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Ancient Egyptian palm trees going extinct

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Environmentalists have called for urgent action to save the last 400 argun palm trees, a rare desert palm tree highly valued by the ancient Egyptians

In the remote regions of Sudan and Egypt the argun palm tree- a rare desert tree whose fruit was discovered by archaeologists in Pharaoh tombs- grows under a harsh sun. Less than 400 trees is all that remains of the species which environmentalists say is now in critical danger of extinction. Although the desert palm tree has managed to survive the passage of time and outlive the Pharaohs, ecological experts say that human activity such as over-exploitation and climate change is putting the prized palm tree in serious danger.

Argun Palm Population Under Threat

According to a report by IPS News, the argun palm tree was first recorded by archaeologists who found its dried fruit amongst the gold and offerings recovered from the tombs of Pharaohs. However, it was assumed that the palm tree had died off with the Pharaohs until a German naturalist, Prince Paul Wilhelm von Wurttemburg stumbled across the species in the wilds of northern Sudan in 1837. Comprehensive surveys done over the last two decades recorded only 40 argun palms in Egypt and several hundred in northern Sudan.

In Egypt, desertification has taken it’s toll on the species whilst the palm trees in Sudan are at risk of over-exploitation by the local tribes who use the trees to make rope, mats and baskets. Professor of plant ecology Irina Springuel told IPS, “The argun palm survives, but its population is under heavy pressure. Unless protected, the species could disappear – and this time for good.” The argun palm tree is currently listed as critically endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nation Red List of Threatened Species.

Growing Threat of Human Activity

Mahmoud Hasseb, director of the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA) of South Area Protectorates, told IPS that the growing level of human activity in regions where the argun grows in Egypt could also have a potentially devastating affect on the palm trees. Hasseb added that they were currently assessing the possibility of seeking protected status for the regions to limit the risk that a careless fire by a visitor or hunter would destroy the entire species. “For several years we’ve seen evidence of tourists and hunters visiting this area,” he told IPS. “When we visited in 2009, we collected the bones of dead gazelles and found dozens of palm trees had been burned. It became clear that this ecosystem was at risk.”

This report is one of many similar cases highlighting the danger of extinction for various species in the Middle East including: concerns about sharks in Kuwait and the Persian Gulf, as well as the dragon blood tree in the Socotra in Yemen. Whilst these may appear to demonstrate the dangerous situation much of flora and fauna face in the MENA region, these calls for urgent action also demonstrate an awareness of the seriousness of the situation and willingness to take action.

:: Image via Bracketing Life via flickr.

For more on species at risk in the Middle East see:

Kuwaiti Sharks, Ecosystems and Exxon

Biodiversity Under Threat At Yemeni ‘Alien Island’

25 Sharks Species In Persian Gulf Need Urgent Protection

Jordan Joins The Food Protests As Tunisian President Steps Down

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jordan-food-protestJordanians have taken to the streets of the capital Amman to vent their anger at the government’s inability to stem rising food prices

We’ve already reported on the riots in Tunisia and Algeria sparked by high food prices, and now Jordan joins the list. Thousands of people have taken to the streets in protest against the growing food prices, unemployment and are calling on the prime minister Samir Rifai to stand down. The protest follow an announcement earlier this week by the Jordanian government that $169m will be invested in reducing the price of food and fuel as well as creating jobs. However, protesters say that this isn’t enough and they want more to be done to tackle poverty induced by inflation. According to a report by Al Jazeera, demonstrators were seen holding banner reading ‘Jordan is not only for the rich. Bread is a red line. Beware of our starvation and fury’.

Zaha’s Robber Opera House Opens 26 February, 2011

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guangzhou-opera-houseThe Guangzhou Opera House will open soon, ushering in yet another building of mass ecological destruction.

Occasionally, readers accuse Green Prophet writers of being killjoys. Israel finds the Leviathan gas field and throws the party of the century, but we hang our heads, certain of the environmental and social destruction that will follow. And when Zaha Hadid is commissioned to do another project, I look for my Prozac.

Each of the Iraqi architect’s buildings revolutionize the field, of that there is no question. But they are expensive, resource intensive, and therefore completely irresponsible. In a country where tens of millions of people live below the poverty line, the almost complete Guangzhou Opera House rises like a robber.

How Quick Eco Flicks Transform Clueless UAE Youth

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green-filmOnce ignorant youth wished they were forced to watch documentaries in school, so moved are they by their new eco-knowledge.

Surrounded as they are by the glittering trappings of excess, where materialism appears to pave a golden path to happiness, convincing Dubai’s youth to care for their environment might seem like a colossal challenge. Not so, according to filmmaker Areeba Hanif.

For her final project at the SAE Institute in Dubai, Ms. Hanif set out to measure the power of documentaries (and maybe sci-fi, like EKON?) to educate youth. While she found that most of the emirate’s young people were spectacularly unaware of environmental issues, a quick flick made all the difference.

Rachel Botsman Makes the Case for Collaborative Consumption

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[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQa3kUJPEko[/youtube]

Moving from a culture of “me” to a culture of “we”.

Rachel Botsman, a researcher and social innovator, is hooked on the idea of what she calls “collaborative consumption” – a phenomenon that is gaining force in the 21st century.  She recently gave a TED talk about the concept (see clip above) and said that what is essentially happening is that “technology is enabling trust between strangers.  We now live in a global village, where we can mimic the ties that used to happen face to face but on a scale and in ways that have never been possible before.  So what’s actually happening is that social networks and real-time technologies are taking us back – we’re bartering, sharing, swapping, trading – but they’re being reinvented into dynamic and appealing forms.”

Collaborative consumption has started to emerge in the Middle East over recent years, with the appearance of online services such as carpooling in Cairo, or car sharing in Tel Aviv.

Egypt Requests Bids to Get 2.7 Gigawatts of Wind Power by 2016

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Egypt is putting out a request for formal bids for wind farms to produce a staggering 2,690 Megawatts (2.7 GW) of electricity by 2016.

At 80 million, Egypt already has the highest population in the Arab world, and it is growing fast economically, with over 6.5% growth expected this year. Its demand for electricity, understandably, given these pressures, is extraordinary.

Egypt has recently had blackouts due to electricity shortages, sending rioting protesters into the streets. It could have taken a timid route to build fossil energy to supply its rapidly growing population. But instead it is implementing an admirably bold policy to act effectively to get 20% of renewable power on its grid by 2020, with 12% coming from wind power.

Loss Of Marine Life Could Lead To Ecosystem Collapse

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ecosystem-oceans-balanceResearch shows that if we aren’t able to stay the loss of ocean biodiversity, we could witness total ecosystem collapse.

The loss of ocean predators such as Bluefin Tuna, which were given insufficient protection at a last year’s International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tuna (ICCAT), and sharks – like those poached by Yemeni fishermen in the Red Sea – could very well end up in total collapse.

This news comes from research compiled by Brown University and the University of Washington, which reveals for the first time, with certainty, that past mass extinctions were caused by the depletion of “ecological redundancy.” And in the past, it took 10 million years for those ecosystems to recover.

Clinton Lauds Masdar’s Renewable Energy Efforts, Is ‘Betting On The UAE’

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hilary clinton masdar city Clinton’s visit came one week before Abu Dhabi hosts its annual World Future Energy Summit.

Green Prophet has presented a number of negative assessments of Masdar and Abu Dhabi’s ambitious efforts to build a carbon-free city. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton seems to have missed or dismissed these reports. During a visit to Masdar City this week, Clinton had nothing but praise for the UAE’s “very creative efforts” to pursue renewable energy.

Beer Expo in Tel Aviv Tonight, Jan. 13

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image-beer-expo-israelIsraeli beers and  small breweries show off  at the Beer Expo in Tel Aviv’s Nokia Sports Hall.

For a small country, there is an astonishing variety of fresh new beers available now. Israeli boutique breweries are sprouting up all over the country – from the Golan to the Negev. Last night at the Beer Expo, we sampled ales and stouts of all colors and characters produced by local small breweries. Jewish beers, Palestinian beers, imported beers, beers flavored with honey and beers flavored with herbs, like The Dancing Camel’s extraordinary rosemary-flavored brew.

More good news is that some of them, including the prestigious Golan Brewery owned by the Golan winery, are committing themselves to more natural and even organic beers. The not so good news is that the organic ingredients will likely be imported from Europe.

Rising Food Prices Behind Riots in Algeria and Tunisia

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tunisia-food-prices-riot-protestThe recent riots that have rocked North Africa are not just about unemployment and political corruption but also the rising cost of basic food

As violence spirals out of control in Tunisia and the death toll continues to rise, it’s clear that the concerns that are bringing people to the street are ones of basic need. It’s not just about political corruption which seems to riddle various Arab governments- it about the the increasing difficulty people face trying to put food on the table.

Violent clashes in Tunisia between protesters and security forces broke out over the weekend and have killed a reported 21 people so far. The protesters say they are unhappy with rising food and fuel prices, unemployment and corruption as well as the excessive violence they have faced during the unrest. A curfew has been enforced in Tunis in Tunisia to help quell the riots but as climate change disrupts food supplies, will the region see more food riots?

Gulf States On Track To Build “European-Style” Rail System

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railwaysAn extensive network could link the GCC states as early as 2017.

The benefits of railways are getting renewed attention worldwide. Though there are doubts about whether Israel’s light rail will reach completion, and a recent accident caused some to call its trains a death trap, rail projects in the Middle East can reduce carbon emissions and congestion.

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) States plan to tune into these benefits with an ambitious rail project expected to cost up to $100 billion. The network will link the region, facilitate expanding cooperation between the Gulf States, and improve movement of freight within, according to Gulf in the Media

LAGI’s “Beautiful Energy” Design Winner TBA At World Future Energy Summit

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land-art-generator-initiativeThe winner of the Land Art Generator Initiative (LAGI) will be announced at the World Future Energy Summit (WFES) next week.

Throughout 2010 we featured several remarkable entries to the Land Art Generator Initiative (LAGI) design competition that inspires energy as art. Making music with the sun was one such entry, and when Abu Dhabi meets sand, sun, and sky was another.

Finally, the competition’s winner will be announced on January 19th at the World Future Energy Summit (WFES) in Abu Dhabi, setting in motion the construction phase of the world’s first beautiful power plant. Dr. Nawal Al Hosany, Associate Director of Sustainability at Masdar, will hand over the award.

Turkey Joins 78 Others to Pass Feed-in Tariffs To Encourage Renewable Energy

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map of turkey and europeFeed-in Tariffs can jump-start renewables faster than any other renewable energy policies. But is Turkey’s high enough to do the job?

The Republic of Turkey has just joined the throng of rapidly growing developing nations that are offering a Feed-in Tariff (FIT) to developers of renewable energy, in order to put more renewable power on the grid. A FIT is a guaranteed payment by the kilowatt-hour, for energy produced. Because these pay just for the power produced, they are risk-free policies for governments to enact, so long as the price is neither so low that they are ineffective, nor so high that the initial investment in building the clean fuel-free energy infrastructure costs ratepayers too much.

New English International MA Program in Environmental Studies at Tel Aviv University

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"tel aviv university green"The Tel Aviv University campus is about to get a little greener.

Tel Aviv University is greener because of the activity of the campus’s Porter School of Environmental Studies, which is always starting some new eco initiative.  Whether it is the construction of the greenest building in Israel, or the cultivation of a community garden, chances are that the Porter School is behind it.  Now the school is hoping to get the international community more green as well, by offering a new English-language International MA Program in Environmental Studies, to be launched in fall 2011.

For the first time, the Porter School program will be offered in English and geared towards students from overseas.

Fighting ‘Ecocide’: Interview With Environmental Lawyer Polly Higgins

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polly-higgins-ecocideArwa speaks to environmental lawyer Polly Higgins about ‘Ecocide’, corporate eco-destruction, water scarcity and why we shouldn’t give up on climate summits just yet

Polly Higgins is a lawyer on a mission to bring serious environmental destruction to an end. Whilst this may seem ambitious, she insists that using the legal system to outlaw environmental crimes can make a real difference.

Voted by the Ecologist as one of the ‘World’s Top 10 Visionary Thinkers’, she has submitted a proposal to the United Nations to make the crime of ‘Ecocide’- or extensive environmental destruction- the 5th Crime Against Peace alongside genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and crimes of aggression.

I spoke to Polly, who recently published her book ‘Eradicating Ecocide’, to find out more.