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Jordan’s Princess Samaya Praises Kingdom’s First LEED Building

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leed dutch embassy ammanThe Princess worries that her ancestors would be horrified at our present waste of resources. Perhaps the new Dutch embassy in Amman would placate them?

Jordan’s HRH Princess Samaya evoked traditional Arab values at the grand opening of the Dutch Embassy’s new Leadership in Energy and Environment Design (LEED) certified building in Amman yesterday. Pointing to the vast clean water, energy and timber resources wasted on the built environment, she added that our Arab ancestors would be horrified.

A collaboration between Dutch architect Rudy Uytenhaak, a local engineering firm, and the environmental and housing departments of the Dutch foreign ministry, the new embassy reflects Amsterdam’s widespread sustainability ethos.

8 Exquisite & Endangered Animals of the Middle East

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baby croc middle east

From snow leopards to the Pakistani sand cat: The vast deserts, rough mountains and scarce waterways of the Middle East are home to many unique animals.

Enjoy these 8 unique exquisite Middle Eastern mammals, birds and reptiles threatened with extinction because of hunting, loss of habitat, lack of prey, or poisoning. Share them with your friends to draw awareness to this beautiful diversity and need for preserving habitat.

Dhole

dhole, or Asiatic wild dog

Fewer than 2500 dholes, or Asiatic wild dogs, survive today. The dhole’s main prey, deer, have become scarce, and they have dense mountains, alpine forests and scrub jungles of the Middle East and Asia next to grassy plains where their prey feed. Also known as the whistling hunter, the dhole has a distinct high-pitched call.

Photo credit: guwashi999

Slender-Horned Gazelle

slender horned gazelle

The slender-horned gazelle lives in sandy and stony desert lands of Algeria, Egypt, Sudan, and Libya. It relies on a plant-based diet for water. Only about 1000 individuals remain in the wild, as the slender-horned gazelle’s horns were once prized ornaments in North Africa.

Glenn, C. R. 2006. “Earth’s Endangered Creatures – Slender-horned Gazelle Facts”

Photo credit: just chaos

Pakistani Sand Cat

Pakistani Sand Cat

Pakistani sand cats get their water needs from the rodents, mammals and insects in their diet. They live in the desert, so their habitat is safe. But they are hunted as pets, and by livestock traders who consider them a threat. No one knows how many have survived.

Photo credit: Benimoto

Mugger Crocodile

mugger crocodile

The mugger crocodile, a freshwater reptile that can reach a length of 13 feet, is found throughout the Indian subcontinent and the surrounding countries, including India, Iraq, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. The Iranian and the Ceylon sub-species are endangered. The crocodiles feed on fish, frogs, crustaceans, birds, mammals, and other reptiles, and chase prey on land for short distances.

Only 100-200 Iranian crocodiles survive, because of illegal skin trading, fishing nets, and the loss of habitat. Their population is increasing in protected areas.

Photo credit: jackol

Egyptian Vulture

Egyptian Vulture

The Egyptian, or scavenger, vulture nests on rock ledges and feeds on carrion, small mammals or eggs. Unlike other birds, it uses small rocks to crack thick-shelled ostrich eggs. Between 10,000 and 100,000 individuals survive worldwide. Poison from the environment, along with disease and electrocution from power lines, threaten their existence.

Glenn, C. R. 2006. “Earth’s Endangered Creatures – Egyptian Vulture Facts”

Photo credit: Steve Snodgrass

Snow Leopard

Snow Leopard

The snow leopard is found in the mountain ranges of Central Asia, and eat boars, arkhar, markhor, bharal, ibex, marmots, and other small rodents. Snow leopards were once heavily hunted for their fur pelts, and other body parts are valued in traditional Asian medicine. Loss of habitat, persecution, and competition with humans for prey also threaten the species. Snow leopards do well in captivity. Conservation efforts have increased the current population to 6000 from about 1000 in the 1960s.

Photo credit: digitalART2

Black Bear

Bukhistani Black Bear

The Baluchistan bear, a subspecies of the Asiatic black bear, is also known as “moon bear” because of a distinctive white crescent marking on its chest. The Baluchistan bear is only found in Iran and Pakistan and is threatened by habitat destruction and hunting for its skin, paws and gall bladder used in Oriental medicine.

They eat crops and domestic livestock, and attack humans, too. Their diet consists of fruits, nuts, buds and insects as well as leftover prey killed by tigers and occasionally, domestic livestock. All Asiatic black bears are protected by law, but the law is rarely enforced.

Photo credit: Drew Avery

Lars Valley Viper

Viper

The venomous Lars Valley Viper, also known as a Latifi viper, is so rare that no pictures are available–an American viper is pictured. Zoologists considered the Lars Valley species to be extinct, until they found an isolated population in the Elburz Mountains of Iran in 2000.

Photo credit: Billy Boy

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7 Eco-Wonders of the Middle East

Israel, Iran Take Top Two Endangered Species Design Prizes

Poison at the Pump: Israel Gas Stations Major Groundwater Polluters

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OECD lays down the law: Israeli gas stations still causing pollution, despite efforts to improve. Above: seaside gas station in Tel Aviv.

Petroleum and the refined products made from it –– gasoline and diesel fuel –– are not the only main polluters to our environment. Gas stations, including those sparkling new ones being erected in Israel, are now being seen as one of the major polluters to Israel’s soil and ground water, and are now being charged by the Environment Ministry as failing to divulge information on the amount of soil and ground water pollution being caused by leakage of petroleum based products into the earth.

According to the ministry’s investigation in the Jerusalem Post 93% of the gas stations built before 1997 were found to be contaminated, while at a third of the gas stations, the groundwater had been polluted as well.

Chevy Volt Hybrids Made From BP Spill Oil Booms

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Oil booms and other rubber and plastic wastes are now becoming car parts

The recent 5 month oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico has created a “by product” in the form of oil soaked plastic booms that will be recycled to make plastic components in General Motor’s  new Chevrolet Volt hybrid car. The idea to recycle the tons of plastic material, and the crude oil it soaked up, is a project being developed by GM’s R & D laboratories, according to a GM news release. Approximately 100,000 pounds (45,455 kg) of plastic resin for Volt vehicle components can be made from this material, which will prevent from being permanently buried in landfills, with all the environmental implications this can have, especially pollution of both soil and groundwater.

Cairo’s 2050 “Cleaner, Greener, Better” Plan Could Displace Thousands

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cairo-2050-green-planEverybody wants a greener Cairo, but residents don’t trust the government’s compensation plans.

The Egyptian government can’t consistently strongarm elections and beat certain citizens to death and then expect its constituents to fall down with gratitude when their first serious green plan is rolled out. Especially when thousands of people will be pushed out of their homes in the process.

Cairo needs a green plan, of that there is no question. What was at its height an architectural and cultural marvel has become one of the loudest, smoggiest cities I’ve ever encountered. So officials should be commended for making an effort. But if they want support from Cairenes, they are going to have to “show the money.”

Book Review: Loving Leo Hickman’s ‘The Good Life’

the-good-life

Want a reference book to living ethically? Want to know the truth about the costs of globalisation and profit-driven business practices on our health and society? Want to know what you can do to bring about change? This is the book for you.

Unlike the other books by Leo Hickman that I have reviewed (The Final Call and A Life Stripped Bare), the absence of the writer’s perspective and his interactions with others in A Good Life makes the book a bit harder to read.

It is much more about the theory of ethical living, about the origin of our food and what’s in it, power dynamics of globalisation, the costs to health, society and our environment of living unethically, and the different ways we can live more ethically.

5 Things A “Green” Writer Wants For Christmas

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colorful-lizardAfter giving up the consumer lifestyle, Tafline reflects on how her Christmas list has evolved. It might not be what you’d expect.

In four years, I turned my habits around completely: instead of buying the newest, snazziest jeans, I’ve been wearing the same clothes for nearly two years. And if I must get more, I buy groovy secondhand clothes or have a seamstress or tailor whip up something local. It used to be that I’d buy another fancy bottle of shampoo or lotion, not even the chemical-free variety, before finishing what was clogging up the cupboard. Not anymore. Now I scrape the toothpaste tube before buying another.

For two years, I drove more than 150 miles almost every day, sending all kinds of carbon into the atmosphere, but these days I walk or take a bus. Meat no longer features in my diet at all. And the truth is, I’m happier. My friends have more respect for me, my self-worth comes from my relationships with people rather than things, and the daily guilt surrounding my wasteful choices has vanished. Based on what I have learned, here is my Christmas wish list for all of humanity.

SolarEdge Solar Co. Lip Dubs “Shine On” For New Year Cheer

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GP7AkDLONZI[/youtube]

Even though the Jewish New Year was a few months ago, and the Muslim New Year the first week of December, SolarEdge, the Israeli solar tech company that creates solar harvesting solutions has created a new video for the west –– a lip dub from RIO’s song “Shine On.” For the New Year. It’s cute, fun and a nice way to meet the Israeli team. I met the team at the recent Energy Tech Expo in Tel Aviv, and it was neat seeing some familiar faces, and the facilities where the company works and plays.

Read some Green Prophet headlines on SolarEdge:
Israel’s SolarEdge Raises $25 Million to Keep Its Edge
SolarEdge and Flextronics Create Products and Jobs
TaKaDu and SolarEdge Red Herring Winners

::SolarEdge

Biodiversity Under Threat At Yemeni ‘Alien-Island’

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In the alien and isolated landscape of the Socotra Island, just off the coast of Yemen, biodiversity is in a struggle for survival

socotra-yemen-biodiversity

Declared an UNESCO world heritage site in July 2008, the Socotra Archipelago which is located in the northwest Indian Ocean is home to some of the rarest species in the world.

According to UNESCO data, 37% of Socotra’s 825 plant species, 90% of its reptile species and 95% of its land snail species do not occur anywhere else in the world.

Recent reports however, have raised concerns that climate change is adversely affecting Socotra’s indigenous flora and fauna which could disappear altogether if conservation isn’t made a top priority in the country.

Locals state that a reduction in mist and cloud cover over the last couple of years means that iconic plants such as the dragon’s blood tree are already on the decline.

The tiny chain of islands, near the Gulf of Aden, has been described as the most alien landscape in the world due to it’s truly unmatched species of flora and fauna. In fact, there literally isn’t anywhere like Socotra and if the endemic species it hosts aren’t protected they will be lost forever.

GE Partnership With Kinrot Ventures Takes Clean Water Innovation Global

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kinrot ge waterGE has just announced a partnership agreement with Kinrot Ventures, the internationally recognized Israeli trailblazer in VC funding for advanced water technologies.

Hot on the heels of reaching out to international innovators with the Eco Imagination Challenge, GE is now making a strategic move into the water innovation business, as countries around the world begin to address problems associated with chronic shortages of clean water.

Kinrot Ventures is known for incubating extremely innovative water cleantech start-ups.

EKON, Environmental Sci-fi Film From United Arab Emirates

EKON Film PosterThe concept is Hollywood-esque: An unknown event has devastated Earth’s biosphere, causing a radiation storm that is rapidly driving all biological life on the planet to extinction.

The reality however, is that this could happen. EKON, an environmental science fiction film from the Middle East, feels like an urban legend, its trailer combines elements from the likes of The Last Man and The Day After Tomorrow.

EKON is set deep in the sands of the desert, where the remaining human survivors, clad in high-tech gadgets and with scientific know, risk venturing the storms to understand the environmental catastrophe that threatens human extinction, and find a solution.

“As they descend into the unknown, they must face a mysterious life form that holds the key to the past and the future of the planet, – the EKON.”

Currently in production, the film was developed by United Arab Emirates writer/director Mohammad Rasoul. The online teaser was produced to introduce the EKON universe to the audiences during the early development process.

Watch the trailer on EKON’s official website.

More on environment education:
University in the UAE First to Offer “Bachelor’s” Degree in Motherhood
UAE Scholars And Imams Speak Up For The Environment
The UAE Gets Its First Carbon Neutral Bus. Maybe?

Acetaminophen, Passive Smoking, Low Vitamin D in Pregnancy Lead to Epigenetic Changes

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pregnant woman silhouetted against dramatic blue sky and beachEnvironmental factors can change the genes of a fetus, leading to illness later in childhood.

When a pregnant woman takes Acetomeniphen (Tylenol) or is exposed to tobacco smoke, spray cleaners or pesticides, her fetus has a greater chance of devloping atopic asthma  within a few years.Nonatopic asthma, wheezing, and shortness of breath is often diagnosed starting at age 3 or even up to age 8. A series of recent studies indicate that the disease is strongly related to environmental factors during pregnancy.

Dr. Harold Nelson discussed the epigenetic factors in atopic asthma at the World Allergy Organization’s 2010 International Conference in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Sweden Moots Joint Water Research Projects with Israel

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Sweden’s interest in new Israel innovated water leakage finder device may result in joint R & D research projects

Sweden, a country with a lot of fresh water resources, is now interested in promoting joint water R & D projects with Israel. This interested was expressed recently by Sweden’s new ambassador to Israel, Elinor Hammarskjold, who expressed these remarks in a speech at a ceremony at the Jerusalem College of Technology, and reported in the Jerusalem Post.

The ambassador, whose late grandfather was the well loved UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold, told the ceremony audience that although Sweden has abundant fresh water, her government is nevertheless interested in finding ways to increase the amount and quality of fresh water in countries where water resources are much scarcer than in her own country.

Bisphenol A Disrupts Quality of Eggs Retrieved in IVF Treatment, New Study Demonstrates

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Fertility is big business, but new research suggests new challenges to harvesting eggs via IVF: a common compound in baby bottles has been shown to reduce the viability of a woman’s eggs.

Baby bottle makers in the US voluntarily removed it from their products a few years back, and while Israel follows EU standards, compromised baby bottles are still plentiful on shelves in the Middle East. We know certain and specific chemicals makes men make compromised sperm. And now bisphenol A, otherwise known as BPA, has been shown to compromise the quality of a woman’s eggs retrieved during in vitro fertilization. Such news for reproductive health and female fertility continues to paint a grim picture, environmentally and sexually speaking.

28 Days To World Future Energy Summit In Abu Dhabi

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WFES-attendees-2010There are only 28 days before the World Future Energy Summit from January 17-20, 2011

Abu Dhabi is beset with a kind of sustainability schizophrenia. On the one hand there is Masdar City – an effort to achieve carbon neutrality and zero waste – and on the other certain irresponsible and extravagant moments such as the diamond-studded Christmas tree glimmering in the Emirates Palace Hotel.

Yet, since 2008 the Emirate has hosted the World Future Energy Summit, which spends a lot of carbon to bring together leaders, junior and senior, from around the globe to share ideas about renewable energy and other progressive initiatives. Last year’s event drew nearly 25,000 people from all sectors of the society. Next year’s summit – which will run from January 17-20, 2011 – promises to be equally well-attended.