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Cigarette Cones, So You Don't Butt Out on the Beach

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beach butt cone tel avivNew efforts to get smokers to butt out in special ashtrays at the beach in Tel Aviv look all for naught.

The City of Tel Aviv has made a stellar offer to help its resident smoking addicts (about 3/4 of the city) to stop butting out at the beach. A recent walk along the North Tel Aviv beach introduced me to cigarette cones, stacked neatly in the tray for smokers to butt out in. Nice idea, but hard habits die hard. Israelis love them smokes and cafe ha fouchs at the beach. Case in point: most of the cones were missing from the tray (the beach was empty). Either they were turned into sand castles, or taken home.

The Weeds We Eat – Karin Forages in her Backyard

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edible weeds photo, Karin Kloosterman wearing a hat and glasses eating a dandelion
Karin Kloosterman eats a dandelion leaf (weed) she foraged for in her backyard in Jaffa, Israel

Karin tries urban foraging and eating weeds from her garden. What are the chances she will live after this experiment?

Taking cues from the Arab women foraging for mallows in the kindergarten in front of my house, and Miriam’s latest winter salad recipe, I decided to do a little urban foraging myself.

(That’s me above sampling what tastes like dandelion leaves, but it could be roquet.)

This time of the year is perfect for leafy greens – ones we can find growing just about anywhere in the Levant region getting rain. Find them in a neglected city park, out in a forest, or in your background, here I present some of the greens I found in my backyard. Next week I am going to tell you (with the help of an expert), which ones you are allowed to eat and how.

Meanwhile, look through the pictures and let us know in the comments section which ones you’d eat (if you dare), and how they’d taste yummy.

A. I don’t think these are fit for human consumption, but my pooch Tasha loves eating winter grass. She is munching on some here in this picture.

B. Would you eat generic looking weeds?
edible weeds levant

C. These ones have potential. Heard they taste good stuffed.
edible leaves

D. These ones look kind of poisonous. Do you think they’d work in salad?

E. These are the weeds in my mouth above. I am growing crops of these things without even trying. I think they are dandelion.

F. These weeds look poisonous and not something I feel like biting into. But maybe they have some medicinal purpose.

G. Another weed better left in the garden? Or can we forage it?

H. These ones look like carrot tops. But they don’t smell like carrots.

So what weeds would you eat? Leave your ideas in the comments section, please!

UAE's SAG Group: Middle East – Take the Environment Seriously or Suffer

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middle east environment issues photo dry middle eastCould this “dry” setting be the entire Middle East one day if we don’t take environment issues seriously?

Business concerns in the Middle East, especially real estate developers in countries like the UAE,  Kuwait, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia are not being concerned enough about the environment, according to a study just released by the UAE branch of the Sustainable Advisory Group (SAG) as reported in the UAE’s The National.

Companies, especially those located in the Middle East, are risking their economic prosperity by not taking enough care for the environment.

According to the article, due to the impact of water scarcity and climate change on the region:

“There is a significant amount of work ahead for public policy leaders and scientists to encourage businesses to appreciate the full scope of the impacts of climate change and water scarcity on economic prosperity and business opportunity.”

Shimon Tal, Israel’s Former Water Commissioner

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shimon tal water commissioner IsraelAs we introduced yesterday, Green Prophet and the Strategic Foresight Group have been interviewing key water leaders from Israel’s water industry to understand what contributions the country can make for sustainable solutions in the region. Today we interview Shimon Tal, the former Water Commissioner in Israel and the president of the Israeli Water Association.

As the CEO of Tal Content – Consulting & Enterprise Ltd, Tal (whose surname means “dew” in Hebrew) has over 30 years of experience in professional and executive duties in Israel’s water resources management and water supply sectors. In the following interview, Tal gives us a brief and comprehensive summary of Israel’s water situation, the regional water situation and the potential for regional water cooperation. We’d sent Tal five questions, but he answered us in a letter.

Here’s his response: The five questions you sent me touch the real problems of water in our region. I will provide you with some facts and personal conclusions that might answer your questions: Water shortage is a common property of all the parties in our region (Jordan, PA and Israel). We also share mutual natural water resources. Therefore it is impossible to manage the water sector in one country separately from the regional water problems. The region is actually on the edge of the desert and extreme changes in the climate are common. A series of drought years should be taken into consideration in planning water supply and the use of natural water resources (“dryness routine”). The affect of climate change on water in our region is neglected in comparison to the affect of population growth.

On All the Water in Israel: Interviews With Government, Analysts and Researchers

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water bottles in hebrew and Arabix writing on Sinai beach imagePlastic bottles (in Hebrew and Arabic) wash up on the shore of the Red Sea in Sinai, Egypt. In this region water and pollution knows no boundaries. How can Israel be part of the change?

Is Israel a water hog, unjustly siphoning aquifers from its neighbours? Does it take more than its share? Or does it have political justification for managing its resources? Can water resources be developed so that all in the region have water security, with Israel as an instigator of change, perhaps?

With a leading spot in the water industry – from desalination technology to water saving technology – Israel has been getting a bad rap from the media and NGO reports, despite the fact that the country is attempting to cooperate on water issues despite the difficulties.

Dropping deep into the well of water experts in Israel, Green Prophet was asked by the Strategic Foresight Group (SFG) based in Mumbai to interview the country’s top experts in water. The aim is to find ways Israel could help promote water security in the region. And to take this information to high level policy makers. We’ve interviewed the country’s Water Commissioner’s office, the heads of top NGOs like Friends of the Earth Middle East, and researchers who know Israel’s water story from working in the field.

Over the next week or so, Green Prophet will be highlighting these different experts, who were posed with five questions directed to long term sustainable solutions. We hope this series will be an invaluable tool for local and international journalists, and international policy makers involved in the Middle East region. Green Prophet will be happy to give contacts to these people to those who ask.

We also hope it will be interesting for Green Prophet readers who know that ‘water’ is one of, if not the most important issue, in the Middle East-MENA region. To know more about the project, we’ve collected more from the Strategic Foresight group, below. This is the same group that penned the report on the Cost of Conflict on the Environment in the Middle East.

Oil Find Outside Tel Aviv: A Blessing or Ecological Nightmare?

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oil found in israel

Does Rosh Ha’Ayin, Israel, have its future in oil?

Finding oil in Israel near the Dead Sea is one thing, but finding significant amounts of the black, un-environmentally friendly stuff right outside of the already polluted city of Tel Aviv may wind up being something entirely else altogether.

This scenario may very well be happening, following an announcement to the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE)  that the Givot Olam Oil Company has located what appears to be “significant quantities of oil” in its Meged 5 well, located near the community of Rosh Ha’Ayin, a few kilometers north-east of Tel Aviv.

Michigan Batteries and 7 Israel-related Headlines, Week of December 20, 2009

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batteries israel

During the week of December 20, 2009, the IDF revealed that it is adopting solar energy field rechargers. The Copenhagen summit was analyzed and Israel and Michigan are teaming up to revive Michigan’s economy through the battery business. For these stories and the rest of this week’s 7 headlines, see below.

Renewable Energy
Michigan Looks to Israel to Rev Up Automotive Battery Business

Solar
SunPower and SolarPower Ltd. Dedicate 50-Kilowatt Solar Power System for HP in Israel
The IDF Adopts Solar Energy Field Rechargers in Army Practices

COP15
Failures of the UN Climate Conference will be solved by science

Environment
Cleaner fuels don’t necessarily cause less air pollution
Where will the water go?
Drought Levy to be put on hold for winter

"Hope Tree" of Bottles for the Sea of Galilee

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sea of galilee israel photo treeA “Hope Tree” planted outside Sea of Galilee incites eco-awareness in Israeli kids and public.

Israel’s only freshwater body of water, the Sea of Galilee (known locally as the Kinneret) is about the only thing every Israeli can agree needs to be repaired. Every year the water line sinks lower and lower, as more water is pulled from the lake for showers, agriculture and a growing population. But “Hope Tree” aspires to create a little more awareness to the problem.

VIDEO: Meteor's Netting Keeps the Bugs from Bugging Your Crops

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[youtube width=”560″ height=”425″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAN5S0I7a58&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]Bug off, eh? When a virus carried by the whitefly almost destroyed Israel’s tomato crop, Meteor developed an innovative new anti-insect net to keep the bugs out.

Meet Avi Klayman. He’s the man who saved Israel’s tomato crop and in the process stumbled onto a multi-million dollar industry that is now creating a green revolution in agriculture. Thanks to his invention – an innovative anti-insect netting – far fewer bugs are making their way into the vegetables we eat, enabling us to enjoy fresh, wholesome produce that is nearly pesticide-free.

Vegetable greenhouse netting may not be as “sexy” a high-tech innovation as, say, the invention of instant messaging (also credited to Israel, via ICQ), but the nets created by Klayman’s company, Meteor Agricultural Nets – which are patented in Israel and around the world – are just as revolutionary.

It all began in 1988 when much of Israel’s tomato crop was lost to yellow curl virus, a destructive disease carried by whitefly that attacks the DNA of plants, causing them to shrivel up and die.

VIDEO: James Interviews Hussein Tarabeih on Arabic Building Project in Israel

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[youtube width=”560″ height=”425″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nB2yceJvSI0[/youtube]

We’ve covered the work of the Israeli Arab eco-pioneer Hussein Tarabeih before for his work on solar power in Palestinian schools. Green Prophet’s own James has created a short film exploring the new TAEQ (Towns Association for Environmental Quality) Environment Centre, in the town of Sakhnin, Northern Israel.

It includes an interview with the NGO’s director, Hussein Tarabeih, and footage of inside and outside this remarkable building built on ancient Arabic building techniques which also happen to be eco-compatable.

::TAEQ website

Book Review of Precycle! by Paul Peacock: So You Can Do Better Than Recycling

Recycling uses up the planet’s resources. You can do better than to recycle: consume less to begin with.

That’s the premise of this short book by British self-sufficiency expert Paul Peacock, who has written 14 books on topics ranging from seasonal cooking to keeping poultry for town dwellers.

Peacock dips into the question of what “quality of life” and “currency” really mean:  money to afford supermarket jam, or the satisfaction derived from cooking up jam from fresh fruit?

A dilemma for the modern Western reader, who has little time to enjoy family, hobbies or just relaxing, but who’s compelled to get up each morning knowing that the best of her time and energy will be spent at the office.

Go Wild With Edible Weeds and Seasonal Veggies in Two Winter Salad Recipes

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winter salads beets

Winter salads are as colorful and appetizing as warm-weather ones. Miriam shares two recipes here.

The word “salad” evokes a warm afternoon, sunshine streaming in through the kitchen window and a big ceramic bowl filled with chopped tomatoes and cucumbers.

At least, it does to me. But it’s the wrong season for that picture right now. In winter, tomatoes and cucumbers are expensive. I turn to root vegetables, sprouts, and wild edibles to satisfy the yearning for salad and to round out a hot meal. These winter salads are so flavorful that they need little more than olive oil and vinegar as dressing.

Beet Salad with Orange Peel

Thin strips of orange peel make the difference between a boring salad and one that wakes your taste buds up. A light vinaigrette dressing offsets the earthiness of the beets.

How to zest an orange: the little hand-held lemon zester is a great device, but lacking one, just grate the orange lightly, turning it often so as to avoid the bitter white pith. Wash the orange well with warm water and soap before removing the zest, unless it’s organic.

Ingredients:

1 large beet, or two smaller ones. There should be about 3 cups of cooked, sliced beets.
1 small onion, thinly sliced
The zest of a small orange
3 tablespoons of chopped parsley, or chickweed
2 tablespoons of vinegar
2 tablespoons of sugar or honey
1 tablespoon of olive oil
½ teaspoon salt, or more to taste.

1. Put the sliced onion into a small bowl. To it add the orange zest, olive oil, vinegar, honey, and salt. Cover and allow the onion to marinate while you’re cooking the beets.

2. Quarter the beet (halve two smaller ones) and cook the pieces in water to cover till tender.

3. Allow the beets to cool slightly and peel them. Grate them into a bowl or cut them by hand to the size and thickness you desire (thinner is better).

4. Mix the marinated onions, with all their juice, with the beets. Add the chopped parsley or chickweed.

5. Allow the salad to rest, covered and in the fridge, for at least an hour before serving.

edible weeds saladCarrot and Sunflower Sprout Salad

Chickweed, a tasty wild edible, plays a larger role in this salad. The hearty taste of sunflower seed sprouts complements the sweetness of the carrots.

Ingredients:

2 medium carrots, peeled if not organic, and grated

1 cup chopped sunflower seed sprouts

½ cup clean chickweed

Just mix everything up together gently. This salad needs no more than a drizzle of good olive oil, salt, and a little lemon juice as dressing.
Bon apetit!

More salads from Green Prophet:

"Bird's Eye View" Raw Sewage Sighting off Beirut's Coast

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raw sewage beirut lebanonBeirut, the “Paris of the Middle East,” is pouring raw sewage into Mediterranean Sea.

It’s not just the Sidon garbage dump that’s polluting the Mediterranean Coast of Lebanon. Irrelevant Combinations blog shows airplane view pictures of raw sewage being dumped into the sea off the coast of Beirut. Although the weather outside may be frightful in the northern hemisphere, hearty winter types best avoid swimming off Beirut’s coast –– especially later in summer –– until the situation is remedied.

“Someone told me that most of Beirut’s sewage gets dumped in the Mediterranean,” writes Mohammad Zaher. “I didn’t believe her, but thought if this is true I will definitely be able to see it from the airplane when we take off. And I did. The scene was horrendous. My intention with this post is to warn you should you ever decide to go to Beirut in summer to enjoy the beach. You need to watch where you jump.”

You might also want to consult this swim guide to Lebanon beaches, Green Prophet posted earlier.

::Irrelevant Combinations

Lebanon’s Sidon Garbage Dump More Serious Than Just the Smell

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sidon garbage dump lebanon“You smell it before you can see it,” says Mohammad who talks of Lebanon’s utterly toxic dumping ground by the sea. Image: BBC.

We’ve written about Israel’s infamous garbage (sh*t) mountain and national “landmark” Hirira outside of Tel Aviv.

We learn that another large regional garbage mound, the Sidon Rubbish Dump or the Saida dump is attracting a lot of “attention” off Lebanon’s sea coast these days – and the “attention” is all bad. Or smelly, rather, reports the BBC: “It’s horrible isn’t it? You smell it before you can see it,” Mohammad, a fisherman, as his fishing boat nears it. It takes another 10 minutes for the source of the stench to appear- a giant mountain of rubbish, as tall as a four floor building. It seems to rise out of the sea outside one of Lebanon’s most ancient cities.

The Saida dump has been there since the 1982 war with Israel, when remains of buildings and other property destroyed during the war were dumped there. Later, personal garbage and other rubbish was dumped there as well, including items thrown out from local hospitals.

Mohammad, who blames the dump on his thinning fish catches, says the eyesore is also very dangerous from an ecological standpoint. Last year 150 tons from the mound ripped off and sank into the sea. Today some brave the stench and use it as a means to scrape together a living. But be careful, swimming near the Sidon dump can put you in the hospital; and avoid the medical syringes washing out with the tide.

In addition to construction wastes, medical trash, and garbage, all kinds of toxic materials get dumped there too. But according to people such as Mohammad Hamdan, a Palestinian refugee who makes a bare living by scavenging for bottles metals, and plastic materials in the dump the hospital wastes are the worst as “it full of syringes, blood, human flesh – even kidneys,” he claims.

Although solutions to this ecological nightmare are available, including moving the dump inland to another location (where it will pollute the ground water in the new location) the Sidon dump is now partially in the sea and could contaminate large sections of the Mediterranean coastline.

As noted in another article, at the environmental website Spacedaily.com Lebanon looses as much as $500 million or EU 350 million annually to pollution, much of it due to losses in the health, tourism and agricultural industries. Garbage mounds like the one outside Sidon create their share of this pollution, and contribute to global warming in Lebanon, which may cause temperatures to rise by as much as 2 degrees C in the next 40 years and by as much as 5 degrees C by the end of the century.

As to the future of the Sidon garbage mound, a lack of “political will,” due to the country’s divisive political system and weakness in the central government, there is no way of knowing if the mound will ever be moved. The plan (to move it) is in place, and money is there; the only thing that’s missing is a political decision. But until these politicians start thinking about the benefit of people and the ecosystem, this issue will not be solved,” says Mr Garabed Kazanjian, a campaigner for Greenpeace.

More on garbage and pollution:
Pollution Costs Lebanon $500 Million a Year
Arrow Ecology Sorts Through Garbage for Gold
Going on a Picnic at Tel Aviv’s Garbage Mountain

Middle East/Med Region Could Solar Power World 3 Times Over

solar energy mena middle east map imageThe sunny MENA (Middle East- North Africa) region and its associated countries could solar power the world, Maurice reports. This map-maker left out Israel.

Middle Eastern and North African countries, often referred to under the umbrella term MENA countries, have the potential to create more than 3 times the world’s power needs, according to a new study reported in the Dubai-based Khaleej Times.

Countries that move fast, the study suggests, could have the competitive advantage. Who could take the lead: MENA countries, especially ones located on the Arabian Peninsula, as well as others like Jordan, Lebanon, and Israel could be. These countries are no strangers to the notion of solar energy, and Green Prophet has covered countless articles touting solar energy in the Middle East.

One of the region’s leading solar energy development countries, Israel, has even been asked by the UN to increase its development of solar energy. Despite being an instrumental innovator through companies such as BrightSource or Solel, Israel’s own use of solar power at home more closely resembles that of a developing nation.