The Jordan River’s source is a sewage pipe, and it ends in a whimper. Predicted to run dry by 2011, Karin goes on a media tour with FoEME to see firsthand the damage done. Here a Russian tourist dips into Kaser El Yehud, believed to be Jesus’ baptismal site on the Jordan.
The bus full of foreign journalists (including Green Prophet’s Maurice) wobbles down a barely graded side-road flanked by an untamed overgrowth of weeds and reeds. “I am going to show you something they don’t want you to see,” says Gidon Bromberg, water activist and director of the Israeli chapter of Friends of the Earth Middle East.
Bromberg has made it his life mission to protect Israel’s precious and limited water supply, the same waters shared by his neighbors and partners in Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority. There is a water crisis in the region; some like Bromberg cite mismanagement as one of the major reasons. Noses are held on approach as the bus reaches the site that some in Israel’s government would rather hide — not for religious or political reasons, but environmental ones.
Dr. Antoine Bittar, one of the solar experts who spoke at MENASOL. (Photo by author.)
Tigo offers a tech and IT solution to squeeze more energy from the sun, which may be going vertical in high-rises through US partner.


The CEO of Jordan’s EDAMA organization, Nasser Majali. (Photo by author)
Rooftop solar panels like these are SBY’s most popular product and will power up Israel and Italy.
Some 250 people participated in the MENASOL conference in Cairo this week. Courtesy image.
