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After the Fire: Israel’s Carmel Forest Doesn’t Need Our Help

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israel fire regrowthA year after the fire in Israel, Joshua finds new life at the ravaged Carmel Forest.

Israel experienced the largest wildfire in the country’s history nearly a year ago. The blaze broke out near Isifiya, in the Carmel region, on December 2, 2010.  Spreading over large swaths of land overnight, the fire quickly consumed 5,000 hectares before emergency crews extinguished it. Firefighters were able to gain the upper hand only after four days.  A large amount of fuel on the forest floor – dry material accumulated from a hot summer – hastened its progression.

It was a tragedy on both a geographic and human scale.  Fourty-four people perished. When the smoke cleared, a shocked country was left grieving and devastated.  After the funerals and memorials, Israelis considered their options.

The natural reaction for many was to begin replanting.

Crocodiles and Ostriches Outlawed For Skin and Meat in Israel

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ostrich steaksOstrich steaks on the “hoof”? Not at Israel’s Yotvata Hai Bar wildlife refuge

Is it right to raise what should be wild animals for use as leather goods or exotic food menu items in offbeat theme restaurants? These issues came to the forefront recently in Israel’s Haaretz newspaper: private “farms” are raising African crocodiles for making leather handbags and shoes, and ostriches for steaks for offbeat theme restaurants. Although both animals are now considered as being extinct in Israel (both were once indigenous to this country) their being raised on private farms will come to an end in 2012 when the country’s Nature and Parks Authority will cancel regulations that allow the raising of these animals for commercial purposes.

The Stunning Water Murals of Gaza (PHOTOS)

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Water murals in the Gaza Strip explore the daily struggle with water shortage and water contamination

The Gaza Strip is known to indulge in political murals but water murals are definitely a new thing. Over the summer months, US activists along with local artists, teachers and school children got together to paint 8 murals exploring the water struggles of the Gaza Strip. Murals were painted on the walls of elementary schools and near water desalination units in areas such as Beit Hanoun, Rafah and Bureij Camp.

Solar Light Bulbs Brighten Relief Effort In Earthquake-Stricken Turkey

Nokero solar light bulbs charge by day and provide hours of light each night for about a year and a half before the battery must be replaced.

If only every relief effort were this sustainable.

More than one thousand ShelterBox relief kits have been sent to southeastern Turkey since a 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck the province of Van one month ago. Each kit contains five Nokero-brand solar light bulbs of the type pictured above, which can be hung so that the miniature solar panel faces the sun.

Eco-Friendly RhythManiAcs Use Upcycled Drums as Instruments

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"eco friendly drummers"Kids can drum on pots and pans and sound good, and the RhythManiacs have found unusual items to drum with too (and keep out of the trash).

Music is not usually something that you think of as being eco-friendly or not.  Food, understandably, can be eco-friendly, and fashion can be green, but it takes some creativity to figure out how music can be made more organic.  One way to make musical performances more sustainable is to use renewable energy (such as human cyclists, for example) to power them, but what about making the music itself more sustainable?  What is the carbon footprint for making a piano or a guitar?

An all-female group of drummers in Israel, RhythManiA, has been exploring ways to make their instruments and their music more eco-friendly and have started to perform their show Green Drumming – In Sync With the Environment using all upcycled drums.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gyxQSxjR-M4[/youtube]

The show presents the possibility of using everyday items as musical instruments.  Some of the instruments include buckets, trash cans, barrels, broomsticks, pots, plastic bags, and more.

RhythManiA hopes that their use of humor, creativity and rocking beats will help promote their green message. They also hope to inspire children around the world to start playing instruments and maybe take drum lessons on a ktak.

Green Drumming is performed at schools, nurseries, and can be performed on the street as well.  To date, the show has been performed all over Israel.

RhythManiA’s performed at the historic Turkish train station in Tel Aviv which has become a hang for brides-to-be as well as kids.

Update 2020, their site is down, so we removed link.

Read more about eco-friendly music:
Don’t Panic, It’s Organic… Music: Non-Electronic Concert in Tel Aviv
Putting the Pedal to the Heavy Metal
VIDEO: Making Music From the Sun

Giant Infrared Human Dryers Slash Carbon Emissions

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Haystack dryers, human dryers, infrared technology, climate change, carbon emissions, greenhouse gases, UAE, Dubai, Sharjah, Haystack

Residents of Sharjah – the Emirate just north of Dubai – enjoy drying off in giant human dryers like these pictured above, which reportedly slash carbon emissions by half in some situations.

With average temperatures of 104 degrees Fahrenheit during summer months, you’d think residents of Sharjah – an Emirate just north of Dubai – would be content to stay wet after dancing in Al Qasba’s musical fountain. Not so. It turns out that the latest attraction at this upscale waterfront theme park is a giant human dryer that uses infrared technology to dry off revelers, according to Gulf News.

The paper described the Haystack Dryer – a prominent feature in fitness clubs and theme parks around the world – as an “egg-shaped Fast Drying Machine [that] looks like an alien space capsule or teleporter from sci-fi movies.” Children and adults alike are said to enjoy the experience of standing in the 113 degree Fahrenheit capsule while their clothes and bodies dry. Mohammad Rashidi told the paper, “My friends talked me into getting wet in the fountain and started laughing at me because they didn’t follow… But it’s OK, I used the machine and was dry again in minutes.”

Gulf Coastal Ecosystems At Growing Risk Due To Development

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gulf coast riskUN scientists say rapid coastal development, booming populations and the fossil fuel industry is wreaking havoc in the Arabian Gulf

The Arabian Gulf, which is also known as the Persian Gulf, is a semi-enclosed area of sea in the Middle East region that has eight bordering countries from Iraq down to Oman. As a major shipping route for the oil industry and the site of various up-scale residential developments (Qatar’s resorts and Dubai’s Islands), it is at growing risk from environmental degradation. According to a report by scientists at the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health, the Gulf is at risk from various types of environmental degradation and the current protection policies are simply inadequate.

How Israel’s Tent Cities Influenced Occupy Wall Street

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tent city israel occupy

Inspired by the Arab Spring this past summer, Israelis from a rainbow of different ethnicities, political leanings and backgrounds banded together to form a protest movement unlike any in recent history. Their tent cities influenced the Occupy Movement in the world.

As the Arab spring spawned protests by the disenchanted across the Middle East, Israelis took to the streets and boulevards across Israel to express their disenchantment with social issues and the high cost of living. They did this in a very simple yet effective fashion. Many left their homes (in some cases they didn’t have homes) to occupy major thoroughfares across Israel by pitching tents and camping out. Social Media, the mainstream media and word of mouth were the primary promoters of the movement that inspired Israelis to take action. The visions of “Occupy Wall Street” were still yet only beginning to be born and the Israeli movement was seen as being its impetus.

A Different Shade of Protest

One protest leads to another. The Arab spring gave birth to the Israeli protests which began with a fed-up public complaining about the rising cost of housing and living. Fittingly, it began on Rothschild Blvd, a shaded boulevard in central Tel Aviv and named after a fabulously wealthy family that helped found the modern state of Israel, originally grounded in social welfare.

Within just a few weeks, 40 tent cities sprang up across the country in highly visible fashion. Just two weeks later, there were over 100 with marchers nearing half a million.

But, even after the few months that tents were scattered across Israel in protest and subsequently shut down, the Occupy Wall Street movement’s numbers and effectiveness still does not come close.

The Israeli movement included thousands camping out, hundreds of thousands marching in protest. A society transformed. It was clearly the people saying. Hey! We want to be in charge! The organizers of the Israeli protests even have been quoted as saying that even though they were a blueprint for what has begun in NYC and across the world, that they were much more successful in transmitting their message by mobilizing hundreds of thousands to a million.

For a small country like Israel with a population slightly above 7.5 million people comprising of Muslims, Jews and Christians the message was sent over high powered amplified megaphones rather than the other occupy protests which were over a microphone.

Happiness is Key in Israel

The logistics of the protest movement in Israel, the camping out part might have been the only similarity to Occupy Wall Street. The big difference. Spirit. Happiness was the key. Journalists were even asking. Is this serious? Because they saw a lot of people smiling. And that is the one thing that organizers said they would like to send to the people of Wall Street.

“What makes it serious is that people are smiling”, one organizer said. “People have hope when their actions lead to change.”

Evidence of this was at night, when the boulevards in Tel Aviv were vibrating with life and hope. There were parties with live music and people binding on issues.

Organizers in Israel compared the tent encampments to chat rooms where people held in-depth discussions, so essentially everyone involved was a leader. “When you act like an organization, the powers to be know who to target. But, when you have 300,00 plus leaders speaking with one voice, the message is loud and clear,” said one organizer.

Community Leads to Change

Garbage removal, communal kitchens, kindergartens were formed. After the tent cities were shut down, the organizers wanted to hold a huge rally in Rabin Square by Tel Aviv’s city hall. They were told that the charge would be $5,000.00. This did not sit well with the organizers and they decided they were doing it anyway, organizing a few hundred thousand that were happy that they were taking it back to the streets. Where it all started.

An article in Time magazine even noted that “Israel’s summertime protest movement, which was occupying Wall Street before it was cool, can now celebrate their first major tangible success.”

When the police needed to evict the protestors, they placed a rose on the tent, as a sign to go. There was no tear gas used. No violence.

After a Sunday Israeli cabinet meeting the government approved the restructuring of Israel’s tax system, shifting a few degrees of the social burden onto corporations and the very rich. More change is coming. Guaranteed.

Huge MedGrid Joins Giant Solar Desertec Plan

medgrid desertec In a marriage made in renewable energy heaven, the two most ambitious energy plans in the world have joined forces.

Today, Desertec and Medgrid signed an agreement to strengthen co-operation on building renewable energy from the deserts and the huge grid to move the power. Desertec, which a mere few years ago was just an impractical vision of a chain of power plants in the North African sun to power 15% of Europe. Now known as Dii (Desertec Industrial Initiative), Desertec now has 56 partners in 15 countries and is already beginning the financing on the first solar power plant in the chain in solar-friendly Morocco.

(Related: Desertec Begins: 500 MW Moroccan Solar)

Shopping Malls Go Green in Israel

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Ir Yamim MallThis Israeli mall, Ir Yamim includes a round tank in foreground for rain or AC runoff water

Mid East Green building projects like those in Abu Dhabi’s much publicized Masdar Citygreen building construction plans for Saudi Arabia, and a newly completed green building in Amman Jordan are indications that a number of countries in this region are interested in making commercial and residential buildings more environmental friendly. This also holds true for Israel with an “eco tower” now being built in Tel Aviv, and what is being touted as the country’s first green shopping mall now under construction in the coastal city of Netanya.

5 Free and Cheap Apps to Save the Planet

We’ve written a book on how to write to save the planet. Now for those of us who aren’t blogging or writing, but who are environmentally conscious, whether you simply want to save money on your monthly electric bill or want to figure out the best way to work or “green” your best friend’s wedding, chances are you’ll find some App to help you green your life. Here are 5 Apps I personally tested that can help make your life and the world a greener one and make your handheld engagement one that is for a good cause. They are either free or cheap.

Kite Surfer Pulls ‘Sail-Support’ Wires to Track the Sun

eterngy, etracker solar panelInspired by kite surfing, an Israel engineer at Etenergy develops a PV dual-axis tracker to get 40% more energy from large PV solar installations.

What happens when an Israeli engineer with experience in solar power goes kite surfing with the wheels of his mind turning? Eyal Dror founder of the company ETracker has developed a new kind of pivoting solar energy tracker. When connected to solar photovoltaic (PV) panels, the company’s solar tracker rotates with the sun. With poles and wires built like a kite surf Etenergy says they can get a lot more energy from the sun, especially in windy regions. I met with Dror and Simon Fried from the company last week at the WATEC event in Tel Aviv, to learn that their new tracker the Etracker uses half as much materials as conventional trackers, and can give 40 percent more power to existing systems for a fraction of the price of today’s dual axis trackers.

Developer’s Artificial Reefs Unlikely to Restore Gulf Damage

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artificial reef, manmade islands, gulf, persian gulf, arabian gulf, dubai, marine ecosystem, coral reefs, environmental destruction

A report last week showed that development projects like The World manmade islands above are destroying the Gulf’s fragile marine ecosystem. One major culprit, Nakheel, aims to restore their own damage with 500 artificial reefs.

Last week the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health in Toronto released the first official report linking rapid development projects with widespread destruction to the Gulf’s marine environment. Environmentalists and activists have long suspected that man-made islands and row after row of the world’s biggest this and that could not possibly be sustainable but the report taken up by such prestigious journals as Nature finally made that truth unequivocal.

Much of the damage done to this fragile ecosystem can be attributed to real estate developers Nakheel, which is behind such projects as The World manmade islands, Palm Jumeirah, and Palm Jebel Ali. Although they told The National it has nothing to do with the damning report released last week, the company recently announced that they will build 500 artificial reefs in an effort to restore the ecosystem in and around their own projects. 

Critical Mass of Cyclists to Test Jerusalem’s Bike Paths

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"bike path jerusalem"During this month’s ‘Critical Mass’ in Jerusalem, cyclists will check out the city’s new bike paths.

Maybe it’s because Israel is becoming a nation of pedalers, or because biking is a hot form of eco-tourism, but for whatever reason a group of Jerusalem cyclists has been getting together for a monthly Critical Mass.  (And no, Critical Mass is not some kind of large religious gathering, even though it’s taking place in Jerusalem.)  Critical Mass, a cycling event typically held on the last Friday of every month in over 300 cities around the world, is an event that has been taking place in cities around Israel for some time.

This month’s Jerusalem Critical Mass will be a little different though, and will aim to test out some new bike paths that the municipality has installed.

Guest Photo Gallery From the Heart of Tahrir Square, Egypt

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tahrir square, arab spring, egypt, photos, CR gas, protests, live ammunition, militarySicilian photographer Giusi Cosentino has shared striking images straight from the heart of Tahrir Square. 

Sicilian photographer Giusi Cosentino and her partner Alex Tricani were commissioned to document life in Cairo in order to boost tourism. Fate pushed us together a couple of weeks ago when our bus to the Siwa oasis near Libya broke down, and we subsequently traveled together to meet the Veiled Weavers of Siwa and the One-Eyed Salt Carver who still loves his craft.

Convincing the world that Cairo is a good place to visit is becoming increasingly difficult for the pair. Protestors are camped out for the sixth day at Tahrir Square to rebel against the country’s rogue military, which has responded with a potentially lethal brand of tear gas, rubber bullets, and live ammunition.

Nothing brings a story home better than beautiful images, so Giusi has shared hers with us. Please visit her remarkable Manifestanti in Piazza Tahrir photo gallery for an up-close look at what our Egyptian friends are currently facing.