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A Sustainable Postcard from Turkey: You’ll Wish You Were Here

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turkey plantersThis Green Prophet tours Turkey and sees a mosaic of eco-sensibility.

Little Eid, a Muslim holiday, is a great time for a getaway. So I reeled in my family from disparate zip codes for a week spent touring someplace new.  Years back, plump thighs on my enormous babies tagged the kids as “turkey legs”.  It feels right that we meet up in Istanbul. Turkey seems so sustainable. Look past the blinding kaleidoscope of colors and textures, tiled surfaces, carpets, spices and foods and spot clever detailing that tips off intrinsic enviro-awareness.

Atatürk International Airport has quiet little features that scream sensitivity to energy consumption. Overhead lighting throughout the main terminal is operated only when natural daylight is insufficient.

Why white colored cars are a better investment

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It keeps the blazing heat back, and white is the best car color for holding value, according to the UK Daily Mail

In the market for buying a new car? Believe it or not, white colors help hold a car’s value.  Although white is usually considered more plain and certainly not as attractive as various metallic colors, and especially the white gold sheet metal on the Mercedes McLaren super sports coupe, there is a certain amount of logic behind choosing the color white for your next set of wheels. The reasons are both green and economical, especially when you go to sell your car online.

In a recent car news article the UK’s Daily Mail newspaper, white colored cars “typically hold about five per cent more of their value than the market average for a typical used car while blue cars still languish below market average values,” the article concluded.

The Mail went ever further and said that other colors, like green, orange, red, and especially purple were “under-performers” in used car markets; causing a price decline of anywhere between 4 and 8 per cent, depending on the model and of course the color.

While this information relates to cars being sold in the UK, the main reason for white’s newfound popularity  appears to be a more conservative taste in car colors among families. Although not specifically mentioned in the article, choosing a white color in either a new or pre-driven car can be a very logical choice, especially for car buyers living in hot climates like the Middle East.

For one thing, white color is easier to deal with when repairing a car after a minor traffic mishap. From a green standpoint, the components of white paint do not contain metals such as lead and other metallic pigments, titanium dioxide, (also used in cosmetics)  and barium sulphate which are  often found in metallic paints. These paint additives are not exactly environmentally friendly. Even though white paint does use substances like plastic acrylics, these are still better than the above mentioned additives.

Another factor involving the use of white paint is that white cars reflect sunlight better than other colors, making them less hot on the inside. This big heat reduction creates less poisonous gasses from plastics and other synthetic materials that form inside cars on hot days which in locations like Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates can reach more than 45 degrees Celsius during mid-Summer.

Some car colors,  including pink, yellow and indigo did perform well; although these colors are better suited for certain trendy sports models. Although gold and silver colors were noted, they did not perform that well for holding a car’s value. No mention of white gold was made however.

More articles on cars and car colors in the Middle East:

How Much Gold Goes Into a White Gold Mercedes Sports Coupe?

Abu Dhabi’s Solid Gold ” Biofuel” Mercedes Another Dubious “Green” Development

Abandoned Jag, BMWS and Mercedes Gather Dust at Abu Dhabi Airport

Dubai Porsche Owner Walks Pet Cheetah on a Leash

Blücher’s Wallpaper Cleans Sick Buildings

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blucher self cleaning wall paper sick building syndromeThough wallpaper is not popular in the Middle East, this wallpaper can help repair sick building syndrome.

I grew up in a duplex, my mom warned us that the walls have ears.  Now the walls can have lungs too. Germany-based Blücher Technologies has created a material called Saratech Permasorb Wallpaper that removes toxins embedded in wall surfaces, improving the air inside the room. This breathable “paper” is actually a non-woven glass fiber/polyester covering that’s applied to interior surfaces like traditional wallpaper. The wallpaper houses thousands of tiny spherical “absorbers” that look just like the poppy seed mess from my morning bagel.

Smoking Ban Fires Up Lebanon Businesses

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smoking ban, Lebanon, man smoking, Law 174, anti-tobacco legislation, hospitality industryHotel and restaurant owners in Lebanon are all fired up after Law 174 went into effect today, banning all smoking within closed environments throughout the country. The law’s year-long implementation process began by gradually ending smoking in educational buildings, hospitals, offices and other public buildings, and culminated today in the official end of smoking in bars, nightclubs and even Nargileh/Shisha cafes.

Dror Benshetrit’s VIP Hub for Exclusive Cross-over Designers

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Dror Benshetrit design studioDeveloping a new ecosystem for multi-disciplinary design? Will this need high-end design hub earmark space for sustainable design?

If you think Ikea has got the top modern décor, you should check out some of Dror Benshetrit’s designs for products, interiors, architecture, art installations.  The studio named after the innovator will be relocated to SoHo this month, spreading out in a 13,000-square-foot top-floor space intuitively named “WeCross.”

“We love to think at the intersection where art, design, and architecture meet,” they say. And what a crossroads it will be:  The Studio Dror team is intimate, with only about 10 people, but WeCross will bring 200 friends, clients, collaborators, and even competitors together to work side by side, under one roof.  Benshetrit has designed the studio himself.

White House Honey Beer Recipes

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obama honey brew beer recipeDrinking beer is definitely more of a Western tradition than one of the East where wine is preferred, but beer has its place where tradition allows. Miriam has covered beer expos in Israel where there is a rise in boutique breweries like the Dancing Camel and a demand for organic beers. My mom always said that a good malt gives a pregnant woman much-needed iron.

Whatever your reason, or taste, the White House has caught the home brew fever and has just released a couple of recipes for its White House Honey Porter, and the White House Honey Ale. Both use honey which is appropriate for the upcoming Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashanah. Below we give you the recipes, and a downloadable printable recipe pack you can tape to your fridge. Use organic ingredients where possible for an organic brew.

According to the White House this is the first time beer has been brewed on the grounds: “As far as we know the White House Honey Brown Ale is the first alcohol brewed or distilled on the White House grounds. George Washington brewed beer and distilled whiskey at Mount Vernon and Thomas Jefferson made wine but there’s no evidence that any beer has been brewed in the White House. (Although we do know there was some drinking during prohibition…)”

WHITE HOUSE HONEY PORTER
Ingredients

2 (3.3 lb) cans light unhopped malt extract
3/4 lb Munich Malt (cracked)
1 lb crystal 20 malt (cracked)
6 oz black malt (cracked)
3 oz chocolate malt (cracked)
1 lb White House Honey
10 HBUs bittering hops
1/2 oz Hallertaur Aroma hops
1 pkg Nottingham dry yeast
3/4 cup corn sugar for bottling

Directions

1. In a 6 qt pot, add grains to 2.25 qts of 168˚ water. Mix well to bring temp down to 155˚. Steep on stovetop at 155˚ for 45 minutes. Meanwhile, bring 2 gallons of water to 165˚ in a 12 qt pot. Place strainer over, then pour and spoon all the grains and liquid in. Rinse with 2 gallons of 165˚ water. Let liquid drain through. Discard the grains and bring the liquid to a boil. Set aside.

2. Add the 2 cans of malt extract and honey into the pot. Stir well.

3. Boil for an hour. Add half of the bittering hops at the 15 minute mark, the other half at 30 minute mark, then the aroma hops at the 60 minute mark.

4. Set aside and let stand for 15 minutes.

5. Place 2 gallons of chilled water into the primary fermenter and add the hot wort into it. Top with more water to total 5 gallons if necessary. Place into an ice bath to cool down to 70-80˚.
Activate dry yeast in 1 cup of sterilized water at 75-90˚ for fifteen minutes. Pitch yeast into the fermenter. Fill airlock halfway with water. Ferment at room temp (64-68˚) for 3-4 days.
Siphon over to a secondary glass fermenter for another 4-7 days.

6. To bottle, make a priming syrup on the stove with 1 cup sterile water and 3/4 cup priming sugar, bring to a boil for five minutes. Pour the mixture into an empty bottling bucket. Siphon the beer from the fermenter over it. Distribute priming sugar evenly. Siphon into bottles and cap. Let sit for 1-2 weeks at 75˚.

man drinking beer balcony

WHITE HOUSE HONEY ALE
Ingredients

2 (3.3 lb) cans light malt extract
1 lb light dried malt extract
12 oz crushed amber crystal malt
8 oz Biscuit Malt
1 lb White House Honey
1 1/2 oz Kent Goldings Hop Pellets
1 1/2 oz Fuggles Hop pellets
2 tsp gypsum
1 pkg Windsor dry ale yeast
3/4 cup corn sugar for priming

Directions

1. In an 12 qt pot, steep the grains in a hop bag in 1 1/2 gallons of sterile water at 155 degrees for half an hour. Remove the grains.

2. Add the 2 cans of the malt extract and the dried extract and bring to a boil.

3. For the first flavoring, add the 1 1/2 oz Kent Goldings and 2 tsp of gypsum. Boil for 45 minutes.

4. For the second flavoring, add the 1/2 oz Fuggles hop pellets at the last minute of the boil.

5. Add the honey and boil for 5 more minutes.

6. Add 2 gallons chilled sterile water into the primary fermenter and add the hot wort into it. Top with more water to total 5 gallons. There is no need to strain.

7. Pitch yeast when wort temperature is between 70-80˚. Fill airlock halfway with water.

8. Ferment at 68-72˚ for about seven days.

9. Rack to a secondary fermenter after five days and ferment for 14 more days.

10. To bottle, dissolve the corn sugar into 2 pints of boiling water for 15 minutes. Pour the mixture into an empty bottling bucket. Siphon the beer from the fermenter over it. Distribute priming sugar evenly. Siphon into bottles and cap. Let sit for 2 to 3 weeks at 75˚.

The ingredients might be hard to place but do look online for beer kits and supply companies if you can’t find the right supplies near you.

Enjoy!

Print a PDF of the above beer recipes here.

Egypt’s Solar Decathlon Team Hits Madrid

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Egypt, AUC, SDE 2012, Solar Decathlon, SLIDES, Arkan, Madrid, Architecture CompetitionThe news that the American University of Cairo (AUC) would be the first from North Africa or the Middle East to participate in a US Department of Energy-sponsored Solar Decathlon competition was a source of great pride for all design and environment enthusiasts in our region. Green Prophet and other news outlets even launched an international plea to support the innovative SLIDES design as the revolution had curtailed their fundraising progress.

Despite numerous obstacles, including high temperatures during the holy month of Ramadan, unavailability of materials, and general inexperience with a project of this nature, the team managed to build a small prefab home that they recently shipped to Madrid. But the new design called Arkan is nothing at all like the original concept we loved so much.

Egypt, AUC, SDE 2012, Solar Decathlon, SLIDES, Arkan, Madrid, Architecture Competition

Green Prophet spoke to a member of the original team who helped to write the SLIDES proposal that was so popular around the world and which garnered Egypt’s historic entry as a SDE 2012 participant.

They asked to remain anonymous for three reasons: they spoke to us without consulting the rest of the team, it is still very uncomfortable to speak out in Egypt, where transparency is still far from the norm, and they are still affiliated with AUC.

Our source explained that during the construction process of SLIDES, the original team felt that the contractors brought in to help them were taking over and that many of the important design elements were being compromised in the process.

Egypt, AUC, SDE 2012, Solar Decathlon, SLIDES, Arkan, Madrid, Architecture Competition

“It is regular procedure to have a contractor help since the students are too inexperienced to do everything, but most of the work is done by the students,” according to the student.

“We started talking to the contractor but we felt that there was something that they left out that compromised the standards to which we were supposed to adhere. We’re supposed to produce something innovative, something new, and very high-tech, but we were feeling that this was being compromised in order to get something done so we could complete the project on time.”

The group’s original core also felt that their advisor, Dr. Lamyaa El-Gabryy, supported cutting corners in order to get the project completed in time.

“We are a team, but we had some difficulties in communication. Because usually the architects are the ones that lead and keep the standards because they have a vision… it might not necessarily be turned out, which is why we need professionals, but you can’t compromise everything just to get something done.”

Egypt, AUC, SDE 2012, Solar Decathlon, SLIDES, Arkan, Madrid, Architecture Competition

“The design that we had on paper wasn’t going to be built. We’re not going to do this structural system or this one. Why? Because it’s easier.”

“We told her [Dr. Lamyaa] that it wasn’t going to work like that, that we were upset with the performance of the contractor.”

As a result of their discontent, several members of the original team pulled out around April or May, taking their SLIDES design with them. They have since entered the Solar Decathlon in China and are in need of both administrative and financial support.

Egypt, AUC, SDE 2012, Solar Decathlon, SLIDES, Arkan, Madrid, Architecture Competition

Green Prophet contacted Dr. Lamyaa several times in the last few months to track AUC’s progress, since Green Prophet will be reporting live from Madrid, but we were never informed that a new crew had been recruited or that a new design had been submitted to officials at SDE 2012.

Arkan refers to pillars in classic Arabic and corners in the Egyptian dialect. Renders depict a luxurious solar-powered prefab that juxtaposes modern technology and traditional design, and the design brief calls for wood and glass, but the completed images posted on the team’s Facebook page show a rudimentary steel-framed structure that will be topped with photovoltaic panels.

Egypt, AUC, SDE 2012, Solar Decathlon, SLIDES, Arkan, Madrid, Architecture Competition

In our last communication with Dr. Lamyaa, which occurred just days before we spoke to our source, she said she was very proud of the team for slogging through despite high temperatures and empty stomachs (during Ramadan) but she said nothing about the new design. We haven’t been able to reach her for comment since.

But we’ll dig deeper next week, live from Madrid, so stay tuned for updates!

More on Egypt and the Solar Decathlon:

Don’t Let Money Rob Egypt’s Solar Decathlon Success

Egypt May Survive Climate Change Thanks to AUC Students

How to Ward Off the Evil Eye

Laurie attempts to explain Middle East evil eye superstition.

Can a lingering look with a penetrating gaze cause catastrophe in another’s life? If you’re Jordanian, you might think so (and your grandmother certainly does): it’s the pseudoscience of the “evil eye”. In Turkey, people with Frida Kahlo unibrows or pale color eyes are considered prime candidates to dish out disaster.  Bedouin mothers keep their children unkempt for fear that attractiveness will invite what’s also called the “eye of envy”.  I’m told this mojo’s real in the Middle East.

Camel milk and diabetes

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image-mother-baby-camelWhat’s good for baby camels may be great for diabetic humans.

Nomads have always considered camel’s milk a medicine, but only recently has science confirmed it. We’re in agreement – see our 6 green reasons for drinking camel milk.

While folks in Dubai enjoy coffee- and chocolate-flavored camel milk drinks, researchers view the thin, bland milk in a more serious light. Improved blood sugar levels in type 2 diabetics drinking camel milk was proved by Dr. Rajendra Agrawal in the Diabetes  Care & Research Centre in Bikaner, India. This caught the attention of researchers at Cairo University, Egypt, and King Saud University, Saudi Arabia.

At Cairo University, a 4-month trial was conducted involving 54 participants receiving insulin. Of those, 27 drank 500 ml. of camel milk every day. Test results showed that those drinking camel milk had significantly reduced blood sugar and higher C-peptide levels, which indicate improved insulin function. Following this, Prof. Agrawal conducted a 2-year study which concluded with proof that three participants no longer needed insulin.

Agrawal explains that camel milk passes into the bloodstream quickly because it has low coagulum (which create curds in the stomach). With no digestive solids to impede quick assimilation, the high-insulin milk enters the bloodstream immediately, benefiting those whose own insulin secretions are inadequate. He also claims that camel milk benefits cell function of the pancreas, another important benefit to diabetics.

The National Nutrition Institute in Cairo’s analysis of camel milk showed high levels of iron, zinc and copper in camel milk, but especially high levels of Vitamin C.

Will these discoveries make an impact on Western medicine? It may, albeit slowly. While vast camel herds roam the deserts of Sudan and Somalia, there are relatively few in the First World. And camels give comparatively little milk: 13 pints to a cow’s 50.

Still, there’s hope for diabetics in the USA: the American Camel Coalition, a group of camel dairies, has recently obtained permission to sell camel milk from the FDA. And in Britain, powdered camel milk should be available soon, pending approval from the European Commission . Vitamol Camel Dairy and Products has been set up by Germans Malik Dakdaki and Martin Wilke and Moroccan Abdelkader Saoudi. The three partners plan to invest US$40m in the project.

Find consuming camel strange? Get over that hump. More on the incredible, edible camel:

Lebanon: Greenpeace Investigation Reveals Toxic Coast Pollution

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greenpeace-lebanon-toxic-water-pollutionAn investigation by Greenpeace has found hormone-disrupting chemicals and a range of phthalates which are classified as toxic to reproduction in Lebanese waters

Ranking a lowly 114 in the Global Health Index, Lebanon was under no illusion that its waters were the cleanest or most biodiverse. However, a recent report by Greenpeace Lebanon has revealed some rather shocking finds about the toxic nature of the country’s coast. From November 2011 to February 2012, the Greenpeace Lebanon team collected a total of 30 samples from various locations along the Lebanese coast. These were then sent to to the Greenpeace International Science Unit in the UK for assessment. The results showed a “a plethora of dangerous and toxic compounds present in the waters [which] represent a serious risk hazard, both to human and environmental health.” 

Jerusalem Gets New Environment Science Study Center

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Jerusalem, Sustainability, Science, Environmental Studies, Education, Beautiful Israel, Hebrew UniversityA new 2,000-square-meter facility in Jerusalem will be devoted to the study of sustainability.

It will be an academic institution from the Council for a Beautiful Israel, located by the Hebrew University’s Givat Ram campus, which caters to the study of the sciences, and some of the Holy City’s most important institutions, including the Knesset and the Israel Museum.

Egypt Makes Recycling A Priority

Egypt, Cairo, Recycle, Waste Management, Crisis, Government, New, Environment, GreenDr. Mamdouh Khalil, a professor of environmental sciences at Cairo University, told Al-Shorfa there is currently a waste disposal crisis in Egypt, because of the lack of waste recycling plants.

Gaza Unliveable by 2020 and Its Water Undrinkable by 2016

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gaza-un-unliveble-2020-water-undrinkable-2016-israelIt’s all bad news for Gazans – a UN report reveals that that region is under immense environmental stress which looks set to worsen unless dramatic action is taken

A comprehensive report released by the UN this week has warned that Gaza will no longer be ‘liveable’ by 2020 unless dramatic action is taken to improve its water supply, power, health and schooling. It adds that Gaza’s rapidly rising population of about 1.64 million could also lose its main source of fresh water by 2016. Clean water is limited for most Gazans to an average of 70-90 litres per person per day – the minimum global World Health Organization standard is 100 litres a day. “Damage to the coastal aquifer will be irreversible without immediate remedial action,” says the UN report.

UN Launches Climate Change Resilience Project In Western Balkans, Turkey

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The incidence and intensity of natural disasters, such as the flash floods last month that killed 12 people in Samsun, Turkey, are expected to increase as climate change intensifies.

A two-year project to improve the disaster response capacities of Turkey and the Western Balkans has just been launched, reports the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR). Co-sponsored by UNISDR and the World Meteorological Organization, the project will receive 2.2 million Euros ($2.8 million) from the European Commission.

Diwan Baladna Books Are Arab-Jordanian Culture for Dummies

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arab jordan culture books Diwan Baladna BooksLearn about Arab greetings, the evil eye, funeral traditions and the habit of pigeon-keeping in these colorful books from Jordan.

On my first free Friday in Amman, I walked to the downtown end of Rainbow Street and turned left to find the merchants of Souk Jara just beginning to set up shop.  Souk Jara is Amman’s tidy Friday Market, and walking casually down the wide grassy lane, with abundant kiosks on either side – not to mention sampling watermelon slushes and other fresh fruit smoothies from the food stands down a perpendicular path – is a pleasant way to start the weekend.

While most vendors sell handmade jewelry or hand-painted kitchenware, Ahmad Kamal Azban sells copies of the books from the program he and his friend Tony Michael Anqoud created.  When I encountered Azban that Friday, he gave me a winning sales pitch about his products.

Diwan Baladna, or “Our Country’s Meeting Place,” is a set of two informative books on Arab-Jordanian life.  The first is on culture, the second on language.  The books were published in January 2010 and May 2011, respectively.

You’d be hard-pressed to find a source for learning about Arab culture as light and humorous as the first book.  Chapters are divided according to major aspects of life in the Arab world, including greeting behavior, the influence of the evil eye, wedding and funeral traditions, and even the practice of pigeon-keeping!  An impending second edition boasts fifteen new topics.