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Saudi Arabia, Corals, Aviation and Basil – Green News Snippets

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corals and shells saudi arabiaFrom  super corals in the Arabian Gulf, basil planting in Palestine to aviation and Saudi Arabia’s mixed climate message

It’s been another busy week here at GreenProphet and we hope you’ve been enjoying our news offerings. We’ve covered everything from pink farming (yep, you read right), the shocking NASA images of Iran’s salt lake Urmia and Laurie also launched our very own plastic bag challenge. If you are still after more green news from the region, then enjoy our hand-selected news snippets for the week.

Earth-Loving Kibbutzniks Help Build Luxury Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in Jerusalem

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green building, earth architecture, Neot Smadar Kibbutz, green design, sustainable design, Jerusalem, Waldorf-Astoria, Palace Hotel

Earth-loving kibbutzniks applied their green building techniques to the luxury Waldorf-Astoria hotel in Jerusalem.

Residents of the Neot Semadar Kibbutz in Israel’s Negev desert have been constructing green buildings for decades, but they’ve never operated beyond their own turf – until now. Tasked with resurrecting Jerusalem’s Palace hotel as the 223 room Waldorf-Astoria, world-renowned Turkish architect Sinan Kafadar sought out their expertise while finishing off the interior.

A founding member of the kibbutz, Mordechai Corcos told Israel 21C that he and other kibbutzniks have never worked on a project outside of the desert, but he felt honored to employ techniques regularly practiced on the numerous colorful green buildings at Neot Semadar to restore the historic 1923 hotel.

Land and Sea Bridge To Connect Saudi Arabia and Egypt

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red sea causeway, egypt, saudi arabiaPlans to build a Red Sea bridge connecting Saudi Arabia and Egypt have been revived but there are some serious environmental concerns

More than two decades after it was first planned, Egypt and Saudi Arabia may be about to start work on a land and sea bridge connecting the two countries. The proposed bridge would run 50 kilometres from the Tabuk region in Saudi, across the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aqaba in Egypt. Conservationists in Egypt have however raised concerns about the possible destruction of coastal and marine environments in the process of building the bridge. Some explain that the bridge could negatively impact protected areas including coral reefs, the nesting grounds of turtles and the Tiran Island sea birds.

CleanTech Group and WWF Name Israel as 2nd Top Cleantech Producer

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Cleantech, oil, natural gas, WWF, Cleantech GroupIsrael tops the global clean tech charts once again!

A recent report compiled by Cleantech Group and the World Wildlife Fund shows that Israel is only behind Denmark in terms of its clean tech prowess. The tiny country beat out Sweden, Finland, the United States and other leading national innovators. Called “Coming Clean: The Global Cleantech Innovation Index 2012,” the report evaluated the top 38 countries investing in clean tech and ranked them according to their the establishment of startups in proportion to their overall financial strength.

6 Green Buildings That Won’t Break the Bank

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All suited to the Middle East climate and budget, here are 6 green buildings that just about anyone can build without a mortgage.

People often say of green building projects that they aren’t affordable. This is true if you’re shooting to live in a glittering LEED certified urban high rise in Dubai or Saudi Arabia, but if you belong to the 99% of the population who wants a relatively simple, soulful home in which to hang a few plants, grow some herbs and vegetables, tap into the sun, and live in peace without wondering if the electricity is going to get shut off, then this post is for you. Here are six sustainably-built structures that cost very little to build. Some have been around for hundreds of years and a couple of them are new, but in each case they are accessible to everyone.   

First Middle East Carbon Market – Dubai!

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Dubai is not the first Middle Eastern country you think of when you think climate-friendly. That’s about to change.

Dubai will develop a strategy to reduce carbon dioxide and greenhouse gas emissions, as well as recommendations for ultimately monetising them through a groundbreaking carbon trading scheme, it was announced today.

“Our commitment towards a green economy starts today with the creation of a platform to monitor and benchmark our carbon performance, ” said His Excellency Saeed Al Tayer, VP of Dubai Supreme Council of Energy (DSCE) who made the extraordinary announcement, flanked by Waleed Salman, Chairman of the Dubai Carbon Centre of Excellence (DCCE) and Nejib Zaafrani, CEO of DSCE.  “Any policy or activity cannot be properly assessed unless it is measurable and quantifiable.”

How Pink LEDs Grow Future Food with 90% Less Water

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10,000 years after inventing agriculture, will we 7 billion take this strange next step?

A Netherlands-based company called PlantLab has devised a method for growing plants indoors using an unearthly pink-purple light made by a combination of red and blue LED lights, instead of sunlight.

Significantly, for a sustainable future anywhere on a planet with 7 billion already – and 9 billion by century’s end – this means we could grow crops with 90 percent less water. Agriculture uses most of the water around the world.

Nowhere is this need for managing on less water more crucial than in the countries of the Middle East and Africa – from Saudi Arabia and Israel, to Yemen and the Sudan – that face the threat of real water scarcity already.

Using lights to grow hydroponically

PlantLab has invented a way to grow plants under LED lights indoors, with all the water recycled within the indoor environment for reuse. Plants, it turns out, are not that dependent on using the sun for photosynthesis. And they certainly don’t mind being separated from their pests. And they are fine with 90 percent less water, if they get it over and over again.

Importantly, in an age of peak oil, PlantLab has also found a way to grow crops that eliminates the two ways that food is dependent on oil.

They have engineered the crops to be able to be grown using fewer fertilizers – which are made from oil.

(Related: 7 Agricultural Solutions That Will Save the Middle East)

The second huge use of oil is in transporting food. But because this indoor habitat can be replicated anywhere in the world, regardless of climate or season – food would no longer rack up unsustainable carbon miles on the way to your table.

The benefits of urban agriculture

Because these eerie new farms can be many stories high, crops can be grown within cities, leaving the most possible land to work naturally as nature’s utility, cleaning the air we breathe and the water we drink, instead of being used for agribusiness that pollutes our rivers with fertilizer runoff from agribusiness.

And, being indoors, away from their pests, there is no need for pesticides. You can imagine how that might ultimately begin to affect their evolution, if we change farming so much that we have have generations of plants grown separated from their natural pests in the open. We live in interesting times.

But PlantLab believes we must rethink food production to survive.

“In order to keep a planet that’s worth living on, we have to change our methods,” says PlantLab’s Gertjan Meeuws in an interview with the Associated Press.

“The methods PlantLab is suggesting are revolutionary. The company grows plants indoors, vertically stacking acres upon acres of plants. They use LED lamps to grow the plants and water them with a slow trickle that drains through the soil and is collected and reused. The neon pink light of the lamps make the space look more like a nightclub than an indoor farm.

Computers capture over 160,000 reports per second to determine the exact amount, cycle, and color spectrum of light that’s optimal for the plant, as well as water, so that no resource is wasted and the plant is neither undernourished nor overexposed.

How do LED grow lights work?

Karin Kloosterman, entrepreneur, founder of flux, and Green Prophet

Plants convert light from the sun into energy through the process of photosynthesis, but plants only need some parts of the sun’s color spectrum. Blue and red LEDs can provide just the light a plant needs, making the process more efficient and growing a stronger, healthier plant.

LEDs and climate-controlled indoor farms not only use less energy, less water, and less space than traditional agriculture; they also reduce the unpredictability of our food supply. Indoor farms aren’t at the mercy of droughts, torrential rains, unexpected frosts, and pests. They reduce the danger of food shortages and waste.

Apples from Chile, asparagus from Peru—an average of six to 12 percent of every dollar we spend on food goes to transportation costs.

Traditionally, most agriculture has been limited to large swaths of land with rich soil, controllable pests, and a predictable climate, but even under optimum conditions traditional methods of agriculture drain our water supply, require intensive resources, and produce a crop dependent on an undependable climate.

Until now, vertical greenhouses like AeroFarms Vertical Farming have seemed a little impractical, because our one and only real sun really needs to reach deep into each floor to ripen food crops, but this unearthly pink agriculture would solve that.

But are we ready for such a drastic step?

Related: 

Epic Sahara Forest Project Unveils Pilot Plant in Qatar
Water & The Middle East At A Glance (Infographic)
End Hunger: Food And Vertical Farming In The Middle East

Israeli Turbo Composter Makes Home Composting Easy

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image-turbo-composter

Do you keep a covered bucket in the kitchen for the organic garbage? If you do, you know only too well how awful it can smell.

Hamamit, an Israeli supplier of greenhouses and composters, offers an odor-free home composter that turns kitchen scraps into dry compost in 18 hours.

Lebanon’s Bees are Freezing to Death

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bees, honey, agriculture, colony collapse disorder, farming, Lebanon, winter, extreme weatherHuge bee die offs do not bode well for agriculture in Lebanon

A staggering proportion of bees in an important agricultural hub have frozen to death in Lebanon. A recent influx of extreme weather that produced ice and frost combined with a series of diseases has wiped out up to 75% of the bees in Hasbaya and Arqoub, according to The Daily Star. As pollinators, bees are essential to the agricultural industry, which accounts for approximately 7% of Lebanon’s GDP and employs up to 15% of the country’s population.

See how Iran’s Lake Urmia with Nasa photos

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NASA, satellite images, Lake Urmia, Orumiyeh, climate change, shrinking lake, ecosystem collapse, Iran, environmental activism

The most recent satellite image of Iran’s Lake Urmia demonstrates how drastically the lake has shrunk since 1998!

Last year an Iranian activists were beaten for protesting government projects that are detrimental to Lake Urmia – the largest landlocked salt lake in the country. Before and after images captured by the Thematic Mapper on NASA’s Landsat 5 satellite demonstrate how the lake shrunk 4 meters between August 25, 1998 and August 13, 2011, which doesn’t bode well for the 76 million people who live within its 500km radius. Recently the Center for Climate and Security warned that policymakers should pay closer attention to this environmental hazard as its unmitigated unfolding could further compromise the country’s “economic health and stability.”

Sustainable Break-up Tips To Turn Your Blues Green

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moving day dog poodle on boxes
Laura offers tips on unloading the stuff that comes between you and a broken heart.

Broken relationships may leave us sad, lonely, or even relieved, but they also leave us with a pile of stuff acquired over that love-lifetime.  Oh, the twaddle we collect in a romantic stupor. Maybe your lonely-heart loot has amped up value: pretty jewelry now tarnished by ugly memories, or the ultimate heartbreak flotsam: a wedding dress, tux, or the Ring?

Never Liked It Anyway offers post-relationship cleansing for your closets and your soul. It’s a website where “once-loved gifts from once-loved partners get a second chance”. The site was conceived when its owner, après wrenching break-up, realized she held a useless plane ticket for a now-cancelled getaway. With simple blogging software, she created a combination online group hug/swap meet. A brilliant website where newly singled users could vent their blues while offloading the detritus of disastrous unions, in an unintentionally green way.

The Top 7 Environmental Movers and Shakers of Saudi Arabia

saudi arabia flag green

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is not particularly known for its commitment to conservation of the environment. Instead, being the world’s largest producer of petroleum products it faces a number of related dilemmas. From oil spills to decline in sensitive marine habitats, to plain old oil pollution, the kingdom has its feet firmly grounded as the evil demigod of eco-disaster.

Then there’s the omnipresent oil guzzling monstrous four-wheelers, it seems no one wants to ride a small(ish) car. Fuel is so cheap I will buy the most gigantic vehicle out there as my ride of choice and feel like I own the world! I really wish someone, someday, writes a book about the relationship between the size of an automobile and a person’s self-worth!

That said there are now obvious changes in the way companies in Saudi Arabia are viewing environmental challenges with more and more local companies putting conservation on their agenda. It is an uphill task and the level of consumer awareness is still at an elementary level but the role of these companies deserves applause. Below, I give a list of entities that are supporting this rather infantile green movement:

German-Funded Solar Projects in West Bank Face Demolition

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solar-wind-west-bank-palestine-german-israelBack in November we reported on a solar plant in Hebron that was threatened with demolition orders issued by the Israeli administration. However, diplomatic pressure from the Spanish government which paid for the project helped save the solar panels from destruction. It now appears that a further 6 solar and wind turbine projects in the West Bank, this time funded by the German government, face similar demolition orders.

How Data Mining Turns You Into A Super Consumer

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teen reading magazine

Visual clues about you are just the tip of the information iceberg. Your shopping habits can be made malleable by others through data mining.

New York Times writer Charles Duigg wrote how Target predicted a teen’s pregnancy before her own father knew. He described a man demanding to speak to a superstore manager: “My daughter got this in the mail!” he said. “She’s in high school, and you’re sending her coupons for baby clothes and cribs? Are you trying to encourage her to get pregnant?”

The mailer, addressed to the girl, promoted maternity and baby gear. The clueless manager apologized, and when he later phoned the man to repeat his apology, the conversation turned surreal. “I had a talk with my daughter”, he said, “It turns out there’s been some activities in my house I haven’t been completely aware of. She’s due in August.”

Be careful at the intersection of data collection and human behavior.When we shop using plastic or customer “rewards” cards, retailers collect our purchase details for deeper analysis to promote more buying. Here’s what you should be aware of:

Inspired by Oman Caves: Take Green Prophet’s Plastic Bag Challenge!

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plastic bag blowing wind
Are you up for a bit of quiet activism? Take our plastic bag challenge

This is a call to arms, and to hands: my challenge to you when you shop this week, this month or this year. Tell the clerk you’ll pass on that bag, instead tuck your purchases into your pockets or purse.  Bring your own sack and use it.  You bolder folks, ask the managers if they’d switch to biodegradable or sell reusable bags. Will you join Green Prophet in this micro-cause?