Home Blog Page 653

Turning Another Nissan Leaf in the Middle East

nissan leafThe Leaf won’t be sprouting its electric engines soon in the Middle East, says Nissan CEO.

Nissan’s new Leaf electric car model may be about to roll off the company’s production lines, but it will be a while before it will be available in Middle Eastern markets, according to the company’s CEO, Carlos Ghosn. The Leaf, hailed by Nissan as a totally electric and emission free vehicle was featured in a previous Green Profit article I where Mr. Ghosn said that “the Middle East is not a prime target for electric vehicles.”

Stop Smoking, Stupid!

5

smoking pipe hookahA new study finds that smokers tend to have lower IQs. 

If you live in the Middle East, like I do, you’ll notice one of the most irritating habits you can’t escape is smoking. Cigarettes, pot, hookah pipe. Either you fight it or join them – something I did after being a virgin non-smoker for a whole 27 years.

I used to wage campaigns against my parents and scream with outrage when they smoked around me. At age 27, when most people want to stop, I started smoking cigarettes. One or two a day. The habit was later fed after dating a chain smoking man (advice: never date smokers). I’ve since quit both the guy and the habit, but does my old habit (or choice of partners) make me stupid? Probably, according to a new study from Israel.

We already know how cigarette butts pollute the ground and beaches, and how the smoke influences our quality of life and that of our children, and we generally think that people who smoke despite numerous health warnings and the increased risk of cancer do so because of social and economic reasons. Perhaps it’s a matter of irresistible peer pressure or maybe they simply don’t know any better? Not so, finds a new Israeli study that links smoking to lower IQs.

Dr. Mark Weiser from the Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer Hospital in Israel found a direct correlation between the number of cigarettes a smoker inhales and his IQ. People with lower IQs are the ones who tend to be smokers and the heavier the smoker, the lower the IQ.

“It was really quite a straightforward study,” says Weiser, who compared the cognitive test scores of male adolescent smokers and non-smokers. “We looked at cross-sectional data on IQ and smoking cigarettes, and looked at people’s smoking status and their IQs,” he says.

Some media reports distorted the findings of the study that appeared recently in the journal Addiction, and reported that smoking actually damages your IQ, but Weiser says this is not likely the case, and it’s not what he and his colleagues found in their study.

“It’s very clear that people with low IQs are the ones who choose to smoke. It’s not just a matter of socioeconomic status – if they are poor or have less education – and because of that do less well on IQ tests. And that’s really the story,” he says.

Peer pressure tactics that are smoking hot

What the study does show, however, is that there could be a new intervention approach for health specialists at schools and in institutions where young people and teens are at risk for smoking. People with lower IQs could be targeted for specialized programs, helping them to kick or avoid the habit altogether.

The results could also be used to pressure friends and colleagues to quit smoking. If smoking means you have a lower IQ, this could be information one might be unwilling to advertise. Weiser agrees that “perhaps” this may help to convince smokers to give up the habit.

As a scientist, he sees his study as something that adds another piece of the puzzle to a larger group of studies ongoing around the world. Some scientists are testing the hypothesis that on average, people with lower IQs tend to make poorer decisions regarding their health. These are people who may be overweight, will abuse drugs more often and will exercise less to improve their health status, explains Weiser, who examined a cohort of 20,000 Israeli military personnel in his study.

Weiser and his colleagues found that 18-year-old men who smoke a pack or more of cigarettes a day were likely to have an IQ score that on average is 7.5 points lower than that of young men who choose not to smoke.

Unlike other studies that correlate health and IQ, the researchers did not include people who suffer from any major health problem, since these people are weeded out during army selection. This is one of many health-related studies based on the data collected by the Israel Defense Forces before, during and after recruitment.

Family status data not relevant

In the recent smoking study, the researchers found that 28 percent of the new recruits smoked one or more cigarettes a day; about three percent admitted to being ex-smokers, while 68% of the young men had never smoked.

Even after examining socio-economic data, including the level of education of the recruits’ fathers, the researchers found that the men who smoked showed a significantly lower IQ score than their non-smoking counterparts did.

An average IQ for a smoker was found to be about 94, while non-smokers averaged around 101. Interestingly, the researchers point out that a steady drop in IQ levels corresponds to a greater number of cigarettes smoked per day. Those who smoked more than a pack a day had IQs of around 90, for example. An average intelligence IQ score is described as one in the range of 84 to 116.

Even in studies of brothers, where environmental factors growing up can be assumed to be similar, the researchers found consistent results: The non-smoking sibling achieved a higher IQ than did his smoking brother.

The researchers conclude: “The IQs of adolescents who began smoking between ages 18-21 are lower than those of non-smokers. Adolescents with poorer IQ scores might be targeted for programs designed to prevent smoking.”

There are plenty of help programs on the web: if aids do not work for you, consider seeking help through substance abuse treatment programs.

More ungreen news on smoking:
No Ifs, And Or Cigarette Butts
Cigarette Cones – So You Don’t Butt Out on the Beach

Reflecting on Israel's Water Usage and Reviewing Water Saving Tips Before International Water Day

2

world water day tipsKaren provides some water-saving tips in praise of International Water Day, Monday. [image via: RonAlmog]

This coming Monday, March 22nd will be International Water Day, a time (almost like New Years) for countries to reflect upon their last year of water usage and make resolutions for the year to come.  This is especially important in the Middle East, where water is frighteningly scarce.

International Water Day is an initiative that came out of a 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), and has since been celebrated every March 22nd.  The theme changes every year, with the theme this year being “Clean Water for a Healthy World.”

Super-Sex Insects With Breakfast of Champions To Be Better Lovers, and Killers!

4

A new super-sex protein jock shake “A Breakfast of Champions” for fruit flies and mosquitoes to make them better lovers, and mercenaries of their own race?

Writing from the beach in Panama City, Florida during Spring Break this new research from Hebrew U seems to ring true: that “males with the muscle,” get the chicks – in both the human and insect worlds. According to a new study at an Israeli university, researchers have uncovered a new sustainable pest control technique using “super-sexed” (but sterile- sorry guys) male insects to copulate with female ones. The approach, the researchers hope, will help the agri business use less chemicals, such as DDT, used since early in the last century to control crop pests or carriers of diseases.

Their trick? A Breakfast of Champions jock drink.

Green Pillow Talk: Sustainable and Healthy Choices For Your Bed

8

sex bedroom green photoWith all the time we spend in bed, it behooves us to make sure they are safe as well as comfortable.

Our pillows can do more than cradle and support heads and necks. Use the wrong kind, and they can make you toss and turn in your sleep. That is why this post is dedicated to making sure that your ‘pillow talk’ –– and pillows –– includes words like, green, clean and sustainable.

Conventional pillows typically contain petroleum chemicals that release volatile organic compounds into the air in your home.  Fire-retardant, non-iron, moisture-resistant pillows are made from compounds that are bad for your health and bad for the planet. Not to mention that many synthetic pillows make great incubators for dust mites, one of the leading allergens that are irritating to lungs, particularly in people with asthma. Yuck.

There are alternatives that are natural-filled and appealing to all personal pillow preferences. When you are choosing, don’t just consider what goes in the inside; make sure it is covered in organic cotton too. Below is a list of popular option, available from many vendors via the web. We’ve personally tested all four, and can vouch for the pros and cons. If readers know where to purchase any of these in the Middle East, we ask you to share this information in the comment section.

  • Natural Shredded Rubber
    A byproduct of the rubber tree, this renewable resource is sometimes called latex. Great for people with allergies and chemical sensitivities, these pillows offer firm support. They may take some getting used to and some sleepers don’t like the smell that new pillows give off. Make sure to avoid synthetic rubber.
  • Wool Fiber
    Choose pure virgin wool. Its many benefits include breathability, flame resistance, moisture absorbency, and bacteria/dust mite resistance. They also maintain temperature during hot or cold climates. Drawbacks: these pillows may be too firm for some, and they can flatten out over time.
  • Feathers/Down
    Pillows made from duck or goose feathers and/or down, and very comfortable, and come in a variety of qualities and price points. The higher the down content, the softer the pillow but higher the cost. May not be firm enough for all sleepers, or appropriate for people with allergies. They also need to be regularly ‘fluffed.’
  • Buckwheat Hull
    Buckweat hull pillows conform to the contours of your head and neck. They offer excellent insulation during summer and winter climates, and generally are reasonably priced. It may take some getting used to as they are ‘noisy’ when you turn in your sleep. They also need to be replaced, and don’t control for odor as well as some other options.

Greening your bedroom is a personal choice that must take budget and comfort into consideration. It may not be feasible for everyone to replace their entire bedroom and bedding with organic, health-conscious products, which is why we recommend starting with your pillow.

As for the next step, we suggest sleeping naked. It’s as natural as the day you were born, and makes breakfast in bed all the more fun. Stay tuned for more ways to make your sex life green, and your green life sexy. Or read our past post on Greening Your Bedroom.

The Best Way to Keep Buildings Green is Not to Build New Ones

2

Central Tel Aviv, Cira 1940’s: A Sustainable Idea Then and Now

All over the Middle East, many old and often historical buildings are being torn down in order to “make way” for new, modern ones. This trend is especially true in cities like Cairo, Egypt and Tel Aviv, Israel, where the quaint and classical architecture of the “colonial period” (which also applies to India) is often forced to give way to glass faced skyscrapers which even though are claimed to be safer in the event of earthquakes and other natural disasters are less sustainable in regards to keeping them cool in summer or warm in winter.

This issue was expressed in an article in Treehugger where they reported that older styles of architecture, built before the “thermostat age” we live in now, had to be constructed to enable people to cope with the climate they lived in – particularly in regions where people experienced extreme changes in temperature during various times of the year.

Dubai-based Timelinks Designs Modern Ziggurat

3

ziggurat timelinksIs it really sensible to squish one million people into this self-sustaining city/building?

Like many of Dubai’s projects The World, which will exacerbate shoreline erosion and habitat loss, and Burj Dabai, reputedly the world’s tallest building, are flashy and expensive.  They are also divorced from the United Arab Emirates’ environmental hazards such as scant freshwater supply and desertification, and though undeniably clever, their eco-footprints are questionable. Timelinks, a consortium of urban planners, scientists, and architectural designers, has designed another less-than-sensible solution to the UAE’s environmental and urban crises.  They call it the Ziggurat.

AGRAme, Honeywell, and Biofuel Projects in Dubai

samphire for biofuel imageHoneywell launches project that converts the oil from salicornia plants, commonly known as samphire into biofuel at Dubai’s AGRAme conference later this month. Image via me’enthedogs.

Global issues concerning green agriculture and energy sustainability have raised many viability questions during the early 21st century. Collaborate efforts of world leaders, non-profits, and research institutes have made great achievements in the area. Units like the CGI and Doug Band tackle Haitian Rice Crop Sustainability through the IRRI (International Rice Research Institute), while also manipulating emission reduction in the San Francisco Bay Area of the USA. Although, the US isn’t the only one playing their role!

Organizations like Ultra Green Middle East tackle issues like water treatment/purification, waste-to-energy and establish LEED eco-friendly buildings. Subsequently, continued success of green initiatives within the Middle East has led us to some of the greatest agricultural innovations yet.

Grow Old With The Sun As Israel’s Migdal Invests in Sunday Solar

1

A large insurance company from Israel invests about $30 milliom in solar energy company Sunday. Image via mcohenchromiste.

The sun makes us old and wrinkly, but in Israel getting some “sun” through your pension plan can make you green. Without the possibility of buying green bonds, many Israelis wonder how they can invest in solar energy (it’s a question I’ve asked to people in the government), and now by subscribing to Migdal, a major insurance broker and holding company, some of your pension plan will be diverted to making good energy: Migdal just invested $30 million in Sunday Energy

Ilana Meallem Is The Green Peacemaker of the Middle East

1

A young, ‘green’ peacemaker Ilana Meallem, who first wanted to serve her country in the army, now devotes herself to coexistence and environmental good works.

You’ll find her wherever the peacemakers and ecologists roam, at venues like the annual United Religions Initiative Middle East North Africa (MENA) region conference.

Today Ilana Muallem is one of the most remarkable “green” activists in the Middle East, inspiring, educating, promoting and drawing ecologically sound practices. In addition to leading EcoSpirit Middle East retreats in Jordan for young activists in the region, she is also currently in the process of creating an ecologically-built retreat, solar-powered of course, which will serve as a home and studio for young peacemakers from the Middle East region.

Thirty-two-year-old Meallem, a Londoner by birth, fell in love with Israel at an early age. She lived in the country for a year when she was two, and the memory somehow became a part of her identity. Raised in an orthodox family, her father was an Israeli-Egyptian who moved to the British city, and her mother, a British Jew. By the time she turned 18, the teenager was already working on enlisting in the Israel Defense Forces, strongly motivated to serve her new country.

When she said goodbye to her parents, two brothers and sister in England, en route to her new life in Israel, one brother’s parting words were: “Trust everyone.”

Book Review: Strategy for Sustainability by Adam Werbach – A Primer for Third Wing Environmentalism or a Harbinger of the Black Swan?

6

stratgy sustainability book cover I find it fitting and perhaps a little ironic that I was asked to write a review about Adam Werbach’s popular book, Strategy for Sustainability, a book addressed to corporations large and small about how they can operate as leaders in sustainability.

Perhaps because  my senior thesis as an undergraduate English  major, was entitled “The Paradox of Corporate Environmentalism.”

I wrote that paper back in 1997 while attending University of California, Santa Barbara. I  had the privilege of interviewing Congressman Henry Waxman (his son and I befriended one another at Tel Aviv University) for my thesis.

Extensive research and this interview with one of the true pioneers of incentive systems for marketable discharge permits, helped shape my view on corporate environmentalism. I learned a lot about various factions within the Green movement, corporate citizenship vs. government regulation, and the central role that economics played in all of these topics. My thesis volunteered that corporate citizenship was incredibly rare and statistically insignificant, like Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s Black Swan.

In Strategy for Sustainability, Werbach clearly takes another point of view with regard to corporate citizenship and I must admit it is a bit infectious.

Israel prepares to combat greenhouse gas emissions

(Image via go-green.com)

Israel’s cabinet approved a joint proposal by the Ministry of Environmental Protection and the Ministry of Finance on Sunday to formulate a national plan on greenhouse gas emissions, the Globes newspaper reported.

An inter-ministerial committee will be formed to study a range of issues, including energy efficiency, green construction, and the ramifications for Israeli industry and exports. The committee will be chaired by the director-general of the Ministry of Finance, Haim Shani, and is expected to submit its recommendations for an operational plan by October 2010.

In proposing a concerted national effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the Ministry of Environmental Protection and Ministry of Finance emphasized the potential benefits for the Israeli economy and local cleantech industries in particular. Reducing emissions of greenhouse gases is also a condition for Israel joining the OECD, the Globes report notes.

The minister of environmental protection, Gilad Erdan, has been lobbying for the establishment of a greenhouse gases committee for several months. Erdan is scheduled to deliver a keynote address tomorrow at the Environment 2020 conference in Tel Aviv in a session entitled “Environmental Vision for the Next Decade.”

Samir Kassir Square Blends the Organic with the Urban in Beirut

3

Samir Kassir Square beirut lebanonWhen you live in a city and pass the same developed areas day after day, you can forget that the concrete jungle is unnatural.  Sure, it may feel natural to you after a while, but you would undoubtedly also enjoy some greenery.  Some botanical specimens to offset the amounts of carbon dioxide released by the buses, taxis, and private vehicles.  Which is why contemporary urban planners and architects often try to fuse the urban with the organic.

This fusion can be seen in Samir Kassir Square in the heart of Beirut, where two old Ficus trees provide shade and serenity.  The surrounding garden, composed mostly of pools of running water, are also intended to cause passersby to feel connected to a more natural environment (although this Green Prophet wonders how water efficient the pools actually are).

Saudi Arabia Has the Highest Road Accident Death Toll in the World

Saudi car art

Time to turn Saudi youth onto bicycling: video of dangerous stunts on the rise in young Saudi males who purposefully “drift” cars.

An average of 17 Saudi Arabian residents die on the country’s roads each day, a report by the Kingdom’s General Directorate of Traffic has revealed. The news comes after the World Health Organization found Saudi Arabia to have the world’s highest number of deaths from road accidents, which now make up the country’s principal cause of death in adult males aged 16 to 36. First reported by the Saudi daily Arab News, the study found that 6,485 people had died and more than 36,000 were injured in over 485,000 traffic accidents during 2008 and 2009.

There was no official reaction to the unfortunate world record, and Saudi analysts pointed to larger underlying problems.

“The driving problems are with young people,” Ali Abdul-Rahman Al-Mazyad, a Saudi columnist in Riyadh told The Media Line. “There are very little outlets for young people to enjoy themselves and kids basically do what they want.”

“There is also not such great education in schools about driving and respecting the road,” he said. “Drug use is also a contributing factor. These are the central problems.”

The report found that almost a third of traffic accidents in the Saudi capital Riyadh were due to drivers jumping red lights, followed by 18 percent of accidents caused by illegal U-turns. The most common dangerous driving activities were speeding, sudden stops and speaking on the phone while driving.

Over the past two decades Saudi Arabia has recorded 4 million traffic accidents, leading to 86,000 deaths and 611,000 injuries, 7 percent of which resulted in permanent disabilities.

A recent study at the King Abdul Aziz City for Science and Technology (KACST), a Riyadh-based scientific research group, warned that if the current rise in road accident rates is not curbed, Saudi Arabia will have over 4 million traffic accidents a year by 2030. Oh, and Saudi Arabia wants to be the next Ibiza!

Silvio Saadi, a Jeddah-based businessman and film producer, argued that both the government and an out-of-control youth culture were to blame.

“You won’t believe what you see,” he told The Media Line. “It’s just crazy.”

“Saudis often try to drift with normal cars and thousands of spectators on the sides of the street,” he said, referring to an informal motor sport in which drivers intentionally over-steer so as to lose traction and drift on the road. “Sometimes the car drifts into the spectators, slamming them into buildings along the sidewalk.”

Saadi said that while the government has made some initiatives, they have fallen short of an aggressive road safety campaign.

“Outside the city, the police often cannot stop them,” he said. “The police are actually scared because there can be thousands of them. A few years ago they built a Jeddah raceway to attract young people to do it on the track instead of on the streets, but people still like to do it the old fashioned Bedouin way.”

“We get approached every year by government departments to produce public service announcements about speeding but most of the time nothing comes of it,” Saadi added. “Who knows what happens, but there is a lot of corruption. They probably take budgets from the government to do public service announcements and then don’t do it.”

Video of crazy road stunt as Saudi youth skate on the road.

[youtube width=”560″ height=”400″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJupNDIKkEk[/youtube]

Saudi Arabia has long had a taste for expensive cars, and spottings of young Saudis cruising the streets of Jeddah and Riyadh in Maseratis, Ferraris, Porsches and Harley Davidson motorbikes are increasingly commonplace.

One of the Middle East’s largest car markets, automobile sales make up about three percent of Saudi Arabia’s gross domestic product.

Following overstated fears that the global recession might seriously weaken the Arab world’s largest economy, Saudi car sales are now expected to boom. The kingdom’s car market, including both commercial automobiles and transport infrastructure, is currently worth about $9 billion. The market is expected to grow by 30 percent in 2010.

Over 675,000 cars are expected to be sold in 2010 to a population of just under 25 million.

(This story by Benjamin Joffe-Walt is reprinted with permission by The Media Line, the Mideast News Source.)

If you have read to the end of this, try making a positive change in the Middle East. Support designs like this that give refugees a dignified way to transition.

Fast Food Causing Increase in Colon Cancer in Cairo

Mcdonald's sign in Arabic, combo, EgyptEgyptians are seeing soaring rates of colon cancer and obesity. Researcher links this to a change in diet. A McDonald’s sign in Arabic. Image via davidberkowitz

Professor of Oncology and the Director of the al-Qasr el-Aini Center for the Treatment of Tumors Yasser Abdul Kader said that colon cancer in Egypt ranges from between two to 6% of the total amount of cancer cases reported annually in Egypt.

He said that the number of colon cancer cases in Egypt is three-times higher among men than women. According to the professor, who was speaking at a local conference on the occasion of the international month to raise awareness of colon cancer, said that 30% of patients infected are younger than 45-years-old.

Abdul Kader added that the cause of the spread of colon cancer in Egypt is “due to the change of food habits of the citizens, as well as reliance on fast food, which is saturated fat and the prevalence of obesity.”

Why is there so much colon cancer in Egypt?

He continued that “in addition to this, smoking is another cause for the spread, and lifestyles do not encourage exercise and type II diabetes, indicating that colon cancer can be easily treated on the condition of early diagnosis, where the treatment success rate is high and can reach 90 percent in that situation.”

For his part, Mohammed Abul, a professor of nutrition at Cairo University, said that there is a close relationship between obesity and tumors of the digestive system, pointing out that the prevalence of obesity in Egypt is “up to 50 percent in men and more than 70 percent in women, as well as a faulty diet for most people, especially with the increasing rates of eating red meat at the expense of vegetables and fruit and the lack of exercise and sports, as well as avoiding eating fiber and preferring food with high salt.”

Mohsen Mokhtar, an Assistant Professor of Oncology and head of the Cancer Patients Support Association stressed that the association has launched an awareness campaign for the prevention and early detection of colon cancer, warning that “colon cancer is one of the main tumors affecting the digestive system, where the rate of infection is 5% of total cases of cancer in the world.”

He added that the total deaths per year are about 700,000 across the world, with 2000 cases a day, pointing to the presence of worrisome signs in Egypt “for a higher incidence of cancer among young people under the age of 30.”

More eco news from Cairo:
Egypt Builds Climate Change Plan For Delta Region
Egypt Makes Sharm Eco-Friendly
Baby Crocodile Boards Plane in Egypt