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Selçuklu Evi Eco-ish Boutique Hotel in Turkey

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From a heritage building in the historic region of Cappadocia, Turkey, this hotel works with local crafts and craftsmen.

It is important to apply eco-friendly labeling carefully.  This is especially true of the tourism industry that is often guilty of green-washing potential patrons to lure them to their site.  We have written about eco-lodges such Feynan in Jordan and Al Karm Ecolodge in Egypt that deserve their “eco-friendly” status given their strident conservation efforts.  Now we’d like to draw your attention to a boutique hotel in Ürgüp, Turkey that has partial claims to eco-friendliness and full claim to a fascinating architectural history.

Last Call for Israeli Clean Tech Companies: Meet Dream Teams In California

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If you were an aspiring actor, it would be like getting an invitation to a wine and cheese Hollywood party with the industry’s top directors. Or an aspiring chef, getting some in-person training with Le Cordon Bleu masters in Paris. If you are an Israeli clean technology entrepreneur in focus areas of renewable energy, water, or smart grid technologies, now is your time to shine under the sun of California’s hottest clean tech investors, potential partners and utilities companies.

The California Israel Chamber of Commerce (CICC) is making its last call for Israeli companies to apply to its prestigious 3-day event, promising to open doors to some of the best opportunities America has to offer. Will your company open that door on April 26 to 28 this year?

Polyamory and Sex Could Save The Planet, Author Argues

magritte lovers rene photoThe Middle East is conservative. But could increased “polyamory” open people up to practices that could save the environment?

At first glance, sex and the environment don’t make obvious bedfellows.  How can the answer to our environmental problems – global warming, access to fresh water, ecological sustainability, and the use of fossil fuels  – possibly be found between the satin sheets of lovers? According to a growing number of greenies, free love may just save the world. In her newest book, Gaia: The New Politics of Love, author Serena Anderlini-D’Onofrio attempts to lay the groundwork for this premise.

Sheikh Abdul Aziz: A Green Sheikh Who Cares About Our Planet

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green sheik Abdulaziz bin Ali bin Rashed Al Nuaimi, The rich folk from the United Arab Emirates are known for their over-the-top cars and wealth. Like gold-plated mercedes. Faux or real, the oil-rich Arab countries, even when they make green initiatives do it in such a bombastic way, counter-intuitive to the gentler, earth-friendly approaches most of us Green Prophets would stand behind.

But all might not be lost if the United Arab Emirate’s “Green Sheikh” gets his way: Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Ali Al-Nuaimi (who we interviewed on Green Prophet), a member of the ruling Ajman Royal Family is now being known not just for his wealth. Locals are calling him the “Green Sheikh” and “Down to Earth Sheikh” as a result of his concern for his local and the world’s environment as a result of pollution and climate change. His concern started young, says his family.

According to the National, Sheikh Al Nuaimi has embarked on a journey to Antarctica as part of a 70 member team to study the effects of global warming and climate change on what was once considered to be the world’s coldest place on earth.

South Korea Looks to Collaborate With Israel on Renewable Energy

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south korea and israel renewable

Shimon Peres from Israel and Lee Myung-bak from South Korea at Davos. (Image via Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs.)

A high-ranking delegation from South Korea is currently visiting Israel to explore possibilities for collaboration between the two countries on renewable energy. The 37-member delegation represents 22 companies, as well as local authorities and R&D centers, according to a report published in the Globes newspaper.

During the extensive 10-day visit, the delegation will visit 13 Israel companies: Zenith Solar, Heliofocus, GreenSun Energy, BrightSource, Better Place, Seambiotic, IQWind, Arrow Ecology, ETV Motors, Ormat Industries, EnStorage, CellEra and Aqwise. The delegation will also meet with officials at Israel’s National Infrastructure Ministry, Industry Trade and Labor Ministry, and Foreign Ministry, and will visit Tel Aviv University and the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology.

Join the Campaign to Get Facebook to Use 100% Renewable Energy

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For the next week, your friends’ profile pictures might look a little different on Facebook.  A little greener.  Don’t worry, they’re not sick – they’re just concerned.  They’ve joined Greenpeace’s campaign to get Facebook to use 100% renewable energy and you should too.

Starting tomorrow, Facebook protesters will be changing their profiles to icons such as the one below in order to urge the social networking site to go green.

Why now?  Because Facebook recently announced that it will be building a massive data center in Oregon in order to serve the millions of people currently using the site.  Facebook proudly noted that the center will be full of energy efficient computers… but the company plans to run the site on coal-generated electricity.  (So what’s the point, right?)

Since Facebook is one of the largest (and therefore one of the most energy guzzling) social networking sites in the world, having them go sustainable would make a big impact.

The campaign is calling for Facebook to:

Commit to stop using polluting coal power.

Use its purchasing power to choose only clean, renewable sources of electricity.

Advocate for strong climate and energy policy changes at the local, national and international level to ensure that as the IT industry’s energy demand increases, so does the supply of renewable energy.

Share this information publicly on its website so its millions of users know the company is a climate leader.

'Zendegi' in Neve Tzedek Offers Highest Quality Organic, Fair Trade Clothes

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zendegi-neve-tzedek-organic-cotton-boots-fair-tradeThe first time I entered Zendegi, a natural and organic clothing shop in Tel Aviv’s historic Neve Tzedek neighborhood, a particularly unique pair of boots caught my eye.  I picked up the boots to take a closer look, but quickly realized that they were out of my intern-activist-blogger budget range.

“But you have to understand why!” exclaimed Shirly Askary, the store’s proprietor.  Shirly explained that the boots are made of 100% organic cotton and natural rubber soles.  Furthermore, they are hand-sewn by a Palestinian man in Hebron, who receives a fair wage for his labor.

The boots, as well as the organic, hand-loomed cotton clothing, hand-crafted gemstone jewelry, and natural bath and body products reflect Shirly’s ambitious vision for her store.

Is Moshe Safdie’s Habitat ’67 for Middle Eastern Urban Housing?

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Habitat ’67 was a model for sustainable village living, in the city. Based on the model city Haifa, does it translate to the Middle East today?

We recently profiled Moshe Safdie’s LEED certified Peace Building as a call to bring more sustainable building to the Middle East. In it, we briefly mentioned Habitat, Safdie’s debut project, which was also his Master Thesis for McGill University.

Built for the 1967 World Fair in Montreal, we wondered whether this controversial cube complex, conceived long before today’s flurry of climate concerns, could enhance other Middle Eastern development projects such as REAL Housing in the Negev Desert in Israel.

Moshe safdie, Habitat 67, Montreal, Karin Kloosterman, 2021

The scaled-down village

Habitat ’67 is a thirteen level housing complex comprised of 354 modular construction units making up 158 houses.  Each of these, molded with precast concrete, is 38’6” x 17’6” x 10’ high and can be put together in 20 different combinations ranging from 600sq ft single roomed units to 1700sq ft four bedroom homes.

The top eleven floors consist of housing, the second floor shelters a pedestrian plaza complete with walkways and bridges, while parking facilities and a road system connecting the service areas are on the ground level.  One family’s roof is another family’s garden.

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Creating a garden was an extension of the greater plan to make apartment habitation more like life outside the city.  The young graduate modeled Habitat as an affordable, egalitarian housing unit reminiscent of Arab villages and the hills of Haifa, where he was born and raised. He hoped that his design would give families a sense of belonging, identity, and individuality often lacking in crude block apartments sprouting elsewhere.

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Habitat should have been a village for 5,000 residents, but the World Fair treasury balked at the idea and the original design was scaled down to 1/6th of its planned size.

Safdie’s village would have included shops, services, a school, and a clinic, and the high population density would have kept rents affordable.  Instead, according to Pierre Berton, because the treasury minimized Safdie’s project, residents feel isolated from amenities and today only the wealthy can afford the high rent prices.

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Is concrete sustainable?

Sustainable Cities considers pre-fabricated housing to be one of five feasible approaches to city building, which puts Habitat in good standing.  However, though concrete is more sustainable than steel, according to tests conducted by the University of Illinois, mining, heating, and breaking down concrete can be energy intensive.

moshe safdie habitat 67

Concrete is also a mediocre insulator and heat conductor, even though its large thermal mass enables it to store energy efficiently.  So, while we think that Safdie’s original plan could be re-visited as a decent model for urban housing in the Middle East, the actual complex, which is neither affordable nor necessarily sustainable, is less than ideal.

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::Habitat 67 website

Melt-in-your-mouth tehina cookie recipe

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tehina cookies
You can only go right with cookies made from tehina. So good with black tea or a cup of milk.

You won’t be able to keep these halvah-like cookies around for long. And they couldn’t be simpler to make.

We never thought to use tehina (or tehini as you might know it) in baking, but this recipe produces the most meltingly delicious cookies you can imagine.

If you’re looking for ways to use up your flour before the Jewish Passover holiday coming up, try them. It takes only 25 minutes and six steps from raw ingredients to placing them in the cookie jar. Advice: hide a few for yourself before they disappear.

Tehina Cookies Recipe
Yield: about 3 dozen cookies

Ingredients:

200 grams soft margarine or butter

1 cup sugar
2 tsp. vanilla
1 cup tehina. If there’s a layer of oil floating on top of the jar, stir in back in.
2 cups plus 4 tbsp. flour
1 tsp. baking powder
Optional: 2 tbsp. pine nuts and powdered sugar

Method:
Preheat the oven to 160 C – 325 F.

1. Cream the margarine and the sugar together.

2. Add the vanilla and the tehina and blend again.

3. Combine the flour and the baking powder; add to the tehina mixture.

4. Form balls the size of walnuts and place them on a greased baking sheet. The dough is dry and crumbly, so squeeze it together to make the balls.

If adding the optional pine nuts, do it like this: form one cookie ball; take 2 or 3 pine nuts into your left palm, and with your right hand, press the ball onto them. Reverse it onto the baking sheet. If the ball crumbles slightly, just squeeze it back into shape with your fingertips.

Bake for 13-15 minutes. Do not bake longer. The cookies need a little moisture to retain their shape and not crumble. Cool the baking tray on a rack, and don’t touch the cookies for at least 5 minutes. If they’re handled while hot, they will fall apart.

Dust with powdered sugar when they’re cool.

Enjoy!

Other green-inspired recipes you’ll enjoy:

Photo of Tehina Cookies by Miriam Kresh

The Middle East Will Remain "LEAF" – Less as Nissan Puts Electric Car Efforts Elsewhere

nissan electric car

Nissan’s all-electric LEAF gives a run for Volt’s and Better Place’s money. Nissan has no plans, however, to target infrastructure-poor Middle East.

The battle over which company will market the first practical electric car is becoming more intense with the introduction of Nissan’s new total electric LEAF model. The Japanese carmaker is marketing this new entry into the electric car market as being one which is totally electric, as compared to hybrids and GM’s Volt model (which also has two engines, even though the gasoline one is only used for charging the batteries for the electric engine).  I’ve compared the Chevy Volt to Better Place’s Renault prototype model, and pointed out the differences between the two concepts.

Get a Ride and Reduce Carbon Emissions with Egypt Carpoolers

If you’ve ever braved the streets of Cairo, you know that every time you cross the street there as a pedestrian an adventure is in store.  Cairo, unfortunately, is almost synonymous with traffic congestion, and all those drivers want to get where they’re going – fast.

But if there were less cars on the road (and fewer people riding alone in their cars), those drivers really could get where they wanted fast.

Five young Egyptians who got sick of sitting in traffic during their morning and evening commutes decided something had to be done.  They started Egypt Carpoolers for those who are “fed up with traffic, pollution, gas prices and stress related to driving in Egypt.”

How does Egypt Carpoolers work?

It is a website where ride offerers and ride wanters can meet.  The steps are simple: register on the website for free, offer/request a ride, and start carpooling.  (Or, in other words, start reducing carbon emissions, saving money, meeting new people, and hopefully getting to work faster.)

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

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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.