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The (Imminent) Death Of My Laptop: E-Waste & The Middle East

It was like a scene from those rubbish action/comedy films when someone drops a precious vase. You know – everything moves in slow motion and the actor reaches out, eyes wide to catch the vase and at the very last moment it lands in his/her arms after which they let out a sigh of relief. Well, when I dropped my laptop it was exactly like that except I failed to catch the laptop which hit the ground with a dutiful ‘crack’ and I said … well, let’s not go there. The point is that my laptop is on its very last legs and I have to think about a) disposing of it and b) replacing it.

All this got me thinking about e-waste: electrical products we throw away and replace. Where do they go? Why do we have to replace our products so often? What is the scale of the problem and what impact is it having on our planet?

Asbestos Causes Mutant Mice in Israel

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mutant mice headsAsbestos is all over the place in Israel. Now the rare form of lung cancer that asbestos causes is not the only worry: asbestos leads to mutations in mice.

Asbestos covers parking garages in Tel Aviv, and the roofs of small buildings and sheds all over Israel. Look in landfills or even playgrounds, and don’t be surprised to see chunks of asbestos board kicking around. With a country tuned to environmental issues, Israel still needs a lot of catching up to do with asbestos removal, still causing lung cancer deaths where landfills in the north try to contain the stuff.

Now more worrying news: Asbestos doesn’t only cause malignant mesothelioma, an asbestos-specific lung cancer, it can cause changes in your DNA.

Mice inhabiting a northern town of Israel known for its high concentration of asbestos-contaminated dust, have a higher level of genetic somatic mutations, compared with other regions where asbestos pollution levels are lower, finds researchers Dr. Rachel Ben-Shlomo and Dr. Uri Shanas of the University of Haifa. “This study clearly indicates that there is a link between the higher levels of asbestos in the environment and the frequency of genetic somatic mutations in the mammals,” the scientists said.

Egypt’s 1st Private Wind Farm To Power More Boring Brown Buildings

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egypt, buildings, cairoExpect to see more of these as Suez Cement secures its long term viability in Egypt with private wind farm.

The good news? Egypt is getting its first privately owned wind farm. The not so green news? It will be used to generate power for Suez Cement, a company owned by the Italian corporation Italcementi. After Egypt’s golden age of architecture peaked, the majestic pyramids and self-aggrandizing Pharoanic temples and tombs belonging to a bygone era, few Egyptian architects have distinguished themselves.

The country’s architectural aesthetic has been replaced with a desperate effort to accommodate 85 million people on a shoestring budget. And cement is frequently an affordable option. The 120MW wind farm will give the company sufficient energy security to ensure that cement supplies for thousands of half-finished block apartment buildings will not abate any time soon.

Wind-Powered Mosque Makes Going Green A Breeze

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eco-mosque, germany, wind-powerA cool green breeze will soon sweep through a new wind-powered mosque in German.

The newest eco mosque in Nordesrstedt, Germany will get the majority of its power from the wind. Although the earliest mosques did not have minarets, they have evolved as a landmark to which Muslims direct their daily prayers. They can also serve an environmental purpose. In addition to sucking up hot air and providing a natural ventilation system, Hamburg-based architect Selcuk Ünyilmaz has designed a minaret that captures wind energy.

World’s First Integrated Renewables Combined Cycle Power Plant To Be Built in Turkey

General Electric’s design integrates a traditional combined cycle plant with wind and solar energy, allowing it to generate electricity with unprecedented efficiency.

Less than 100 kilometers from the planned site for Turkey’s first nuclear power plant, another alternative energy “first” has been planned. But this one promises high energy returns for low emissions without any threat of a nuclear meltdown. And by supplementing energy from natural gas with solar and wind energy, the plant will achieve record rates of efficiency.

One day after General Electric (GE) announced that(GE) had made a deal with eSolar allowing it to sell Integrated Solar Combined Cycle (ISCC) technology worldwide, it was announced that the first power plant to use this design would be built in Karaman, in southern Turkey. The plant’s construction will be overseen by MetCap Investments, a Turkish investor and power project developer.

World’s Largest Solar Clock Gives Full Measure To Iraq

solar power, cleantech, IraqThe world’s largest solar-powered clock in Iraq will tell time sustainably!

As part of the war-torn country’s restoration plan, Baghdad University in Iraq commissioned the world’s largest solar powered clock. Designed by UK-based Smith of Derby, which has been making and servicing historic clocks for over 150 years, the Beacon Clock will be 3.5m in diameter, and will feature 4 dials and backlit lighting. Powered by building integrated solar panels, this clock tower is just one in a range of EcoTime products that rely on nature big time for its power, lighting, and even a bell sound system.

Iran Lacks Water Planning

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The importance of recycling used water is understood more today by the Iranian environmental authorities, but converting theories to practice needs more investment. Mohammad J. Mohammadi Zadeh, the head of Iranian Environmental Protection Agency has declared how the water supplies of the country, which is among the arid and semi-arid lands, are wasted: “From 410 billion cubic meters of rainfall of the country, 280 billon cubic meters are evaporated, 92 billion cubic meters flow on the surface, and 38 billion cubic meters are added to underground water reservoirs.”

Jerusalem Train Points to Ancient Underground River

underground river JerusalemJerusalem will get a new railway line, and in the process, geologists find large underground river.

Excavators digging for a new railway station deep under the surface of central Jerusalem have discovered what geologists say is the largest underground river ever found in Israel.

And while its deep canyons and waterfalls may be an impressive find for scientists, it doesn’t contain a significant amount of the precious fluids to affect the water balance in this traditionally parched city.

The river makes sense, because as legend goes the water of the world first emerged from a spring in Jerusalem.

“We found a nice but small underground river,” Professor Amos Frumkin, head of the Cave Research Unit of the Hebrew University’s Department of Geography, told The Media Line.

“In terms of Israel, it’s the longest underground stream that we have ever seen. It is a kind of a canyon that has been cut by the stream of the water over a long period of time, maybe millions of years,” Frumkin said.

Frumkin and his team were called upon by Israel Railways after its engineers chanced upon the cave while excavating an 80-meter (260-foot) shaft close to the city’s main convention centre and central bus station that is being drilled for a huge, underground station that will serve the high-speed Jerusalem-Tel Aviv railway.

“When they reached the depth of 75 meters they cut into this cave accidentally. The water started flowing into this shaft and they had some problems until they found some engineering solution and called us,” Frumkin said.

The first humans to enter ancient Jerusalem cave

“We were the first humans ever to set foot inside this cave. However, it wasn’t very easy. It meant crawling in mud and some rappelling on ropes was required. So you needed some spelunking techniques,” he said. “It was beautiful. One canyon was over 200 meters long and we never reached its end. We found some waterfalls inside, which was nice for our arid country.”

Jerusalem is not known for its water sources and there is only one major spring in the city, the biblical Gihon, which has been gurgling since before King David’s time. With a population of some 700,000, Jerusalem gets its water pumped up from the coastal aquifer.

Frumkin said the cave appears to have developed after water seeped in from the surface and dissolved the underlying limestone. While other major caves have been discovered in Israel, this was the only one with running water.

“This is the longest one with an active stream flowing through it. All the other stalactite caves in Israel are without any stream of water today. They are just dripping water from the ceiling and the stream that formed the cave have long vanished because of geological and hydrological changes in the mountains,” he said.

“This one is still active in terms that the stream which was forming the cave is still active and this is not very common in Israel. It is much more common in other countries that are wetter like Europe and America and tropical countries,” Frumkin said.

Frumkin said the cave was at some points a few dozen meters high and speculated that the water originated from the surface and it was likely rainwater and possibly leakage from pipes and even sewage. Unlike a cave discovered a few years ago in central Israel that contained previously unknown crustaceans, the Jerusalem cavern has been found to host some microbes but no other major forms of life in this cave.

“The study of the cave can help us understand the precise mechanism by which water flows through the aquifer in the Jerusalem area,” he added.

He said that efforts were underway to reseal the cave entrance so that the water channel could be preserved without compromising the railway project.

“The train station will be built, but I believe that we can also preserve the cave by building some doorway to seal the cave but to allow the entry to anyone who needs to get into it for one reason or another. So the cave won’t be lost,” he said.

This story was first printed on the The Media Line, the Middle East News Source.

Cardboard Mounted Deer Heads for the Eco Conscious Decorator

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"mounted deer head cardboard"Enjoy taxidermy without the guilt, with a recycled (and recyclable) cardboard deer head.

In centuries past, mounted deer (or other animal) heads were considered a type of trophy – an item that illustrated the skills and capabilities of the hunter who killed the deer.  If a man had a deer head on his wall, you would assume that he was virile, manly, capable of taking care of his little woman and kids, and probably a few other things as well.  But what is the modern, eco-conscious vegetarian man to do when he too wants to use interior design to demonstrate his masculine, yet environmentally sensitive, attributes?  Play on the classic mounted deer head and hang a “green” cardboard version.

Donkeys, Not DSL to Get Syria’s News Out

donkey syria photoJournalists are waiting on the Jordan border to get news by donkey, as Syrian activists smuggle out video.

When I traveled to Syria more than 10 years ago, there was no Internet. The young people I met, who talked in whispers, had asked me to send them books from the outside world. Books on anything, art mainly. When I sent them postcards or letters, there were some things I couldn’t talk about, as the censors read everything, they said. Talking about Israel was a big no, no. So I had to avoid recounting my travels to the Middle East in full detail. Now, some of the people of Syria in the middle of a revolution, are cut off from the Internet that they’ve had access to over the last years. To get the word out to the media on what’s happening to them, as the government kills protestors and threatens soldiers with their lives, locals are relying on donkeys to transfer video files from Syria to Jordan.

Are You Eating Arsenic With Your Chicken?

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arsenic in chickenLooks ‘finger lickin good’; but how much arsenic is inside?

Issues over whether the poison arsenic is being fed to commercial poultry in many countries, has now come to a head again with the USA’s Federal Department of Agriculture (FDA) has now admitted that amounts of the cancer causing poison arsenic is being fed to chickens as part of the commercial poultry feed products given to them. The revelation first became known a few years back (around 2006) and was later reported in both Haaretz (arsenic in chicken feed in Israel), and in Green Prophet, regarding free KFC fried chicken giveaways being promoted on Oprah Winfrey’s own website. With the meat glue scare, and the E.coli outbreak in Europe, how safe is our food?

Bicycle Activists Stop in Istanbul En Route to Palestine

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“Pollinating” social and environmental justice as it goes, British bicycle activism group P.E.D.A.L. launched a 100-day trip from London to Palestine this spring.

Next month in Jerusalem: that’s the goal of 22 bicycle activists who passed through Istanbul this week. The community organizers, artists, farmers and ordinary cyclists have been visiting communities across Europe where local residents are forced to fight for their land and human rights, gathering and spreading news of the disparate struggles. The group calls itself P.E.D.A.L.: Popular resistance movements, Environmental justice, Direct action on BDS, Art & culture, and Linking stories of struggle.

It’s an ambitious agenda, and P.E.D.A.L.’s members are determined to carry it out in each country through which they pass. They arrived in Istanbul after biking 5,000 kilometers through 15 different countries, including France, Austria, Slovenia and Kosovo.

MENA Is Fired Up For A Solar Boom

solar eclipseThe Middle East-North Africa region has greater potential for Concentrated Solar Power projects than in another in the world, a new World Bank study finds.

If the MENA region plays smart, it could benefit from a huge influx of Concentrated Solar Power projects, according to a new World Bank study. In cooperation with Ernst & Young, Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research (ISI) and the Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems (ISE) found that although Spain and United States are currently leading the solar race, the MENA region has the best potential and widest application.

A pet favorite of the World Bank’s Clean Technology Fund (CTF) and a contender for financing under the  United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), five MENA countries in particular need to take certain steps to realize this solar and financial infusion.

BrightSource-Chevron Joint Solar Project To Extract Heavy Oil, Suffers Losses

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brightsource solar thermalBrightSource solar thermal illustration: Better than using the sun to soften oil

BrightSource Energy, the California based solar thermal energy company whose technology as innovated in Israel, and whose solar “star” was even touted by US President Barack Obama, is now in financial hot water again as its joint oil recovery project with giant energy company Chevron, appears to have incurred “significant cost overruns”, according to Reuters.

The oil recovery project, in which BrightSource’s patented solar thermal technology would be used to inject high pressure steam into oil wells to help Chevron soften the oil, would help pull out deeply embedded “heavy oil”. The company is incurring heavy financial losses of about $40.2 million, which company officials claim is $29.7 million more than “originally anticipated”.

Ormat Lands Its Largest Geothermal Deal in New Zealand at $130 m.

ormat geothermal energy new zealandThe US subsidiary of the Israeli company lands the largest geothermal deal in New Zealand, with Maoris.

Geothermal heats up in New Zealand: Ormat has told the Israeli business newspaper Globes that it has developed its biggest deal yet in the geothermal industry – one which uses heat from the earth’s crust to generate power. Our kiwi friends in New Zealand have just ordered an Ormat power plant for $130 million USD. It will be called the Ngatamariki geothermal project.