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Green Prophet Interviews Author and Journalist, Alanna Mitchell

Of the many non-fiction, environmentally-themed books I’ve read over the past few years, those that stand out are Alanna Mitchell’s ‘Dancing at the Dead Sea’ and ‘Seasick‘, both of which I have reviewed for Green Prophet.

Mitchell is an acclaimed Canadian writer, skilled in her clear evocation of the destruction of the environment she witnesses around the world, and her unpicking of the scientific reports and data from scientists who are at the coalface of our changing planet.

In this exclusive interview, Alanna Mitchell explains some of her motivation, and shares insight into her exploration:

GP: In both ‘Dancing at the Dead Sea’ and ‘Seasick’ you describe many ecological disasters around the world, on land and at sea. How do you remain optimistic in the face of this?

AM: The ecological disasters are terrible; that part is clear. And we know that human actions are causing the disasters. So my hope lies in my knowledge that we are a profoundly moral species and we are capable of making things better. I choose to hope.

The Tale of Ancient Trees in the Holy Land (Video)

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[youtube width=”560″ height=”400″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anjsDjPvsN8&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

Trees tell stories. And it’s not just because you can see and measure their rings. In Israel there are thousands of old trees with history. Serious history. Some have “seen” great battles, heard prophets, witnessed the advent of new religions and the rise and fall of different empires through the ages. The Jewish National Fund cares for many of these old trees and over the last three years has been conducting a survey to determine their “orthopedic” needs and building supports, fumigating them and treating rot when necessary. See this story produced by ISRAEL21c on the story of the country’s trees. We know that not every environmentalist is a tree hugger, but it can be nice visiting the “roots” to green movements around the world, through trees.

Israel Seeks to Build Nuclear Power Plants With Arab Neighbors

nuclear power plantsA pan-Middle East nuclear power plan? Arabs and Israelis working together?

While Israel continues to maintain a policy of ambiguity regarding its military nuclear capability, it is making no secret about its plans to pursue a nuclear option to meet its energy needs. The minister of infrastructure, Uzi Landau, officially announced today that Israel seeks to build nuclear power plants in cooperation with “scientists and engineers from our Arab neighbors,” the AP reported.

Garbage Trucks Dump Straight Into the Sea in Lebanon As Hizbollah Takes Hold

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sewage lebanon sea pollution fishing photoRaw sewage seeping off Beirut coastline, and dump trucks heading straight for the sea, is the “catch of the day” in Lebanon.

Marine pollution in Lebanon is becoming so severe these days that local fishermen are catching more garbage in their nets than fish. An article on thenews site Inter Press Service said that Lebanon’s 6,500 fishermen are having with the increasing problem of coastal and marine pollution being caused by large amounts of garbage and other forms of pollution finding its way into the sea. Political ambivalence is to blame.

Extra! Extra! Read All of Green Prophet's News on Kindle!

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green prophet kindle reader amazonGood news for all our readers out there who have (paper and ink and fossil fuel saving) Kindle Wireless Reading Devices: now you can get your Green Prophet news downloaded straight to your Kindle!

The Kindle is Amazon.com’s lightweight, portable electronic reader that can hold as many as 1,500 books (eliminating the need for these books to use up precious paper and energy resources).  The display screen is supposed to simulate the look of real paper, with no glare, and many books are cheaper if you buy their electronic version for the Kindle.

Green Prophet is proud to be joining the Kindle’s current selection of New York Times Best Sellers, US and international newspapers, and magazines.  We are definitely in good company and happy to be distributed in such an eco-friendly format.

So how does Green Prophet work on the Kindle?  When you subscribe to get GP on your Kindle, it is downloaded automatically so that you can read our stories even when you’re not wirelessly connected.  And don’t worry about the format – unlike RSS readers which often only provide headlines, on Kindle you’ll be able to read the full text and see the images from our stories.

We would love to hear about your experiences reading GP on Kindle, and about using the Kindle in general. And if you really love, we’d appreciate a rave review on the Amazon website.

Read more about green reading::
Sustainable Reading: The CEO of Eco-Libris Speaks
Friedman’s “Hot, Flat and Crowded” – The Perfect “Green” Starter Book
Book Review of Precycle! by Paul Peacock: So You Can Do Better Than Recycling

The National Religious Coalition on Creation Care Takes Interfaith Environmental Concerns to the US Government

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(Photo Credit: Jim Davidson) Jewish leaders were among 50 religious leaders who prayed and visited Capitol Hill together during the week of February 22 to tell US legislators that action on climate change is urgently needed.

Religious faith and concern for the environment should really go hand in hand.  If you believe in God and in God’s creations, then you are invested in protecting and caring for them.

Here on Green Prophet we have repeatedly demonstrated the correlation between religion and the earth.  To name a few related stories, we have written about Islam’s green agenda, the Eco-Rabbi series, and interfaith environmental initiatives.

The concern for the environment among the faithful was demonstrated during recent weeks by the National Religious Coalition on Creation Care (NRCCC) in the US.  A delegation of approximately 50 people from a variety of backgrounds and religions met in Washington D.C. from February 21-24 for the NRCCC’s annual Washington Week and National Prayer Breakfast on Creation Care.  The delegation’s mission was to remind legislators of the moral need for strong environmental legislation now.

The NRCC, which brings together Catholics, Jews, Evangelicals, Protestants, Bahaiis and Buddhists (among others), describes its mission as “serv[ing] God and the health of creation by bringing together the formal environmental policy positions of religious institutions and by communicating those positions to elected officials and government leaders.”

Are "Green" Garbage Bags Good for the Environment?

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garbage containers Question: What product do we buy just to throw out again? Answer: Garbage bags.

New “green” products, like biodegradable garbage bags, are a hot topic. But it’s usually best to manage with fewer products instead of buying more, even if they are “green.”

In most cases, biodegradable bags pose less danger to landfills and groundwater and are a better choice than conventional garbage bags.

When biodegradable bags start to decompose, the nutrients from your garbage go right into the earth. But what if you have spray cans, batteries or other contaminants in your garbage? Using a biodegradable bag will increase the likelihood of dangerous chemicals leaching into the ground.

Bunkers for Bats

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bats bunker israel jordan idf photo hanging batBats find no-man’s land makes a great “hang-out.” Image via Yuvalh.

The song lyrics ask, “War — what’s it good for?” Well, conflicts between peoples may create new opportunities for displaced and endangered animals. Haaretz newspaper reports that Ph.D. student Eran Levin of Tel Aviv University’s Department of Zoology has discovered one of the most species-rich bat populations in the world — and they’re hiding out in unused army bunkers in the Jordan Valley. The bunkers, originally set up by the Israel Defense Forces, have been abandoned since the 1994 peace accord with Jordan. Since then, they have become the bats’ preferred haunt. Levin is making sure that the bats — some of them endangered — get adequate “hanging” space to encourage breeding and long-term survival.

Bring Moshe Safdie’s Green Building to the Middle East

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habitat 67 moshe safdieMoshe Safdie’s Habitat ’67 designed for Montreal World Fair a model of sustainable living. Image via Wikipedia.

Sustainable building is gaining some speed in the Middle East, but at a pace that is powerless against escalating climate damage.  The Gutman Visitation Center’s Living Building in Jerusalem and Qatar’s LEED certified convention center offer good examples of what can and should be done, but we can only hope that influential architects and developers will do more to voluntarily adopt better building standards.

9 Israeli Etsy Shops That Make Online Shopping Greener (and Funner)

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Etsy, for those who don’t yet know, is an online forum for handmade products.  The handmade revolution is green in and of itself, since it attempts to reduce reliance on machine (and electricity powered) made products, but Etsy goes even greener than that.  Etsy makes it easy to shop green by making it easy to shop local and search for products made from recycled or eco-friendly materials through their “ecoetsy” category.

Many Israeli Etsy sellers (who have all been featured on Green Prophet already – click on their names to see the full feature) are making our shopping very green and fun.  We thought it would be helpful for you to have their names on your shopping list, maybe to make your Passover gift shopping a little more environmentally friendly?

Let the local, green, handmade shopping begin!

Dria Peterson creates her handmade dolls and upcycled denim bags from Amirim, a vegetarian eco-village in northern Israel.  Her whimsical dolls are all made out of reclaimed fabrics and are definitely a great alternative to non-eco-friendly Barbie.  (Check out her baby-friendly doll, Iz’o the Strong Man, above.)

Help From Above As Saudi Environment Satellite-Monitored

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satellite persian gulf e-GEO satellite monitoring of Dubai’s Palm Island. Can technology protect the endangered Persian Gulf?

Saudi Arabia’s fragile desert and coastal environments will now get “help from above,” thanks to an initiative by a group of Saudi Arabian and European partners (GAF AG and e-GEOS) who have completed a project to implement and provide satellite-based environmental information products and services to the Presidency of Meteorology and Environment (PME) of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA). The project will involve satellite monitoring of all areas of the Kingdoms environmental structure “Land – Air – Coast – Marine” and is based on similar projects conducted in Europe in GMES for “Global Monitoring for Environment and Security” programs. They’ll be watching for oil spills, and more. 

A New Solar Energy Source from the Common Pea

pea pod solar energyAn Israeli scientist has found a way to pull solar energy from pea plants.

If harnessing the unlimited solar power of the sun were easy, we wouldn’t still have the greenhouse gas problem that results from the use of fossil fuel. And while solar energy systems work moderately well in hot desert climates, they are still inefficient and contribute only a small percentage of the general energy demand. A new solution may be coming from an unexpected source — a source that may be on your dinner plate tonight. Peas!

“Looking at the most complicated membrane structure found in a plant, we deciphered a complex membrane protein structure which is the core of our new proposed model for developing ‘green’ energy,” says structural biologist Prof. Nathan Nelson of Tel Aviv University’s Department of Biochemistry. Isolating the minute crystals of the PSI super complex from the pea plant, Prof. Nelson suggests these crystals can be illuminated and used as small battery chargers or form the core of more efficient man-made solar cells.

Nanoscience is the science of small particles of materials and is one of the most important research frontiers in modern technology. In nature, positioning of molecules with sub-nanometer precision is routine, and crucial to the operation of biological complexes such as photosynthetic complexes. Prof. Nelson’s research concentrates on this aspect.

The mighty PSI

To generate useful energy, plants have evolved very sophisticated “nano-machinery” which operates with light as its energy source and gives a perfect quantum yield of 100%. Called the Photosystem I (PSI) complex, this complex was isolated from pea leaves, crystalized and its crystal structure determined by Prof. Nelson to high resolution, which enabled him to describe in detail its intricate structure.

“My research aims to come close to achieving the energy production that plants can obtain when converting sun to sugars in their green leaves,” explains Prof. Nelson (below).

pea pod solar energy

Described in 1905 by Albert Einstein, quantum physics and photons explained the basic principles of how light energy works. Once light is absorbed in plant leaves, it energizes an electron which is subsequently used to support a biochemical reaction, like sugar production.

“If we could come even close to how plants are manufacturing their sugar energy, we’d have a breakthrough. It’s therefore important to solve the structure of this nano-machine to understand its function,” says Prof. Nelson, whose lab is laying the foundations for this possibility.

Since the PSI reaction center is a pigment-protein complex responsible for the photosynthetic conversion of light energy to another form of energy like chemical energy, these reaction centers, thousands of which are precisely packed in the crystals, may be used to convert light energy to electricity and serve as electronic components in a variety of different devices.

“One can imagine our amazement and joy when, upon illumination of those crystals placed on gold covered plates, we were able to generate a voltage of 10 volts. This won’t solve our world’s energy problem, but this could be assembled in power switches for low-power solar needs, for example,” he concludes.

Tap Into North Africa and Middle East Solar Opportunities at MENASOL

masdar city illustration photo

Destertec and Masdar (above) are heating up solar energy opportunities in the Middle East. Tap into this new energy at the 2nd Annual MENASOL conference, this year in Egypt. Image via Masdar website.

Green Prophet wants to remind you about MENASOL –– the major solar energy conference taking place in Cairo, Egypt this May. You can read our first interview with MENAOL’s Heidi Hafes here, and according to Heidi, the abundant sun resource in the Middle East North Africa region is now being commercialised as governments and international enterprises speedily begin to enter the multi billion dollar solar market in the region. Some are hoping they can make multi billion dollar returns. Want to know just how much the Middle East and North Africa region is heating up?

Coastal Erosion Threatens Evolutionary Hotspots In Gulf Region

the world dubai coastal erosionProjects like Dubai’s “The World” will cause untold damage of shoreline erosion and habitat loss. So do modern ports, threatening endangered species. But there are solutions, says US expert.

Coastal waters are evolutionary hotspots, says Jerry Berne, a shoreline expert from the NGO Sustainable Shorelines in the US. Based in Charlotte, NC, USA, Berne is concerned about the toll construction and shoreline projects are having on the world’s marine ecosystems. Looking at the intensive construction projects ongoing in the Gulf region, such as Dubai’s The World, and over-pumping of aquifers by the Palestinian and Israeli authorities, Berne sees our current management of shorelines as a disaster. In an interview with Green Prophet, Berne points out the problems in the Middle East and gives alternative solutions, such as offshore ports powered by solar energy, to stop soil erosion and habitat loss.

Pick Organic from Under the Nile’s Cotton Clothes and Toys for Babies

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under the nile organic cottonSupport the organic cotton business in Egypt by buying Under the Nile brand toys and baby clothes.

While Israel’s Katanchic is making groovy cotton baby clothes, and Turkey is brandishing their organic cotton in the steamy markets of Istanbul, Egypt has long been lauded as the Middle East’s king of cotton. Under the Nile, founded by Janice Masoud, takes business one-step further making baby clothes and other organic products.  Not only do they produce 100% organic, handpicked Egyptian cotton products, but they also give back to the communities that sustain their business.