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Haifa Chemicals and Citi To Sell Carbon Credits

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191900913_322a652ad8Haifa Bay is lovely, but it’s extremely polluted. Chemical giant there now producing carbon credits with Citi bank.

What would induce a significantly environmentally polluting company like Israel’s Haifa Chemicals to make an agreement with an international banking institution like Citi to meet targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions?

Haifa Chemicals has long been a producer of various chemicals for use in the food, fertilizer and technical chemicals industries.

Some of these chemicals include potassium nitrate, used both as a food additive and as an ingredient in explosives (such as gunpowder). The company also produces phosphate based fertilizers that are used for a number of food products, including meat and fish, dairy products, and vegetables. The production of these chemicals meant that this company, along with others such as Taro Pharmaceutical Industries and Kitan Textiles has far exceeded set pollution limits.

Haifa Chemicals in particular was formerly engaged in discharging 1.5 million tons of toxic effluents into the Kishon River (one of Israel’s most polluted streams) annually, much of it phosphate based.

Eco Rabbi – Hanukkah and the Importance of Spreading the "Green" Message

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hanukkah-lights green eco rabbi

This week we begin our celebration of the festival of Hanukkah, also known as the Festival of Lights. The main event of Hanukkah is the lighting of the Menorah, a candelabra.The Menorah has 9 arms, one for each day of the holiday, plus one more candle for lighting the other ones.

One of the lessons of Hanukkah is that if you want to spread a message, you need to vocalize it and announce it to everyone. Everyone who celebrates Hanukkah looks forward to walking through their local community during Hanukkah at night and seeing all the lights in the windows. I think that we should take a page out of Hanukkah’s book to understand how to spread the importance of treating our environment better.

Curapipe's Little Pigs Tackle Leaky Pipes and Faulty Oil Pipelines

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curapipe-pigsCurapipe’s solution is designed to seal leaks fast, with little inconvenience to the customer.

Most kids know that some little pigs ate roast beef, some stayed home and some had none. Today, some new little pigs from Israel are going out to fix pipes – tackling a billion dollar problem in the world’s water, gas and oil industry.

Curapipe, on Israel’s southern coast in Ashkelon, has a new solution that can detect and repair a problem that hides below the radar of the water and gas industries. Green Prophet covered Curapipe a few weeks ago, and now here is an update: Tiny pinhole, almost undetectable leaks emit water, oil and natural gas, costing the taxpayer money and causing unnecessary greenhouse gas emissions to enter our atmosphere.

A Farmer's Story on Natural Sheep Grazing for the Jericho Date Company

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sheep-jericho
At the Jericho Date Company Bedouin sheep, not pesticides, keep the weeds at bay. This story is written by Ronley Konwiser, a new farmer working the land.

The Jericho Date Company maintains a date plantation of 320 date palms that is in the Judean desert, adjacent to Jericho and within plain view of the Dead Sea. One of the main problems throughout the year has been the weeds. Every time that I would get to the end of the field, after a weeding session, I would have to start over again.

Weeds simply just don’t go away. Of course this problem can be solved with pesticides and weed poisons that are very effective, but definitely defeats the purpose of keeping our dates and date field organic and eco- friendly. What to do? Bring in the sheep!

Jennifer C. Daniels Asks if Farming and City Intersect in the Middle East?

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city-gardens-algae-middle-eastJennifer C. Daniels is a visionary and artist in Florida who poses a good question for the world today — can farms and cities intersect in this modern world? Much of what she discusses applies to life in the Middle East as well.

“The increase of population – a strong argument for urban living – has required 1.2 acres of farmland per average person (to sustain dietary requirements),” she says.

“In addition, the equivalent to 1 acre is lost per person increase in population. This consumption of land will result in the devastation of arable land by 2050.

What is the resolution? Can farm and city intersect? Can there be efficiency in this intersection?”

A Model "Garden Library" For Urban Environments in Transition

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garden-library-tel-avivAn art collective in Tel Aviv has built a new library in a park for migrant workers, making the city more sustainable.

Green architects and urban planning experts will like this new community project in Tel Aviv. It’s got green written all over it because this new library (set up in a park where refugees collect), gets marginalized people out of the house and engaged in learning, sharing and breathing something more than stale indoor air. Okay, Tel Aviv air is not that hot… but this project could serve a model in cities everywhere.

Jews are known as ‘people of the book,’ and many Israeli Jews put special emphasis on reading and education. But when refugees and migrant workers come to Israel, they tend to fall through the cracks. Their kids attend Israeli schools and learn Hebrew, but with limited or no access to the public library these marginalized people aren’t exposed to literature and the power of the written word.

When a collective of Israeli artist types was looking to express itself in the urban environment, it dreamed up the Garden Library. Now open on Saturdays and Sundays in the south Tel Aviv neighborhood of Neve Sha’anan, where a majority of refugees and foreign workers live, the Arteam collective created two outdoor garden libraries in Levinsky Garden – one for small children, and one for adults.

Can the American-Danish MethaEnergy Compete With Better Place?

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methaenergy fuel cellIs a Serenus methenol fuel cell package the best one going?

With the opening Monday of the 15th meeting of the Conference of Parties (COP15) in Copenhagen, some of the discussions taking place there will deal with finding “greener” solutions to ground transportation, particularly automobiles and other vehicles which are now considered as being one of the major forms or air polluters on our planet.

Car companies in particular, like Better Place and MethaEnergy,  plan to promote products at the conference.

MethaEnergy’s technology is based on a unique fuel cell design using methanol, a highly flammable compound that is produced from the combination of carbon monoxide gas with hydrogen, and is often produced from natural gas, a very available commodity in some parts of the Middle East, including Qatar – and in the near future, Israel.

The UN Tells Israel to Produce More Solar Power

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aora-solar-power-pictureAora fires up its “sun” flower in the desert. But Israel is not doing enough for itself, says UN.

Despite successful companies like Solel and BrightSource, Israel itself is not producing enough power from solar energy, says Cristophe Bouvier, the regional director for Europe at the UN Environment Program, who recently summoned an Israeli delegate to complain about Israel.

What’s new about that?

Ecomum Scratches Her Head From…Lice!

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head-lice-ecomum-naturalThe kid’s got head lice, again? Ecomum offers her natural tips.

Oh the joys of back to school, done with all the holidays (for now), found bliss in returning to a routine and actually drinking my tea while it’s still hot. Then being a mum and thinking this is just too good to be true (because you know it is), you see your child having a veritably good scratch of her head.

On closer inspection head lice are the culprit and action is demanded. Living in the Middle East, there always seems to be rounds of head live thriving at schools. There are healthy ways to do it.

Conventional treatment for head lice is not an inviting option, the off-the-shelf shampoos and treatments from your pharmacy all contain insecticides. These shampoos are recommended to be left on the hair for several minutes: they might be killing the critters but they can also be absorbed through your child’s scalp into their bodies – a big no, no!

Denmark Set to Spotlight Electric Car Initiative at Global Climate Change Conference

battery-exchange-israel-better-place

For 25 years Denmark has supported the adoption of electric vehicles by excluding them from the hefty 200% tax levied on new cars.

However, due to the limited capabilities of the models available, only 497 electric cars are registered in the entire country, as the New York Times pointed out in a recent article. All eyes are now on Palo Alto-based Better Place, which has an ambitious plan to re-engineer the electric car market. The company is now in Copenhagen allowing reporters to test-drive its platform.

Jordan Asks Thailand to be a Rainmaker

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china-cloud-seedingCloud seeding in Beijing, where silver iodide is fired with canons into the clouds to induce rain. (Photo from Howstuffworks.com)

As the fourth driest country in the world, Jordan is desperate for a water solution. This week, the Jordan Times anounced that Amman asked Thailand for help in cloud seeding to open the skies. It’s one of many Jordanian projects to get more water, such as the Red-Dead Canal and the Edama conservation campaign.

Greenpeace Petition Calls on Netanyahu to Attend Copenhagen Climate Change Summit

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netanyahu copenhagen greenpeaceLebanon’s Prime Minister is going, but Israel’s won’t. Locals sign petition to get its PM to Copenhagen.

Sick of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s excuses for not attending the international Cophenhagen summit on climate change, Greenpeace has been circulating a petition in order to urge him to attend.  Apparently, many Israelis agreed with Greenpeace.  Within three weeks over 6,000 Israelis signed the petition.

The petition was presented to Netanyahu on Sunday morning, with a request that the Prime Minister confirm his attendance at the conference.

Nili Grossman, the director of Greenpeace Israel’s energy campaign, said that “we call upon the Prime Minister to stand at the interest of the Israeli public, to promote Israeli solar technology and join the group of developed countries to reduce the use of coal.”

Reflecting on Copenhagen and Climate Change Effects In Morocco

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[youtube width=”560″ height=”475″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1CBejL7dgv0&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

As the world seeks a deal on global warming in Copenhagen, the Middle East and North Africa remain one of the most vulnerable regions in the world to climate change.

The region is one of the worlds’ most water-scarce and driest, with a high dependency on climate-sensitive agriculture and a large share of its population and economic activity in flood-prone urban coastal zones. Morocco is one North African country where the effects of climate change are becoming increasingly apparent.

For a comprehensive view on what’s happening in MENA region countries, please visit Daniella’s report: The Middle Eastern View of Copenhagen

::NTV

The Middle Eastern View of Copenhagen

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copenhagenToday opens the two-week round of climate change negotiations in Copenhagen, Denmark. From this corner of the world the conference is a meeting of giants – literally, the giant polluters like the U.S. and China, which make it seem like there is little the small countries of the Middle East can do to stop global warming. But Middle East policy makers still have serious goals for reducing dependence on fossil fuels at home. Here’s a brief of the messages coming out of Lebanon, Jordan, Israel and Egypt on the opening day of the 192-country Copenhagen conference. Statistics are from the International Energy Agency.

Greening Hajj and Madina for the Muslim World

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sustainable hajj

Hajj is either starting or it’s already over, and millions of participants have returned to their countries of origin or are starting to prepare to travel to Saudi Arabia.

But even before the pilgrimage began, representatives of major world religions met in London to try to use the power of faith to help reverse the effects of climate. Muslim leaders who were present at the November 3rd meeting, brought with them the idea of turning the Arabian holy city of Madinah into a green oasis; not only for future pilgrimages but as an example to the Muslim world to abide by the principles of Islam which is said to instruct Muslims to protect the earth.

The London event called Faith Commitment for a Living Planet, met at Windsor Castle, and speakers included UN Assistant Secretary General Olav Kjorven, HRH Prince Phillip, Nigel Savage, founder of the environmental Jewish charity Hazon, and others representing various religious faiths, including Islam, Sikhism and Hinduism, Taoism, and various Christian faiths.

Muslims in attendance brought with them ideas to create a number of green cities in Saudi Arabia, beginning with Madinah; according to an address by the Grand Mufti of Egypt, Sheikh Mufti Ali Gomaa,  who told the audience that a number of measures are to be taken to improve the city’s environment, including reducing exhaust emissions for public transport, and reducing the number of plastic bottles used by pilgrims by improving the quality of tap drinking water.

We’d written last years already about the fast train to Hajj to reduce congestion and pollution.

“Pollution and global warming pose an even greater threat than war; and the fight to preserve the environment could be the most positive way of bringing humanity together”, said Mufti Ali Gomaa.

As we wrote earlier this year, there was much concern that this year’s Hajj pilgrimage could result in large scale outbreaks of contagious diseases such as the H1N1 flu virus; which was fortunately not as serious as Saudi health officials feared, due to a number of precautions taken before and during the week-long event.

In regards to making cities like Madinah more environmentally friendly, solving the transport problem in and out of the two main holy cites of Mecca and Madinah may be greatly benefited by the completion of a planned high speed train network which will link both locations with the main arrival and departure cities of Riyadh and Jeddah that will help reduce to large numbers of busses and private vehicles which carry pilgrims to and from the holy sites.

The Windsor event is said to have been one the major events dealing with climate change prior to the upcoming Copenhagen Climate Change Conference, otherwise known as COP 15,  scheduled to begin today.

Even though various projects have already been created in the Kingdom in regards to improving the environment, it should be pointed out that Saudi Arabia is still one of the world’s major suppliers of petroleum oil which is said to be one of the major causes of global warming and climate change.

It is without doubt that this will be brought up during the COP 15 Climate Change Conference next week (Lebanon’s IndyACT will probably be on the scene); and both Saudi religious and governmental leaders (including the Saudi Royal Family) should be aware of this fact when instituting measures to make cities like Mecca and Medinah more green.

Photo via www.googleimages.com
::www.bt.com.
:: www.windsor2009.org