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Sakina Design Brings an Environmental Conscience to Contemporary Islamic Design

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sakina designIslamic wall art and greeting cards, with religious intonations in line with green values in Islam.

Sakina Design‘s logo is green not only because the company creates Islamic design and green is an important color for Islam.  Their logo is green because they are an environmentally conscious business… for partially religious reasons. The husband and wife design company that produces contemporary Islamic wall art and greeting cards feels that “as Muslims, we understand that Allah has entrusted us with taking care of the earth, and this trust entails utilizing resources wisely and minimizing waste and pollution.”

Saudi Arabia to Build Musma Park – The Mideast's Largest Environmental Tourism Park

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saudi arabia eco parkThe scenic countryside in Hail, Saudi Arabia to become part of the largest eco-park in the Middle East.

Saudi Arabia is probably not on your list of dream vacation spots – especially if you’re a woman traveller, or want to work on your tan, or get back to nature. However, seeking to boost its tourist offerings as part of a wider effort to diversify its sources of revenues, the oil-rich kingdom announced on Arabian Business.complans earlier this month to build the largest environmental tourism park in the Middle East. The new project, called Musma Park, is slated for Hail province in north-central Saudi Arabia.

Israeli Solar Water Heaters Heading to North America

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Israel’s solar water heating technology made by Chromogen heads to the US and Canada.

Chromagen, an Israeli developer and manufacturer of solar water heating solutions, has entered into a strategic partnership with Milwaukee-based A. O. Smith Corporation. The agreement provides A. O. Smith the exclusive rights to market and distribute Chromagen’s solar collectors for residential and commercial solar water heating systems in the U.S. and Canada, the Solar Thermal Magazine reports.

Under the new partnership, the two companies will also work together to design, develop, and market energy-efficient solar products.

Holyland's Unnatural “Monster on the Mountain” Built with Bribes

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holyland project jerusalemFormer Prime Minister Ehud Olmert denies the charges, but he is suspected of accepting $1million to push through the highly contested Holyland Project which uprooted pine forests.

Israel’s former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Jerusalem’s former mayor Uri Lupoliansky, and senior officials in the Jerusalem municipality are accused of accepting tens of millions of shekels in order to bypass appropriate construction permits to create the Holyland housing project in Bait Vegan, Jerusalem.  This story has emerged as “one of the worst corruption affairs in Israeli history,” according to deputy president of the Rishon Letzion Magistrate’s court Abraham Haiman. And environmentalists were against the construction since the beginning.

Muslim Green Team's Views on Water Conservation and Islam

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muslim islam water environment issues photoThe Muslim Green Team connect water to spirituality. Words of wisdom for the Middle East. [image via: luigig]

It may not seem like an obvious connection, but if you are a believer in God and the wonder of his creations then you probably have a vested interest in conserving them.  These creations include wildlife, plant life, natural resources, and – very importantly – water.

The Muslim Green Team, a project of the Muslim American Society, has made an interesting correlation between the actions of the Prophet Muhammad and the importance of water conservation (especially in the desert region where he lived and which characterizes most of the Middle East).

Israel's Grid Will Never Handle Renewable Energy Goals

electric gird israel No green “juice” for your Better Place electric car? Energy expert says Israel’s infrastructure will never be able to fulfil renewable energy goals.

Thinking about buying an electric car like ones being promoted by Shai Agasi’s Better Place? Following my test drive of one of their Renault Fluence ZE Concept cars it turns out that it may be longer than planned before this country will have the electric power grids needed to run large numbers of them, according to comments by people such as Eyal Hadas (who we’ve interviewed), managing director and head of renewable energy at Cukierman & Co. Investment House as told the Media Line recently. 

Green Geeks Network Launches Its Second Unconference in Tel Aviv

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There will be no green tech conference at this un-conference in Israel.

With the Alice in Wonderland craze in full force now, an “unconference” might sound like something the Mad Hatter would organize.  If he celebrated unbirthdays, we wouldn’t put it past him to organize an unconference.  But alas, no.  The green unconference coming up next Friday, April 23rd has been organized by the Greeks (aka, the green geeks).

This is the second unconference put together by the Greeks, who had their previous one in 2008. So what exactly happens at an unconference?

Honda’s U3-X Electric Unicycle Could Outrace the Dying Segway, Sideways

Not a car, not a bike, not a buggy, not a lawn mower. Check out Honda’s one-wheel unicycle. Middle East readers want to know: Does it do dunes?

We’ve written about electric cars, electric motorcycles and scooters, and even electric powered skateboards for an environmentally clean way to get travel short distances.

But now, something new has been developed by the Honda Motor Company that may revolutionize the way we get around even further.

And that device is known as the Honda U3-X Personal Mobility Device that looks more like a figure 8 on wheels – a unicycle that drives sideways.

The device, which only weighs around 10 kilograms – (about 20 pounds) and can be carried on a bus, train, or other mass commuter vehicle, was recently demonstrated to an amazed audience of people walking through NY City’s Time Square, one of the most busy pedestrian locations in the world.

Vegetarians Beware: Surprising Uses for Pig Byproducts and Other Things That Make You Go Oink

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Christein Meindertsma pig 05049All the uses of pig. From Christein Meindertsma’s book PIG 05049.

Vegetarians, vegans, and those Muslims who keep halal or Jews who keep kosher – do you think you’re avoiding pig products simply by not putting them on your plate or in your mouth? Reader discretion advised: you may be in for a rude awakening.

The Eco-House in Aqaba, Jordan

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Tareq Emtairah  eco house jordanTareq Emtairah built this eco-house to prove that energy efficient buildings aren’t always prohibitively expensive.

Jordan’s Prince Hassan does not shoulder his environmental concerns alone, nor is the Red-Dead canal project the singular answer to Jordan’s worries.  In 2005, Tareq Emtairah, a consultant with the International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics at Lund University in Sweden, attempted to persuade the Aqaba municipality to adopt stricter environmental standards for its Master Plan to accommodate a projected population growth of 80,000 to 270,000 by 2025.  After murmurs that energy efficient housing would be too expensive, Emtairah resolved to prove dissidents wrong.

Sustainable coffee and Israel?

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sustainable beduin coffee israel photoBeduin coffee in Israel. Consumption is on the rise, and in demand is the sustainable, fair trade, organic variety. Image via Robert Scoble.

In celebration of the year 2010- the International Year of Biodiversity- the environmental charity Earthwatch hosted a lecture on Farming and Sustainable Environments at the Royal Geographical Society, London, on March 17.

One of the speakers, Dr. Mark Chandler, presented his latest pioneering research project entitled “Costa Rican Coffee from Community to Cup. His study-examining ways to minimise soil erosion, whilst maintaining high yields of coffee, addresses issues at the heart of the controversial debate between modern agricultural production and the preservation of healthy ecosystems. And it has significance to the Middle East country of Israel.

So far, his study reveals that the over-utilization of fertilizers is not only detrimental to the environment, but can also significantly decrease coffee yields over time.

Coffee is one of the world’s most widely consumed beverages, and the sixth most traded agricultural product. Traditionally grown under a shade canopy, modern-day intensive (also known as ‘sun coffee’) production and its associated synthetic fertilizer regime, has increasingly led to high rates of soil erosion and biodiversity loss. Over-using fertilizers can increase soil acidity while decreasing the amount of essential nutrients in the soil.

According to Dr. Chandler, this project helps to understand and solve pressing environmental problems since it engages both consumers and producers. Earthwatch scientists and volunteers help map water resources and biodiversity indicators, while local farmers are simultaneously kept informed and respectively given guidance throughout the entire process.

Finjan coffee, Turkish coffee

The crop of great global significance is also of great particular national significance to Israel –the small nation on a rather big caffeine rush. Coffee consumption in Israel surpasses that of the United Kingdom and Japan- and it continues to increase at an annual rate of 6.9%.

The Strauss Group, headquarted in Petach Tikva (and which says it will use its leftover coffee beans for biofuel), has become a major player in the $40 billion global coffee market. Just over five years ago, the company merged its coffee activity with Santa Clara Indústria e Comércio de Alimentos, Brazil’s second largest coffee manufacturer. It is currently expected to be one of the top five coffee companies in the world within the next two years.

It is important then to recognize that Israel’s coffee mug holds considerable leverage in promoting agricultural sustainability in the Americas, and other regions where coffee is produced (in areas typically known to have high biodiversity). Thankfully, in the city that never sleeps (though not exclusively), there are signs that suggest that with the general growth of coffee shop culture in Tel Aviv (see post on LoveEAT organic coffee cafe in Tel Aviv), there has also been a rise in demand for organic, shade-grown coffee.

As some of us are found guilty of refilling our 4th cup of coffee before midday, we should all be mindful that sustainable production goes hand –in-hand with sustainable coffee consumption.

Perhaps we can acquire our much needed energy boast in other ways? If getting a couple more hours of sleep doesn’t help, driving down one of Israeli’s chaotic highways is certainly bound to wake someone up.

Update 2022: in a strange greenwashing campaign, Nespresso has earned B Corp status. Current members including Dr. Bronner’s CEO, are outraged.

Read more on sustainable coffee:
A Natural BreathMint Made from Coffee
Elite Uses Great Smelling Coffee to Make Green Energy
Green Your Coffee Break

Middle-Eastern Spice Remedies: Roses to Sumak

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dried rosebuds in a Middle Eastern marketMiriam’s series on medicinal Middle Eastern spices is reaching the end of the alphabet! Middle Eastern cuisine sometimes regards roses as a spice or flavoring. (above)

R is for…Rose Buds. The Tunisian version of Baharat spice blend has crushed, dried roses in it. The  complex Iranian Advieh spice mixture also contains rose buds.

You find dried rose buds and rose water in open-air markets and Middle Eastern stores.

Rose Water. Roses are eaten, all over the Middle East, as rosewater. Either distilled or made into a syrup, rosewater is the aromatic flavoring for sweets like ma’amoul (links to recipe) and baklava. It comes in tiny glass bottles, very concentrated and to be measured out in drops, or in bottles more or less the size of ketchup bottles. That’s a weaker liquid which is used by tablespoons. We have read that Arab chefs sometimes use rose water as a substitute for red wine.

PopLove Designs Brings Upcycled Eco Chic Fashion to Tel Aviv (and the Whole Wide World)

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recycled tshirst poploveWe’ve heard about H&M’s imported influx of sustainable fashion, and now onto to local eco-friendly clothing design: PopLove Designs.

A design label that produces men’s and women’s clothing, shoes, accessories and housewares, PopLove describes its mission as “creating fabulous products with minimal harm to the surrounding world.”

Its founders, Andrea Hughes and Shai Wallach, both observed the wastefulness of the fashion industry firsthand when they were working in retail and decided something had to be done.

“The modern fashion market has become an extremely wasteful industry, with hundreds of millions of garments tossed away each season,” PopLove says.

So what did they do?  They constructed a fashion line based on the use of recycled materials.  Have no fear of boring earth tones and extreme new-agey designs, though.

PopLove is based on the “idea that style shouldn’t be sacrificed to sustainability.”

Egypt’s Hashish Crisis Stokes Bitterness

joint egyptDrugs can cause environmental devastation. Some smokers say it connects them to life, and nature. On the streets of Cairo, a hash shortage is generating some conspiracy theories. Photo via torbenh

It may be an attempt to maintain stability while the ailing president was abroad, or a pre-election clampdown on crime. But whatever the conspirators say, more and more Egyptians are asking: “Where has all the hashish gone?”

Hashish, the once ubiquitous yet illegal substance in Egypt, is becoming increasingly difficult to obtain in the country and it’s fueling conspiracy theories and general anxiety. The issue is especially pertinent to the younger generation, the main consumers of the illegal drug derived from marijuana, who resort to the “remedy” as a retreat from their daily troubles.

This UNESCO Bioreserve Is Refuge for Prophets, People and Wildlife

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druze woman bread carmelDruze woman making bread in the Carmel region, a new UNESCO Bioreserve. Image via Joshua Paquin.

It may measure only 77 square miles, but it contains a unique forest of Aleppo pine found nowhere else on earth. That’s one of the reasons why The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) declared the Carmel Mountain range on the outskirts of Haifa, Israel, an international bioreserve (like the other UNESCO Bioreserves we’ve mentioned on Green Prophet).