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Who Needs 11 Nuclear Plants?

nuclear energy, egypt, solar energy, wind energyEgyptian environmentalists urge officials to reconsider their plans to acquire 11 nuclear power plants.

Egypt’s military intends to acquire 11 nuclear power plants. This comes soon after press reported that government officials expressed concern about a potential radiation leak at the Anshas nuclear power plant just outside Cairo.

Though the Egyptian Atomic Energy Authority (EAEA) dismissed those reports, the ruined Fukushima nuclear reactors in Japan has inspired certain countries to drop their nuclear ambitions. Egyptian environmentalists are working to get Egypt to do the same by diverting authorities’ attention to the country’s vast solar and wind resources.

Grow a beard – save a million gallons of water

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beard transplant

The beard that saves. Judaism, Christianity and Islam encourage faithful believers to grow an environmentally friendly beard. Now with added eco-value.

Beards are timeless. Eons ago, a beard was an integral part of manhood for religious reasons and in the 21st century it still carries a sign of religiosity. We have seen the most iconic faces sport a stylish beard and the trend is still being passed down from father to son, generation to generation. Now that we know in Islam, the beard is in pursuit of a prophetic tradition, the question you’ll no doubt ask is, “Well, how is that connected to saving the environment?”

Growing a beard protects the earth’s resources by firstly cutting back on excessive water usage, currently a dwindling source of life in the Emirates. Although society promotes a clean-shaven look, growing a beard eliminates a need for not as eco-friendly grooming products. Ask yourself, is my bathroom eco-conscious? A properly maintained beard is also conducive to increased hygiene (in most men).

beard grow one

To encourage bearded living, Budweiser’s ‘Grow One. Save A Million’ campaign was an annual celebration of World Environment Day, 5th June, focusing on water management.

By asking adult men across America to not shave, the ‘Grow One. Save A Million’ program enabled consumers to save 5 gallons of water for each shave they skip.

“Every gallon of water that we save makes a difference to our communities, so when thousands of people get together for one common cause, great things can happen,” said Chad Pregracke, founder of Living Lands & Waters and the face of the program on Budweiser’s Facebook page.

“By pledging to skip shaving and ‘grow one,’ guys can literally wear their commitment to conserving our most valuable natural resource.”

Such environmentalism has a core place in the Islamic worldview of aesthetic harmony. A Muslim’s personal hygiene is easily incorporated in his daily routine of ‘Zuhd’ – an Arabic term loosely translated as ‘living lightly on the earth’, which defines how our low ecological footprint secures a healthy planet. Even ‘greywater’, the waste water after a shave, is recycled.

So, how is growing a beard eco-friendly?

  • The average home uses nearly 11 gallons of water a day from running taps alone (faucets) and the average shave can use more than 3 gallons of water. Cutting out a morning shave significantly reduces this amount.
  • Replacing brand named grooming products for environmentally friendly cleaners such as natural beard care shampoos means a beard produces ‘healthier’ waste into our water systems.
  • Not only does a beard reduce product quantity and water used, it will reduce you annual bill, meaning it’s more affordable to maintain. FTW!

And to my sisters – recruit your men to save one, grow one!

Take more enviro-action:
Knit Your Own Sustainable ‘Sunnah’ Beard
How To Live A Car-Free Existence
6 Tips for Conserving Water in Israel and the Middle East
How To Wash Your Car In A Water-Parched Desert
Go Green This Ramadan – 6 Steps

Now Even Big Oil is Getting in on the Geothermal Boom in Indonesia

Chevron is about to join Israeli geothermal pioneer Ormat in drilling for geothermal energy in what clean-energy investor Al Gore has described as the world’s first potential “geothermal superpower” – Indonesia.

Ormat is building a 330 MW geothermal plant in Indonesia’s North Sumatra, and has invested in other Pacific Rim nations too. It just landed a deal in New Zealand and invested in Alaska and Chile last year. Now Chevron plans to try its luck in Indonesia too. It has just drilled 84 wells two miles down beneath the Indonesian rainforest, to tap not oil, but steam that’s trapped in the world’s richest store of volcanic energy.

Ecological Conference in Istanbul Questions Wisdom of Rapid Economic Growth

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Turkey is rapidly traveling down the same development path as many European countries. But will Turks be happier at the end of it?

Today is the last day of the 9th International Conference of the European Society for Ecological Economics, which was held in Istanbul this year. A recurring theme at the conference was the true cost of economic growth. Per capita, Turks consume approximately two-thirds as many resources as the average European, yet the standard of living in Turkey compares favorably with some European societies that are more economically developed.

Which begs the question: Should Turkey be modeling its economic development on Europe so closely?

Egypt Starts Over With Two New Cairos

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Cairo, sustainable development, green architecture, eco-city

Two city extensions East and West of Cairo are each expected to accommodate 2.5 million people  within the next 10 years.

Cairo feels and looks like an apocalypse zone. When I last traveled through the city, small children huddled in dirty doorways, a bloody-faced man groveled on the ground looking for money, and trash piled up at the foot of every half-built red brick building. Though the desert and Luxor still maintain some of Egypt’s magical allure, it seems that Cairo’s glory days are over. But a joint SODIC and Solidere International venture that is well underway may restore some sense of sanity to the areas east and west of one of Africa’s most densely-populated cities.

Honk Heard Around the World: Saudi Spring for Women Drivers Begins Now!

saudi arabia facebook driverOn June 17th, she started to drive the car, not pose in front of it.

In a defiant move against the repressive treatment of females in Saudi Arabia, women across the Kingdom will do something commonplace around the world but forbidden in their country: they’ll start driving. Consider it the shot across the hood (much like the protest against virginity checks in Egypt) and a wake-up call that the Arab Spring will only flourish when women’s rights are on the forefront of democratic changes. Many international organizations point out that when it comes to environmental issues, improving the welfare of women and children must take center stage.

The ‘Women2Drive’ campaign has strong grassroots support, relying heavily on social networking. The official Arabic twitter account, @W2Drive has over 8500 followers (the English account has about 1500), and the number of copycat support groups, particularly on Facebook, number in the many dozens.

One-handed Whole Wheat Pita Recipe, the Old Yemini Way

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pita wheat recipe
A recipe for making your own whole wheat pita bread.

If you don’t live in the Middle East, where the pita is the staple bread, and can be used instead of napkins for wiping humus off your face, chances are the pita breads you will find are old and stale. Or packed with chemicals, or frozen. If you do live in the Middle East, you’ll be hard pressed to find whole wheat pita. But dear readers, I have the ultimate recipe for you thanks to a young Yemenite woman who taught this westerner the tricks of the trade. (Sad disclaimer: I grew up on Wonderbread). Keep reading for the recipe and scroll to the bottom of the post for all the images.

Sari has been coming over to my house a few days a week to help take care of my baby. A few weeks ago she brought a pita bread, one she’d made with her grandmother, in the old Yemenite way. “With one hand, two fingers!” her grandmother insisted. Enjoying a new health food store near my house, I picked up some high-quality, pre-sifted whole wheat flour, and some quick-rise yeast, and Sari taught me the old Yemeni ways.

Our first round of pitas were a resounding success, and I gave a bag full to my husband’s band as they were heading for an event in Jerusalem. They are yummy eaten alone, drizzled with olive oil, or wrapped around some goat cheese. For breakfast, I commit an act of sacrilege by eating them with butter.

The method for making whole wheat pita

The trick is not just forming the pita with one hand, two fingers, it’s about maintaining a delicate balance with water. Add too much water and the pita will be hard to form, and too little, they will be hard. Another important piece of equipment is a pita pan. If you live in an Arab country, just ask a local store for a pita pan. See picture below. If you can’t find one, I’ve included a picture if it’s useful, then improvise. The trick is to have intense heat on both sides of the pita at the same time.

pita baking pan

Handmade, organic Yemenite pita

1 kg pre-sifted whole wheat organic flour (set aside half a cup for the end)
1 tsp salt (or more depending on taste)
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1 tbs olive oil (or more depending on taste)
1 1/2 tsp of yeast
2 cups water

Pour flour into a large bowl. Add dry ingredients. Stir with a wooden spoon.

Add olive oil to 2 cups of water, luke warm, preferably filtered with a Brita or similar device.

Take wooden spoon and stir while adding water. Dough should be considerably softer than when making regular bread. Firmer than cake dough, but softer than bread dough. About the consistency of cake icing or pizza dough. Later, as it’s rising you should be able to see bubbles on the surface.

Pita bread rising schedule:

Stir all the ingredients together, then set aside for 10 minutes covered with a clean towel. You can sprinkle the surface with a bit of water.

Take one hand, dip it in water, and plunge into the dough along the side of the bowl, and let the dough flop down trapping air. Repeat this for a few minutes, but only add water to prevent your hand from sticking to the dough.

After 10 minutes, repeat.

Let dough sit flat in the bowl and cover with cloth to let rise. After it rises, about 1 to 1.5 hours depending on temperature, fire up your pita pan. Put the stove on to medium high.

Wet fingers, and take a tangerine size ball of sticky dough and drop it onto a flour surface, preferably a tray to contain the mess. Pull wet dough from the side, and fold it up on top to form a round ball lined on the outer side with flour.

Form it in your hands, or pat the pita down on the surface covered with flour. Quickly drop it onto the pan, and immediately place the lid on top so the element in the lid heats the top side of the pita. Leave for about 1 minute or until you see a bit of smoke.

Remove with tongs and repeat. This recipe makes about 20 pita. Be careful about burning yourself though. I’m nursing a nasty burn as we speak.

Enjoy.

More recipes that go well with whole wheat pita:
Recipe for Baba Ghanoush
Recipe for Muhamarra
Tomato Confit Recipe

Fish Farming Isn’t So Evil After All

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aquaculture, fish farm, UAE, EgyptA new report sheds light on when, where, and how aquaculture is terrible for the environment, and when it’s not so bad.

Aquaculture has a bad environmental rap. Possible negative impacts associated with fish farms include eutrophication or the loss of oxygen in water, greenhouse gas emissions, land occupation, excess energy demand, and biotic depletion stemming from feeding wild fish to farmed fish.

But Blue Frontiers, a recent report co-produced by the WorldFish Center and Conservation International, reveals that not all fish farms are equally destructive and that some farms can even have a positive environmental impact.

Israel’s “Green Queen” Royally Stamps Her Approval on Eco Design Products

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"upcycled cloth necklace"Royally save resources with Green Queen’s eco friendly design products.

Green Prophet has encountered several green royals over the past few years, between Jordan’s Queen Rania helping organic farmers and lobbying for environmental education, and H.E. Sheikh Abdulaziz Al Nuaimi (aka The Green Sheikh) penning a monthly column for this very site.  But there’s a new eco-royal on the Middle Eastern scene in the form of the “Green Queen” – a new eco design studio in northern Israel started by Revital and Ruth, two former stage designers.  According to these ladies, every object in their studio (including the upcycled cloth necklace above) “has a story, and each item was examined by the Queen personally.  Only when we realize that the object meets our ecological and aesthetic standards does the queen grant her royal eco signal.”

Ofer Zick’s functional erotic art

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ofer zick vibrators
Medical device industrial designer creates eco-friendly Amazonian vibrators.

Award-winning designer, Ofer Zick, didn’t intend to be a green advocate when he founded ‘ThinkingOfYou – Erotic Icons’, but his grown-up T.O.Y. provides sustainable pleasure nonetheless (see the box below to learn more about what makes adult toys green). As an industrial designer, his specialty is medical devices, but his passions have always run a bit more personal. For as long as he can recall, Ofer Zick – former-director and current senior lecturer at Israel’s Holon Institute of Technology department of Industrial Design – has had an interest in the elegance of the human form. “I was drawing pictures of women when I was a young boy,” he told me in an exclusive interview.

Brought up by a single mother (his father died early in his life), this married father of two learned early on to appreciate womankind, something that ultimately served him well when he founded Toy-Thinking Of You (T.O.Y.).  His Israeli company markets a possible first of its kind: a high-end, reasonably priced aesthetically captivating and functional erotic art.

Over the course of a several chats, he shared his passion for sustainable design, and why he wants to revolutionize an industry that’s known more for being seedy, rather than sensual. Turns out, Zick’s vision offers more aesthetic pleasure with less carbon footprint. The only question he can’t yet answer is: Is the world ready for T.O.Y.?

ofer zick sex toysGreen Prophet: Tell me how and why you decided to start T.O.Y. and why vibrators?

Ofer Zick: I’ve been designing products for 20 years. My education is as a designer, and I teach as well. I was a bit fed up of giving my talents up to others. I decided about 5 years ago to design products for myself. That was the beginning. When I was thinking of an area, the idea of sex toys came up, though I had my concerns at first.

I started to do as I always do for all products I design. I did research, first to know the market, and second because sex toys are related to porn and don’t have the best image. I went to Berlin to see a big show, and just to travel around and meet people in industry. I must say that the first 10 min in that huge hall was shocking! The people there turned out to be wonderful too, by the way.

Then I focused. I checked out what kind of products were on the market, and found the gap: high quality products at a reasonable price. Most were very low quality products, or the high ones were extremely expensive.

That’s when I knew this is the place for me, an industrial designer. I design for people. Like I teach my students, we have to give them the best products they can afford. That’s my philosophy in general.

“Design is the ability to recognize, analyze interpret and translate necessity to a new user experience. What this means is that you have to find something people need, and then give them the full experience. It’s not just functional; aesthetic issues are part of it too.” Ofer Zick

GP: Tell me about the recent design show in Italy. What were people’s reactions?

OZ: My design was recently seen at the Promise Design Show in Milan, which is the largest design convention in Europe. There was a booth from Israeli designers, and the curator asked me to send him a few projects from the past few years. I sent him a product from T.O.Y, and was amazed he chose this for the exhibition.

The surprise was that he was open-minded enough to put a sex toy in a design exhibition. He put it in the right place – the idea of the product is the design. It’s the first time that a sex toy was presented in a design show. The audience is design addicts, not people looking for sex. Next, the exhibition is traveling to Paris and Lisbon.

What I heard from friends was that it was a big attraction. People loved it! From this show alone, we saw a 15% increase in orders.

ofer zick sex toysGP: Tell me about sustainable design. Did you seek out to create something environmentally friendly?

OZ: Everything I do I take into consideration environmental issues. When you are making a product, you have to ask yourself, what will happen at the end of its life? Design for disassembly is a big issue for design today.

For example, one of the last products I made was a new colonoscope. The inserter was supposed to be from silicon and plastic. This was supposed to be disposable, one examination for one patient. I knew that meant a lot of silicon in the garbage! I made the handle not disposable, and I reduced the silicon disposal from 90% to 20%.

Let’s talk about T.O.Y. A big problem with vibrators is the battery issue. Green products should save on batteries and money. One lifecycle of my product will save someone about 3000 batteries! That’s a lot of waste and chemicals that are saved from going into the garbage.

In addition, the materials we use are medical grade. It’s also designed for disassemble. The silicon isn’t over-molded when you take it off. Of course, there’s more we can do to make things more sustainable. We are working to get there.  The charging base also serves as an ambient nightlight. Duel purpose fun!

GP: Your design is both functional and artistic. Is the world ready for your creation?

OZ: It’s a tricky question. What I did which is different from other adult products is that I took it outside the drawer. I took a product that people hide and put it out. That is why the reason the cradle was made to also be an atmosphere light. You don’t realize it immediately as a sex toy.

People accept sex more easily when it is wrapped with an artistic cover. A picture of a naked is woman okay, but they have a harder time putting out a sex toy. I believe that sexuality should be spoken about and be presented.

I have a teenager girl at home.  In my opinion, sexuality is related to maturity. We can’t push it forward, and we need to teach them what is age appropriate. We can’t fight lady gaga and fashion world and film industry. We are already on that hill, so we have to educate that sexuality is okay.  As a society today, our kids are more neglected and growing themselves, in part because of the way we work and behave and the tempo of our lives. We have to be there for them a little more including teaching them about sex in a healthy way.

ofer

T.O.Y.-Thinkingofyou.com manufactures and markets three products in their Calla Lily Collection: The Sahara, the Amazon and the Everest.  Currently, all are available in black silicon, but Zick has designed the Amazon to also come in shades of lilac, pale pink and light blue.

All are waterproof and C.E. certified, have very silent batteries, made of medical grade materials (unusual for sex toys), and available to consumers in Israel, the Middle East and internationally for an approximate price of $141.00.

Green Adult Toy Guidelines

When shopping for something that’s intimate and sustainable – better for you and the planet (afterall, we don’t want to put carcinogens or other harmful compounds in our bodies) – consider the following:

Materials: Look for products made from people and eco-safe compounds. To the best of our current knowledge, these include annealed glass, silicone, stainless steel, Lucite, ceramic or hypoallergenic thermoplastic elastomer.

Avoid phthalates or PVC-based products (they often have a stronger smell, a possible giveaway), compounds used to make them squishier.

Rechargeable: Old-fashion batteries are a green No-No; better options include rechargeable batteries, something that uses a charging base, or solar-powered.

Biodegradability: Silicone and Lucite don’t decompose, but they are recyclable. Glass goodies are also recyclable, and the production is relatively nontoxic. Word of caution though: don’t drop them. This can result in fractures; making your glass toy something you don’t want to play with.

Read more on eco-sexuality issues:
One of a Kind Online Muslim Sex Shop: Al Asira
Fundamentals of Eco-Sexuality: Is Conscious Sex the Way Towards Global Peace?
How do Tree Humpers Prevent Pregnancy?
Ins and Outs of Personal Lubricants

Looks Like Desertec & Morocco’s Govt Might Join Hands

solar energy, desertec, moroccoThe Moroccan government may lean on Desertec to meet its renewable energy commitments.

The Desertec Industrial Initiative (DII) has signed a cooperation agreement with the Moroccan Agency for Solar Energy (Masen) to help enable exports of Morocco’s vast renewable energy reserves to Europe. The Desertec initiative is designed to develop North Africa’s latent renewable energy potential in part to secure Europe’s cleaner energy future.

Until now, DII’s ambitions have been separate from Morocco’s national solar plan to produce 2GW of solar energy by 2020. The new agreement to generate a European market for Moroccan energy suggests that perhaps the Moroccan government hopes to lean on DII to meet its own commitments.

Iran Quit Dirty Energy Subsidies And Survived

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Iran, architecture, Ali Reza ParsiThere was life before oil. And life will go on when it’s all used up. Iran becomes an unlikely leader by ending dirty energy subsidies.

Iran has done what every politician on earth secretly dreams they could do: enforced the end of dirty energy subsidies. And the country is still standing. Mr. Dominique Guillaume and his posse from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently paid a visit to Iran in order to assess damages after the country increased energy, public transportation and bread and wheat prices in December, 2010. The “mission” found that there is life after oil.

Masdar’s 10 MW Solar Plant Takes 3,300 Cars Off the Road

masdar solar power plantProviding a progress report, Masdar City‘s 10 megawatt plant is already a net exporter of energy, saving 24,000 tons of CO2 emissions, an equivalent of taking 3,300 cars off Abu Dhabi’s roads. This month was its 2 year anniversary.

The photovoltaic (PV) plant is based in Masdar City, about an hour from Abu Dhabi, and according to press material, it has met all performance targets in the first two years of its operations, demonstrating that utility-scale PV plants in the region are viable, Masdar officials said.

It is one of five projects in the United Arab Emirates which is registered for carbon credits under the United Nation’s Clean Development Mechanism. This month it enters its third year of operation.

The plant cost 185 million dirham ($50m) to build, and it generates half its output from traditional crystalline silicon panels, and the other half half from thin-film panels.

The plant is made from 87,777 panels of thin film and crystalline silicon technologies, and is connected to the Abu Dhabi National Grid and in its lifespan has created approximately 36,000MWh of clean energy from the sun.

“The success of the 10MW PV plant is a good example of how Masdar integrates research, development and innovation with investment, sustainable production, and deployment,” says Frank Wouters director of Masdar Power, one of the five integrated units of Masdar.

Like a pilot run

“The utility-scale PV plant has also enabled our engineers to gain insights into ways different PV technologies respond to the region’s climactic conditions. The expertise and knowledge gained will serve as a valuable reference point for other utility-scale PV projects in the region.”

The connection of the 10MW solar power plant to Abu Dhabi’s electrical grid was a joint effort by Masdar, Abu Dhabi Distribution Company and the Emirate’s regulatory body, the Regulation and Supervision Bureau.

Masdar Power is currently constructing the 100MW Shams One, one of the largest concentrated solar power plants of its kind in the world and the largest in the Middle East. Located at Madinat Zayed, 120km southwest of Abu Dhabi city, the project, is on schedule for completion towards the end of 2012.

Masdar Power’s other projects include the 1GW London Array, the largest offshore wind farm in the world, an onshore wind farm project of up to 30 MW on Sir Bani Yas Island, 250km southwest of Abu Dhabi city, the Mahe onshore wind farm in Seychelles, and Masdar PV, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Masdar that produces at its plant in Germany amorphous silicon thin film photovoltaic modules eight times larger and more powerful than the industry standard.

Read more on solar energy in the Middle East here:
Arava Power To Launch 4.95 MW Solar Field
Masdar City Photos
Solar Clock in Iraq

Green Prophet Eco-Tours Wadi Ara’s Hiking Trails and Springs

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Panoramic view of Umm El Fahem (Mother of Charcoal) in Wadi Ara

For those Israelis who use Wadi Ara a merely a way to travel on their way to other places like the Galilee, Wadi Ara itself has a lot to offer for weekend day trippers looking for an eco-touring experience. I was there recently. For the eco curious adventurer, Green Prophet has included articles on eco tourism in both Israel and elsewhere in the Middle East, including touring by bike in this region.

For Wadi Ara, and in Umm el Fahem (Mother of Charcoal), however, this area has not been covered, and I could be the first. I was able to take a tour of Umm el Fahem a few days ago, and was pleasantly surprised to find out about the many eco touring possibilities there are in this region, the most notable being the Umm el Fahem Trail Tour that encompasses the city itself, and the surrounding areas.

“Muslim For A Month” in Turkey plants seeds for interfaith

muslim-month-turkeyWorking closely with peace activists and scholars, the Muslim for a Month program in Istanbul has brought communities together through shared “Islamic” experiences.

After successfully running its Buddhist immersion program Monk for a Month, the Blood Foundation looked to easing the “social friction between Muslims and non-Muslims” earlier this year. So was born the sister program – Muslim for a Month. Green Prophet interviews the project’s coordinator to better understand the green benefits of being a Muslim for a month.