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Could Intense Solar Flares Meltdown Nuclear Reactors Everywhere?

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solar falre A massive solar flare, like small one shown in this photo, could cause the world’s 440 commercial and 300 plus research nuclear reactors to melt down simultaneously.

The sun, that intensely hot ball of gases located 93 million miles from plant earth, has been the subject of numerous articles here, but mostly for good: for harnessing solar energy in an Israeli kibbutz for instance, as well as in other parts of the Middle East. A while back I speculated on the ideas of the electrical engineering genius Nikola Tesla, who believed it is possible to harness the radio magnetic waves generated by the sun to create “free electricity”.

But what would happen if things went terribly wrong in the event of a massive solar flare? According to a National Geographic report, a major solar flare known as the Carrington Event that was reported to have occurred in the year 1859 and recorded by a British astronomer Richard Carrington. It was so strong that people could read newspapers at night from its light. The latest report suggests if such a flare were to happen, the world’s power grids could fail. In long-reaching consequences, without power for days, or weeks catastrophes could happen.

Israel’s a Top #4 in Clean Tech Investment Performance

israel clean tech investment

You’d think the top clean tech investments come from the United States, China or Brazil. Look again on the right side of this chart to show how green economies actually perform. Israel is a top 4 with Denmark, Germany, and Sweden.

A new report called the Global Green Economy Index shows that although the perceived hot spots in clean tech investment appear to be in China, the return on investment is something else entirely. Since we cover the Middle East region we’d like to point out that Israel ranked particularly well on the cleantech dimension, according to the report, at slot #4 out of 27 national green economies.

Israel’s Ramot Menashe Woodland New UNESCO Biosphere Reserve

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Israel's Ramot Menashe WoodlandSclerophyllous forests in Ramot Menashe now a UNESCO biosphere reserve

For such a small country, Israel has some very beautiful and unique natural landscapes and vegetation, including forests (those not destroyed by fires like the recent ones on the Carmel Mountains ), wild flowers like the purple “Argamon Iris,” and eco tour areas like the  Wadi Ara in the foothills of the Galilee. It has now been announced that a woodland area near the ancient archeological site of Megiddo, the Ramot Menashe region is now designated by UNESCO  as a world “Biosphere Reserve” due the ability of natural areas to coexist with human development. According to the UN organization, as noted during a recent conference in Dresden Germany.

Meet Me in St. Louis for Sukkah City 2011

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"sukkah design architecture"Inspired by last year’s Sukkah City in NYC (see one of the past designs above), St. Louis is hosting its own sukkah design competition this year.

With the Jewish high holidays fast approaching, some of us are thinking about honey recipes, sustainable festive meals, and sukkahs (or temporarily erected shelters).  The folks over at Washington University in St. Louis (WUSL) certainly have sukkahs on the brain, as they are preparing to host Sukkah City 2011, a design competition similar to the one held in New York last year.  The theme of this year’s Sukkah City will be “Defining and Defying Boundaries”, asking participants to focus on the material, cultural or metaphorical boundaries that may influence our lives and define the ways that we relate to an increasingly global society.

Dar Les Cigognes: Night “One” of Your 1001 Nights in Marrakesh

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Dar Les Cigognes riad MarrakeshStay at Dar Les Cogognes for a boutique-style rest in the exhilarating city of Marrakesh.

Marrakesh is a thrill to travelers looking to access the Middle East oriental flavor, through a North African city a short plane ride from Spain. Despite the occasional terror attack and instability in the Arab world right now, Marrakesh is a relatively safe city, even for single women travelers, and babies (though they will be kissed a million times by strangers). And it is easy to get around on foot. I recommend Marrakesh highly to curious people from the west or east wanting to access Arabian culture without the fear of what traveling post-Arab Spring might do to your safety or well-being, real or imagined.

Marrakesh features marvelous markets, warm people and boutique hotels waiting to be met: I arrived to the Old City with little planning after sojourning at a conference in Rabat organized by the URI. After Rabat, first I headed south to the Atlas Mountains hoping to enjoy some Berber hospitality, which I did at the Kasbah du Toubkal, a boutique Berber-UK-run resort held in the palms of North Africa’s highest peak.

After a couple days in the mountain cool air with good people, it was onwards to Marrakesh, and the heat hit me and my baby as we descended by taxi into the throbbing city that provides absolutely no mercy in the noon day sun. It was so hot it hurt breathing in. We refused the air conditioned taxis and tried to acclimate like a local. We were happy though when the driver arrived at the riad Dar Les Cigognes just outside the Royal Palace gates. A flock of nesting swans were perched in their massive fairy tale nests above us (cigognes is swans in French), and when you walk in the door of this special riad the fairy tale simply continues.

Dubai Porsche Driver Walks Pet Cheetah on a Leash

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IUCN, CITES, wildlife trafficking, conservation, illegal traffickingThis juvenile cheetah is paraded in front of several onlookers in the streets of Dubai.

Trafficking illegal drugs in the United Arab Emirates can earn offenders a death sentence, but trafficking wild animals that are listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) apparently goes unnoticed if committed by a rich Emirati.

Not so long after a cheetah was found roaming the streets of Abu Dhabi, Dubai residents spotted a grown man “walking” an African cheetah last week near Media City.

After the animal showed visible signs of distress, the man coaxed it back into his fancy Porche Cayenne and left, ostensibly facing no charges for what should be considered a very serious crime.

Cogenra Solar Brings Heat&Power to Arizona’s La Posada

 Cogenra israel cleantech companyArizona green retirement community La Posada is next to get Cogenra’s combined heat and power

Cogenra was founded by Dr. Gilad Almogy, with a BSC in Physics and Mathematics from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel, and the inventor of over 30 registered US patents. Before founding Cogenra, which Vinod Khosla also had a hand in creating, Almogy was a senior VP of the Display and Thin Film Solar Products at Applied Materials (AMAT).

His innovative solar cogeneration (making heat and electricity from solar power) succeeds in bringing solar power costs down to the level of fossil fuels – but without those catastrophic health and climatic side effects!

6 Secrets of Happiness (Living with Less Carbon) From the Green Sheikh

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carbon emissions, pollution, Middle East, United Arab EmiratesAlthough the Middle East’s carbon emissions make up a fraction of the global average, the Green Sheikh urges readers to follow these 6 tips to reducing their carbon habit.

Carbon emissions in our region have doubled in the last few decades. In spite of our small contribution (a fraction even) to global emissions, the United Arab Emirates is at the lead of emissions per capita, generating more than five times the amount of carbon per capita than the global average. If we are to improve this, we have to rise to the challenge of using less energy and increasing efficiency.

But before I reveal the six secrets that can help people to reduce their carbon habit, is it not strange that we have to think about “How to consume wisely?” From our regular attitude towards business as usual to environmental change, we go so overboard that as we adapt numerous planning, management and prevention plans to reduce the size of damages, losses and disasters arising from climate change, many of us have forgotten the difference between use and consumption.

Colorful Murals are a Fortified Moroccan Town’s Environmental Meal-Ticket

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conservation, environmental degradation, UN, Morocco, artEvery year artists are invited to the Asilah Arts Festival to contribute colorful murals to this Moroccan Town’s white walls – keeping the town clean and well-funded.

If you are among those who associate art with the rail-thin, woebegone people who produce it and not much else, then you might be surprised to learn about the power paint has to transform a community. Take a look at Asillah, a fortified town with a long, colorful history complete with pirates on Morocco’s Northwestern Atlantic coast. A skip over the environmentally-threatened Mediterranean Sea from Europe and only a short drive south of Tangiers, Asillah became completely overrun by trash about three decades ago and no one thought to do anything about it. That is until one boy who remembered a time before, when the town of now 35,000 residents was still spotless and tranquil, returned as a grown man from his UN travels to find his home town completely neglected. Now Asilah’s longstanding mayor, Mohamed Benaissa instantly turned to mural art, and the generous patronage of Gulf countries, to lovingly restore the former majesty of his childhood memories.

Turkey’s Touristic Beach Towns: Sun, Sea — And A Little Animal Exploitation?

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Hotels and photographers along Turkey’s tourism-heavy southern coast are reportedly exploiting chimpanzees and other wild animals for profit — but Turkish authorities say they can’t put a stop to it.

For the past several years, various international animal rescue groups have received complaints from tourists in Turkey, who say that their hotels offered guests the chance to take their photograph next to a posed chimpanzee. Since 2007, the World Society for the Protection of Animals has received at least twelve such complaints, and a Dutch primate rescue group, the AAP Rescue Centre for Exotic Animals, has heard of a few such cases as well. Most of the reports came from tourists in the cities of Alanya and Antalya.

But an official from the Ministry of Environment has declared this type of exploitation the fault of private photographers, not the hotels where the photographers find their customers, making it difficult to prosecute or prevent such cases in the future.

Boycott Wine Until Vineyard No Longer Animal Deathtrap?

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Judean Hills WineriesThis mountain gazelle can be seriously injured or killed if it tries to reached fenced in vineyards in Israel’s Judean Hills. Wineries like Barkan are “open” to solutions, but not at their expense.

Israeli wildlife are already threatened by illegal hunting and development projects that result in a lack of available land for animals to roam in. Now, according to Haaretz, they face being snared by fencing placed by wine vineyard growers in the Judean Hills near Jerusalem.

Book Review: The Feast Nearby by Robin Mather

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image-the-feast-nearbyLocavore life on an almost invisible budget.

Robin Mather has over 30 year’s experience working as a journalist with a passion for the truth behind food production. And she lets nothing get in her way.  The head of Michigan’s largest dairy co-op once told her,

“Young lady, if you write about rBST (a GMO hormone given to cows), I will have you killed.”

She did write about the dairy industry’s use of rBST. The newspaper she worked for took the threat so seriously that they hired her a bodyguard for two months after publishing the article. *

Bookstores are full of memoirs with recipes these days, but The Feast Nearby is much more than a good read with some recipes to earmark. It’s the story of the author’s triumphant emergence from  personal hardship – burying a marriage and losing a job in the same week – to a fulfilled new life.  The amazing thing is that this new life is based on a locavore existence with a budget of $40 a week. (See another book review on the topic of locavore living.)

What do LED lights do to our biological clocks?

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light bulbs For the first time scientists examined melatonin suppression in a various types of light bulbs, primarily those used for outdoor illumination, such as streetlights, road lighting, mall lighting and the like.

Just as IKEA stops selling incandescent bulbs in Israel, a new study that illuminates some unknown health effects of newer environmentally friendly LED lights – effects that might help us know more about lighting and cancer.

Exposure to the light of white LED bulbs, it turns out, suppresses melatonin five times more than exposure to the outdoor lights filled with high pressure sodium bulbs that give off an orange-yellow light. “Just as there are regulations and standards for ‘classic’ pollutants, there should also be regulations and rules for the pollution stemming from artificial light at night,” says Prof. Abraham Haim of the University of Haifa who is following the effects of cancer and artificial lights at night.

A 2021 study found that lights at night doesn’t only mess with us but it’s probably ravaging the entire animal world that lives near us. Crickets have lost their sense of timing, and ability to mate, beetles can’t find the Milky Way, and sea turtles

Melatonin is a compound that adjusts our biological clock and is known for its anti-oxidant and anti-cancerous properties. The study investigated the influence of different types of bulbs on “light pollution” and the suppression of melatonin, with the researchers recommending several steps that should be taken to balance the need to save energy and protecting public health.

The fact that “white” artificial light (which is actually blue light on the spectrum, emitted at wavelengths of between 440-500 nanometers) suppresses the production of melatonin in the brain’s pineal gland is already known.

Also known is the fact that suppressing the production of melatonin, which is responsible, among other things, for the regulation of our biological clock, causes behavior disruptions and health problems.

In this study, conducted by astronomers, physicists and biologists from ISTIL- Light Pollution Science and Technology Institute in Italy, the National Geophysical Data Center in Boulder, Colorado, and the University of Haifa, researchers for the first time examined the differences in melatonin suppression in a various types of light bulbs, primarily those used for outdoor illumination, such as streetlights, road lighting, mall lighting and the like.

In the first, analytical part of the study, the researchers, relying on various data, calculated the wavelength and energy output of bulbs that are generally used for outdoor lighting. Next, they compared that information with existing research regarding melatonin suppression to determine the melatonin suppression level of each bulb type.

Taking into account the necessity for artificial lighting in cities, as well as the importance of energy-saving bulbs, the research team took as a reference point the level of melatonin suppression by a high-pressure sodium (HPS) bulb, a bulb that gives off orange-yellow light and is often used for street and road lighting, and compared the data from the other bulbs to that one.

From this comparison it emerged that the metal halide bulb, which gives off a white light and is used for stadium lighting, among other uses, suppresses melatonin at a rate more than 3 times greater than the HPS bulb, while the light-emitting diode (LED) bulb, which also gives off a white light, suppresses melatonin at a rate more than 5 times higher than the HPS bulb.

“The current migration from the now widely used sodium lamps to white lamps will increase melatonin suppression in humans and animals,” the researchers say.

The researchers make some concrete suggestions that could alter the situation without throwing our world into total darkness, but first and foremost, they assert that it is necessary to understand that artificial light creates “light pollution” that ought to be addressed in the realms of regulation and legislation.

White light limits

Their first suggestion of course, is to limit the use of “white” light to those instances where it is absolutely necessary. Another suggestion is to adjust lampposts so that their light is not directed beyond the horizon, which would significantly reduce light pollution.

They also advise against “over-lighting”, using only the amount of light needed for a task, and, of course, to simply turn off lighting when not in use – “Just like we all turn off the light when we leave the room. This is the first and primary way to save energy,” the researchers say.

“Most Italian regions have legislations to lower the impact of light pollution, but they still lack a regulation on the spectrum emitted by lamps. Unless legislation is updated soon, with the current trend toward sources as white LEDs, which emit a huge amount of blue light, we will enter a period of elevated negative effects of light at night on human health and environment. Lamp manufacturers cannot claim that they don’t know about the consequences of artificial light at night,” says Dr. Fabio Falchi of ISTIL.

“As a first step in Israel, for example, the Standards Institution of Israel should obligate bulb importers to state clearly on their packaging what wavelengths are produced by each bulb. If wavelength indeed influences melatonin production, this is information that needs to be brought to the public’s attention, so consumers can decide whether to buy this lighting or not,” Prof. Haim says.

Cave Discovery in Lebanon Could Boost Jeita Grotto’s 7 Natural Wonder Campaign

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7 Natural Wonders of the World, conservation, Jeita Grotto, LebanonJeita Grotto in Lebanon is one of three Middle Eastern finalists in the 7 Natural Wonders of the World Campaign. Can a new cave boost its candidacy?

Speleologists first detected a new cave at Jeita Grotto in 2004. A popular tourist destination and Lebanon’s national symbol, the existing 9km long network of karstic limestone caves smack dab in the middle of Lebanon are among three Middle Eastern destinations campaigning to become one of the 7 Natural Wonders of the World. Others include Bu Tinah Island in the United Arab Emirates and the Dead Sea, which is dead in more ways than one, and there are a total of 28 finalists worldwide.

Michael Tsinovsky Puts Arabic Into Israel’s Melting Pot

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 Michael TsinovskyIndustrial designer Michael Tsinovsky brought together Israel’s many local styles in his ‘asli’ furniture design.

When it comes to consumerism, local is almost always better for the environment and for the local economy.  Local is better when you’re buying produce at the farmer’s market, when you’re supporting local artisans and craftsmen, and when you’re purchasing local design.  But what do you do if you come from a ‘melting pot’ country like Israel, where there are multiple forms of local design?  Industrial designer Michael Tsinovsky’s solution, presented in the ‘asli’ furniture line above, was to combine them all in a hybrid of various techniques, styles, and functions and create a coexistence of local.

 Michael TsinovskyThe word ‘asli’ means genuine and pure-bred in Arabic, and is used here to signify a return to local aesthetic roots.

In explaining his project further, Tsinovsky explained that his ‘asli’ line was representative of “a young country without a long tradition of arts & crafts and industrial design, that tries to be European in the center of the Middle East.  This study case was designed through a glance at the local making cultures, from Arabic carpets and Arabesques, through the German carpenters that immigrated in the 50s and up to the biggest industry in the country ‘Keter Plast’ – plastic injected furniture, through the cultural mix between the people that gathered from all around the Diaspora and formed the ‘melting pot’ of the Israeli society.”

"middle eastern chair"This idea is perhaps best demonstrated in the chair above, where German carpentry is used to create Arabesque ornament, or in the stool above which has a similar play on techniques.

Tsinovsky’s furniture was recently exhibited at the Thinking Hands exhibition in Milan of work by designers from the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, alongside Galit Begas’ plastic bag shoes and Nitsan Debbi’s glass-blown PET plastic bottles.

::Design Milk

Read more about locally-focused designers:
Zolaykha Sherzad Resurrects Traditional Afghan Crafts via Modern Fashion Design
Guy Lougashi Weaves Together Baskets and People with Recycled Paper
Interview with Egyptian Eco-Fashion Designer Nadia Nour