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SDE Makes Wave Power in China Where It's Completing 1 MW Power Plant Deal

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china beach umbrellas photoSunnier days for smog-ridden China ahead? The next wave in China may be clean energy culled from the sea. Image via ivanwalsh

The Israeli clean tech company SDE is finalizing the construction of the first of a number of sea wave power plants to be installed in China during the upcoming month, the company reports today. The 1MW sea wave power plant will be installed in the province of Guangzhou, in the city of Dong Ping, and will represent the successful beginning of the implementation of an overall 10,000MW plan to be executed in Guangzhou.

Green Your Mother’s (and Grandmother's) Day, Sunday May 9

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No this grandmother isn’t wearing a plant on her head! It’s a green halo. Some ideas for Mother’s, and Grandmother’s day. Image via robertivanc

It’s hot on our tracks. Yet again Mother’s Day. The time to celebrate lovely mothers all over the globe. Are you tired of giving your mother the same old flowering potted plant that wilts and dies and then gets composted by mid-June? We are. That’s why Green Prophet has come up with a few more ideas for greening your gift list for Mom.

Brazil and Israel to Collaborate on Water

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gisele giselle bundchen water dress brazilThey’ve tried the peeing in the shower campaign. Now Brazil looks to Israel for water technologies. Can we hope for a Gisele Bundchen (above in water dress)/Bar Rafaeli poster campaign?

Water-rich Brazil and water-poor Israel have found that they’re a good fit, with each country’s handicaps and blessings contributing to the cooperation between them. The two countries have embarked on a series of water negotiations so that Brazil can better manage its resources, and Israel can do business selling one of its few natural resources: Ingenuity in water technology.

Brazil is the most water-rich country in the world, owning an estimated 12 percent of the world’s freshwater resources, most of it in the Amazon Basin. However, despite its abundance of water there are areas in the country, mainly in the northeast, where water stores are scarce. In major cities like Sao Paolo, the largest in Brazil and the seventh largest in the world, only 70 percent of the sewage is treated, while the rest flows into rivers and the sea. In rural areas the sewage situation is much grimmer.

Turn Your iPad Into Interactive Cycling Sign With Pocket Sprocket App

[vimeo width=”560″ height=”400″]http://vimeo.com/10964580[/vimeo]

It costs about $600 today, but resourceful folks are already finding clever ways to upcycle and get the full use from Apple’s new iPad. We’ve already featured ways that an iPhone app can spare you from cellphone radiation. Now, consider the Pocket Sprocket, featured in the above video, by a company called Maya. With your iPad inserted into the back of your cycling wear, and the app installed, your iPad becomes a very handy and brightly lit navigation device for drivers to follow. Are you stopping, turning right, left or heading in an unstoppable straight line? Let your iPad do the talking. Perfect, we say, for the perils of Middle East road rage. Follow the video to sew your own pocket.

maya pocket sprocket

::Download your Pocket Sprocket at Maya via Fashioning Tech

Muslim World Takes Steps for Making the Hajj Green

green mosque hajj mecca medina photoMuslims recognize the Qu’ran has a lot to teach about ecology. A critical mass of Muslims are now working to make the annual Hajj pilgrimage greener. Green was, after all, Mohammad’s favorite color. Image via jonathangill

Ask around in Egypt and the environment is usually not on the top of most people’s agenda, especially considering the vast number of people living in poverty, unemployment rising, sexual harassment burgeoning and a government that constantly pushes its people toward oblivion. But that is not stopping a number of Muslim activists from speaking out on environmental issues, with calls in Jakarta recently at an environmental conference to turn the Islamic pilgrimage, or the Hajj, green.

The movement sees no qualms in combining faith with environmental protection. They argue that global warming does not discriminate between religion or region, activists said at the Jakarta meeting of the international Islamic green movement’s meeting.

Leading activist Mahmoud Akef of the Earth Mates Dialogue Center was one of nearly 200 Muslim delegates from across the world to call for a greener Hajj: “Because we are all living on this Earth and what is happening, or what’s affecting with regard to the climate change, affecting Americans, affects the Muslims here in Indonesia, affects Egypt, Muslims in Africa and Asia anywhere,” Akef said at the conference.

Middle East Airlines Wait for the Volcanic Ash to Settle

The Icelandic volcano has both environmental and economic effects. Some Middle East passengers are stranded in Europe and wonder if it’s time to think about less polluting modes of travel. By ship?

As a massive volcanic ash cloud hovers over most of Europe, Gulf-based airlines are increasingly concerned over the potential effects the Icelandic volcano may have on their business.

“It’s effecting all European operations,” Abu Dhabi-based aviation expert Oussama Salah told the Media Line. “The industry is losing some $200 million every day and they only expected a profit of $2-3 billion this year.”

But while the ash cloud continues to spread, aviation analysts are predicting that in the short run, it is unlikely to have a dramatic effect on carries carriers such as Etihad Airways (working to cut greenhouse gases), Emirates Airlines and Qatar Airways (see Green Prophet’s past story on Qatar Airway’s biofuel project), all of which are fully or partially government owned and thereby able to absorb some degree of economic damage.

Pregnancy is the new fountain of youth

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pregnant warrior womanFind your inner warrior, and the fountain of youth with pregnancy? 

Women from the western world put off pregnancy (even green ones!) for as long as possible, making way for career, adventures, or finding that somewhat “elusive” true love. In the meantime, these same women postpone the effects of ageing by becoming gym rats, getting Botox treatments, and taking any step possible to retain the youthfulness and vigour of someone younger.

A new study I’ve reported on, suggests that women who get pregnant – like Middle East women, who give birth much younger and more often than their western counterparts – may be staving off the effects of old-age. The Jerusalem-based study has found evidence that pregnancy, while it might cause your teeth to fall out, can have a restorative effect on damaged organs – in this case the liver.

But the researcher I spoke with says that pregnancy, over all, is probably very good for a woman’s body.

It’s common to associate pregnancy with the maladies that may accompany it. There’s fatigue, morning sickness, weight gain – and in some cases diabetes. But for all the complaints, one Israeli professor has found new evidence that pregnancy may be a source of the elusive “fountain of youth” that all drug developers would love to find.

yehudit bergman fountain of youthIn a new study, Prof. Yehudit Bergman (pictured left) and her colleagues at the Hebrew University (HU) Medical School report finding a process that occurs only in pregnant animals that appears to have a restorative effect on damaged organs, in this particular study on the liver. The news has been reported in the journal Genes & Development.

Using animal models, they applied their findings to two-year-old geriatric mice and found that the same processes that appear to trigger quicker healing of liver damage in pregnant mice, also work in older ones who are not pregnant. Using a novel formula to trigger the effect of pregnancy, what the researchers believe they have discovered may lead to a new class of compounds that could heal a number of organs that degenerate over time as we age.

It is Bergman’s goal to adapt this trigger for regeneration to more organs, but she cautions that the drug development process may take a decade or more.

Triggering the regeneration process

Bergman tells me that her research on mice shows that pregnancy does good things for the body. “In pregnancy, regeneration of the liver is faster and better than when the same mouse is not pregnant. Moreover, we understand some of what’s happening in pregnancy – in its cells, the hepatocytes and why they regenerate better.

“Once we understood the signaling pathway that instructs the cell to do what it does, we imitated the same kinds of signaling effects in aged mice who were not pregnant,” she explains. This approach led the research team to understand why the liver regenerates itself in pregnancy.

The team, which included Dr. Yuval Gielchinsky and Dr. Eli Pikarsky from Hadassah Medical School, Prof. Neri Laufer, from Hadassah Hospital, and Efi Weitman, Dr. Rinat Abramovitch and Dr. Zvi Granot, all affiliated with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, found that during pregnancy, liver cells regenerated better and in less time than during periods when the mice were not pregnant.

In non-pregnant mice, one sees normal cell division. From one cell, you get two, as the liver attempts to heal itself. “When the animal is pregnant,” Bergman found, “the liver gets bigger because each cell gets larger. It becomes a bigger liver.”

While under normal circumstances an enlarged liver is a sign of liver damage, in pregnant animals different processes are at work. The growth is not caused by increased blood volume, which is a normal effect of pregnancy.

“This wouldn’t be a good sign, unless we knew that the liver was working in the normal fashion and regenerating itself faster,” explains Bergman. “Once we understood how this happens during pregnancy we turned to very old mice – those that were two years old – whose [liver] regeneration process is not as good as that of young mice.”

Get pregnant, live longer?

And that’s when the researchers had their Eureka moment. “We mimicked the liver regeneration of pregnancy in old mice,” Bergman reports. With their new understanding of the process, they gave a group of older mice drugs that mimic the state of pregnancy. They had determined that the repair mechanism was a kind of switch in the cells, and they developed a molecule that could trigger that switch.

Like any serious scientist, Bergman hesitates to jump to conclusions. “The fountain of youth? It is quite novel research, but this is just research in pre-pre-clinical stages,” she points out.

However, the research is her raison d’être. “The dream is to help people, to aid older people to regenerate their liver and we are looking into achieving the same goals for other organs in the body,” she says. These could include the heart, lungs and kidneys.

So is pregnancy the elixir for extended youth? “The only evidence I have for that is the study I have published,” says Bergman, but adds: “Friends I have who are gynecologists do say pregnancy is good for the body.”

Read more on greening your pregnancy:
EcoMum Greens Your Pregnancy
Dioxin Affects Milk Production in Mice
Breastfeeding and How to Keep Up With Supply and Demand

Lebanese Prefer "Green With Envy" Maseratis Over Eco-Friendly Hybrids Cars

lebabon car show maserati interiorInside view of Maserati MC Sport: worth 300 grand? Maybe for some wealthy Lebanese who are more interested in “green” of the envious variety.

Will eco-friendly cars ever become popular in a country that prefers status symbol models like BMW’s, Mercedes Benz and even Maserati’s? Not according the AFP which reported on the country’s annual Motor Show which opened in Beirut last week. Spot interviews with Lebanese who were in attendance clearly indicated that of the 400 models in display, the most attention was being given to high priced “glitz-mobiles” including a $300,000 Limited Edition Maserati MC Sport, one of only 15 in existence and definitely not very eco-friendly (12 were produced for Middle Eastern markets).

Hybrid models, such as Toyota’s Prius,  are considered to be much more eco-friendly than normal, all-fossil fuel models; and are increasing in popularity in neighboring Israel. But they didn’t catch the eyes of the Lebanese who don’t see hybrids matching any kind of status they seek.

12 Things I've Learned About Human Nature From My Cats (Slideshow)

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cats human nature

Nature can point us in the right green direction. Maurice learns about human nature from his cat.

I’m sure many Green Prophet readers enjoyed Jack Reichert’s recent picture story: 11Things I Learned From My Dog. He showed us how we can learn a lot about life by observing how man’s best friend relates to us as human. I decided to write a follow-up piece on how people relate to another very popular, yet often misunderstood human companion, Felis Catus or the common domestic house cat.

Many people consider cats to be the opposite of dogs, especially in their relationship (or even non-relationship) to humans. I’ve lived with several cats during my life, and have had relationships with numerous others, including what many people refer to as street or alley cats, which are quite numerous where I live in Israel. Cats also have had a bad break historically, and have been considered as symbols of bad luck and harbingers of evil – even being associated with the devil and witches (especially in the case of black cats).

So in order to present a counterpoint to dog fanciers, I’ve decided to write this article so that cats can also have their place in the sun in-so-far as their relationship to people.

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.