers: Both begin as 99.9999999 percent pure silicon, one of the basic ingredients in desert sand. A furnace melts the silicon and controls the cooling and growing of a mono-crystalline cylindrical ingot which is then sliced into standard 100 to 300mm (4 to 7.5 inch) wafers.  Infinitesimal quantities of doping materials are added to change the wafer into a semiconductor with the correct properties to become either a microchip or a photovoltaic solar cell. From this point these two types of wafers go their separate ways and give little indication of their common roots. But now a company named Sol Chip of Haifa Israel intends to combine these two silicon-based technologies to make solar-powered microchips.

It All Grows In Kuwait – One Bloggers Green Fingered Journey

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it-all-grows-gardening-organic-kuwait-alzainah-food-middle-east-greenAlzainah Albabtain, a 22 year old student, is growing her own food in the scorching heat of Kuwait and wants others to give it go too

A green fingered student from Kuwait is taking the blogosphere by storm with her ‘It All Grows’ blog. Filled to the rafters with gorgeous photos of lovely fruit and veg, recipes, and gardening tips, Alzainah wants to prove that “good fruits and vegetables don’t have to travel across the world to make it to your plate.” I caught up with her to find out how she got hooked on gardening and her insider tips for growers in the Middle East.

Revolving Crystal Ball Predicts Qatar’s World Cup Ambitions

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Qatar, crystal ball, FIFA, World Cup, 2022, Museum, Sustainable Development, DesignA giant revolving crystal ball provides a glimpse of Qatar’s 2022 world cup ambitions, which aren’t looking so sustainable after all. Apriori Communications commissioned Vedran Pedišić (SANGRAD) and Erick Velasco Farerra (AVP-arhitekti) to design a technologically-advanced spherical structure that will play host to a new FIFA soccer museum.

Islamic Cemetery in Austria Reinforces Natural Connection to the End

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An 8,400 square meter cemetery for Islamic burials in Austria reinforces humanity’s connection to nature until the end. A tranquil design flawlessly executed by Bernardo Bader with an applaudable combination of simplicity and reverence, the cemetery built in Vorarlberg features a series of variously-sized walls that not only separate the cemetery from the surrounding landscape, but also gently cordon off grave burials.

Islam, cemetery, Austria, green design, sustainable design, bernardo bader

islamic cemetery in alpine setting, austria

In its purest form, Islam (like most religious and spiritual ideological systems), calls for humanity to retain their connection to the earth. That we are custodians of the planet is an idea that is expressed in numerous Quranic tenets.

Bearing this in mind, Bader aimed to design a cemetery for Muslim residents living in Altach, Austria that would be a gentle reflection of this powerful and largely overlooked sense of responsibility.

Unlike some embarrassingly overdone monuments to the dead, a series of elegant walls depicting intricate designs very similar to the Mashrabiya screens that help to facilitate natural light and ventilation in mosques and homes in the Arab world.

Islam, cemetery, Austria, green design, sustainable design, bernardo bader

It is at once a tasteful intervention that minimizes site impact while also creating intimate spaces that allow families to mourn their loss in a magical alpine environment.

See how this cemetery compares with Zoroastrian burials in Iran.

Islamic cemetery in Austria, nature

 

Cemetery blueprint

Images via Adolf Bereuter, Nikolaus Walter, Peter Allgäuer, Bernardo Bader

Hot Air Ballooning over Turkey’s Cappadoccia

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hot air balloon capadoccia Cappadoccia turkey

Park those alternative energy cars and hybrid vehicles, hot air ballooning is my new green travel of choice. Can there be a more magnificent place to try my wings than over the Cappadoccian landscape?
Cappadocia is a region in Anatolia, largely in the Nevşehir Province, in the center of modern day Turkey. Together with Göreme National Park, these rock sites form one of Turkey’s eleven World Heritage Sites. Centuries of volcanic eruptions coated the topography with layer on layer of lava and volcanic “tufa”, volcanic ash turned to rock. Nearby, Erciyas volcano is still active with occasional minor eruptions.

Wind and water have sculpted the landscape into spectacular pillars and towers that could have sprung from the imaginings of Tim Burton or Doctor Seuss.  Grass covered plateaus crack open, exposing terrifyingly craggy innards.  Soft mounds of tufa look like melting ice cream. The variegated earth is set against unflinchingly blue skies. All perfect for a hot air balloon ride.

Tel Aviv Bids for Artificial Island International Airport At Sea

tel aviv artificial island airport
Fly into Israel? Land at sea first on this 250 acre platform runway proposed for international flights.

There has been talk for a couple of years already that Tel Aviv’s international airport will move to the sea, literally. A proposal has been submitted to create an artificial island off the city’s coast to replace the Ben Gurion Airport, one that services local, domestic and international flights. A couple months ago I interviewed a geologist helping to develop feasibility studies for such a structure. And according to media reports it looks like the crazy plan is going ahead despite environmental risks to the fragile Mediterranean Sea, and security risks of sabotage.

Tel Aviv Goes on Bike Impounding Rampage

cycling bikes impound inspectors cutting bike locksBikes blocking traffic or crosswalks are being impounded in Tel Aviv.

From the first time I visited Tel Aviv more than a decade ago, up until today so much has changed in the way the city’s residents accept cycling. Back then if you rode a bike you were either a migrant worker pushing fabric rolls across the city, a vagrant collecting junk and hobbling it to the side of your wheels, or a strange kind of hippy. Fast forward ten years and the middle and upper class of Tel Aviv has embraced bike riding – so much that the city has rolled out a Paris-style Velo bike program called Tel-O-Fun.

Although it has its aggravating moments (as some users complain), it’s a pretty neat way to get around the city while avoiding the stress of thievery. But now, Tel Aviv cyclists have more than vandals to worry about. Media reports say that the City is indiscriminately impounding bikes that aren’t chained to one of the city’s 3000 official bike racks. Like every story there are two sides, but the approach has the city’s bike riders up in ire. 

Mud and Mirrors Make Interactive Eco-Art in Morocco

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mud, earth, eco-art, Morocco, Marrakech, Biennale, design, mirrors, Elin HansdottirIcelandic artist Elín Hansdóttir has combined mud and mirrors in this unusual interactive eco-art exhibit for Morocco. Designed as part of the Marrakech Biennale earlier this year, the earthy installation features pillars of mud and straw organized into a spiral design that is then fronted with mirrors that reflect the exhibit itself and the surroundings.

Eat Slower, Enjoy It More, And Eat Less

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image-unhealthy-eating

You eat more under stressful conditions.

Did you ever notice that you eat much more popcorn during the tense scenes at the movies? It’s a self-comforting thing to do, a response to stress. Researchers Brian Wasink and Koert van Ittersum at Cornell University recently discovered a parallel in a study done at one of the Hardee restaurants, an American fast-food chain offering items like bacon and cheddar fried potatoes. The Hardee restaurants feature a typical fast-food hectic ambiance: lots of bright lights and color, and fast, loud music – all forms of stress. (Here at Green Prophet we’ve wondered if stress makes us fat.)

To accommodate the study, the restaurant made over an isolated area to resemble a fine-dining experience. Low lights, white tablecloths, and relaxing jazzy music – but the same fast-food menu as offered in the regular area. Subjects under study were assigned to eat in either area.  Expectations were that the slower-paced diners would order and eat more, but it turned out to be the opposite. We reported on Dr. Wasink’s previous study on overeating in this post.

Cement Returns to Its Sustainable Roots

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cement green sustainable bricks
Chemists bring one of the oldest materials in building history back to its green roots. 

Cement is one of the oldest building materials cooked up by humans, but it’s so misunderstood. It’s not what paves your cement sidewalk, that’s concrete.  And it’s not concrete, although cement is a main ingredient. Modern advances in production and ingredient mix are reinventing this “everywhere” substance as a sustainable champ. The material itself is fairly green but fails miserably in whole lifecycle assessment. Cement relies on fossil fuels for processing its raw materials. Resultant emissions mean that making basic cement causes about 5 percent of all manmade carbon dioxide.

Think of it as glue. The ancients discovered that finely ground lime or silicates, mixed with water, will react at ordinary temperatures to form a sludgy ooze with superior binding powers. Recent advances in chemical mix and production technologies are not only making concrete carbon-neutral, it’s actually achieving carbon-negativity.

Turn Disposable Water Bottle into Pencil Case: Upcycling Tutorial

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pencil case plastic bottle tutorialNow that the kids are back at school, time to go green and continue the celebrations with this back-to-school tutorial. Parents will need to help with this one.

This time of year with kids returning to school, many go on shopping spree spending lots of money on branded notebooks, agendas, and bags.

But why not for a craft and green option for a pencil case?

I’m all for using a reusable personal water bottle filled with tap water, but there are still plenty disposable plastic bottles around, so here is the step by step tutorial how to upcycle it to a cool pencil case!

Crafting has many benefits, in this case not only you are making your own personalised creation – using a water bottle allows for additional benefit: it’s transparent so you can easily see what’s inside your case. See below for instructions.

Spencer Tunick and Israel’s Tent Protest Leader Team up For Dead Sea

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Dead Sea, Spencer Tunick, social activism, environmental activism, IsraelRenowned nude photographer Spencer Tunick and Daphne Leef, the leader of last year’s tent protests in Tel Aviv, are teaming up to promote creative social activism in Israel. In support of Save our Sea, a grassroots organization that strives to raise awareness of the Dead Sea’s declining ecological health, the pair have organized an overnight gathering and early morning photo shoot (sorry, no nudity this time).

The event scheduled to take place overnight on Thursday September 14th will include an early morning drumming session near the Masada ruins and end with a panel moderated by environmental photographer Roie Galitz.