Home Blog Page 685

Iraq Begs Dry Neighbors For Water

4

turkey-iraq-syria-waterWith the regional drought carrying on for its third year, Iraq is in a water bind as its rivers dry up. Turkey’s Hurriyet Daily News reports that Baghdad has urged Istanbul and Damascus to release water so that residents of southern Iraq don’t flee of thirst. The problem is that they are suffering from water problems of their own. Left, the three countries’ ministers meet in Ankara.

Iraq, once a food exporter, has to import 80 percent of its supply this year. The country has turned off the hydroelectric power plants over the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers to release dammed waters, but it hasn’t been enough. Now Iraq wants Syria and Turkey, both upstream, to release their own dams. In response, Turkey said they are trying, but global warming is decreasing the water supply there too:

“We even abnegated our electricity production in order to provide Iraq and Syria with more water,” said Environment and Forest Minister Veysel Eroğlu, who hosted the Ankara summit along with Energy and Natural Resources Minister Taner Yıldız.

Eroğlu said climate change was the main cause of the dried-up riverbeds.

“Turkey’s biggest dam, the Atatürk Dam, has been almost emptied. The water level decreased by 10 percent,” he said, confirming that his country had provided a flow of 500 cubic meters per second in line with its legal responsibilities.

Iraq’s water shortage is having disastrous effects. An area that used to be known as the Garden of Eden – 9,00 km. sq. of lush marshes – has shriveled into a parched pach of 760 km. sq.  The depopulated wasteland is becoming a haven for drug smugglers. In April Turkey announced it would release more water to revive the marshes, but apparently that effort hasn’t gotten too far.

But Syria and Turkey have their issues, as well. Climate change has emptied out 160 villages in the northern reaches of Syria, while lakes in Turkey have been drying up or turning into polluted salt water marshes thanks to warming and river diversion.

 

Friends of the Earth Middle East Joining Forces with 350.org to Organize Climate Change Protest

10

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5kg1oOq9tY&eurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.350.org%2Fmission&feature=player_embedded#t=97[/youtube]

Friends of the Earth Middle East (FoEME) is an Israeli, Jordanian, and Palestinian environmental organization that has been doing a lot of good since 1994.  The organization focuses on promoting cooperative efforts in order to solve communal environmental problems in the Middle East and improve relations between the people in the region.

Now they are joining forces with 350.org, an international campaign that hopes to inspire the world to create a sense of urgency among world leaders for changing policies that would effect climate change.  The campaign is focused on the number 350 – the level of parts per million that scientists have determined to be the safe maximum for CO2 levels in our atmosphere.

The collaboration will lead to FoEME’s organization of a regional protest at the Dead Sea on October 24, 2009 – the day that 350.org has designated as “Day 350”.

How to clean your body with raw, organic food the Ann Wigmore way

5

mitzpe alummot raw food retreatMitzpe Alummot (literally, “Sheaf Observatory”) is a health farm in the lower Galilee of Israel that focuses on restoring the wellbeing of its visitors during their stays.  But it also focuses on the health and wellbeing of the environment, one blade of wheatgrass at a time.

A large component of any stay at Mitzpe Alummot is the gourmet vegetarian, organic raw food.  Besides not insisting on a strictly vegan menu, the food offerings at Mitzpe Alummot are the extreme environmentalist’s dream.

Vegetarian food is more environmentally conscious because it conserves all of the energy associated with raising livestock to be eaten as meat, and organic food keeps harmful pesticides out of our soil, air and waterways.

The health farm claims that cooking food in temperatures under 48 degrees Celsius (or 105 degrees Fahrenheit) preserves the nutritional values of the food, since food cooked above that temperature loses 50% of its protein and 70% of its vitamins and minerals.  Cooking food in temperatures under 48 degrees also means saving a lot of energy.raw food mitzpe alummot

Mitzpe Alummot believes in the Ann Wigmore philosophy, which “regards the body, the mind and the spirit as one whole.

This method offers a natural way of living, which helps prevent different ailments, while providing the tools to conquer disease.”

We would like to add that their holistic approach to food encompasses a healthier environment as well.

If the health benefits and energy savings are of interest to you, make sunburgers and Jerusalem artichoke salad and a basic fruit pie and carob fudge brownies for dessert.

As of 2025 the website was down, and presumably the center is out of business.

Read more about other food issues:

Solar Cooking Ovens: Another Eco-Solution from the Gaza Strip

Carlo Petrini’s Slow Food, A Review

Lebanese Farmers Market Makes Food Not War

Arava Power and 11 Israel-related Cleantech Headlines, August 23 – September 1, 2009

4

Desalination plant

During the past week, Siemens bought a 40% stake in Arava Power while BrightSource Energy broke ground for a solar-steam farm that will partially power a Chevron oil field in California. Israel continues to face water shortage problems and an Israeli company has  developed a plastic bottle that disintegrates. For these stories and the rest of this week’s 11 cleantech headlines, check below.

Investment and Economy
Giza makes first Taiwan investment

Israel’s economy returned to growth in 2Q

Siemens buys 40% stake in Arava Power

Solar
Chevron taps solar-powered steam to get more oil

Israel Pioneering Use of “Bottled” Solar Energy Has Many Following Suit

Water
New desal technology goes inland to evaporate brackish water

2009 World Water Week Honors Young Turkish and Israeli Innovators

In Israel
Draft tender published for Negev wind farms

Israel’s main source of water faces dire shortage

Israeli company develops disintegrating plastic bottle

Israel Will Increase Solar Energy Capacity with New Feed-In Tariff

Jordanian and Israeli Scientists Collaborate to Study and Protect the Gulf of Aqaba

gulf of aqaba moses rockThe Gulf of Aqaba (also known in Israel as the Gulf of Eilat) is an important Middle Eastern body of water.  The 99 mile long extension of the Red Sea is surrounded by four countries – Jordan, Israel, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia – and houses coral reefs and hundreds of fish and invertebrate species.

Since the marine ecosystem is especially vital to both Jordan and Israel, scientists from both of these countries will be collaborating with scientists from Stanford University to provide detailed oceanographic information that would help Jordanian and Israeli environmental agencies minimize pollution.

Participants in the project say that they are collaborating for the sake of science, peace, and environmental conservation.

According to Stephen Monismith, one of the scientists from Stanford (and the person responsible for the beautiful underwater photo above), “the people involved are interested in international collaboration in science and protecting the place they live.  Nothing in the ocean understands political borders.”

Qatar Plans Environment Program With Syria For Turning Deserts Green

11

Greening the Desert

The UAE Emirate state of Qatar is planning to launch an environmental program to turn desert areas into usable pasture lands and other green areas by findings ways such as desalination. They also plan on replenishing the country’s rapidly depleting ground water resources, and using scientific innovations for growing of grass and other plant life that will support animal herds such as sheep and goats.

In an agreement reached with the Damascus-based  Arab Centre for the Studies of Arid Zone and Dry Lands (ACSAD), Qatar hopes to integrate the growing of special plant life suitable for dry regions, along with the breeding of animals more suited for life in hot, arid regions.

Qatar is no stranger to being involved projects dealing with both the local and world environments. Its Stars of Science TV program is already beginning to feature new and innovative ideas to improve the environment such as a device to lower the internal temperature in a parked car during the summer, as well as ways to produce electricity from ocean waves. 

Israel Pioneering Use of "Bottled" Solar Energy Has Many Following Suit

 

solar-water-heaters-on-roof_lbiRv_5784[1]Israeli solar energy companies such as Solel Solar, Aora, Ormat technologies, and a host of others are now world leaders in the development of sun power to produce electricity. But Israel, a small country of 7 million, with more than half its land area being desert, has been a solar energy pioneer virtually since its beginning in 1948.

What is now fondly known to many Israelis as a “dude shemesh”  or  sun boiler, was invented by a guy named Levi Yissar  back in the early 1950’s, when electricity was very expensive due to a severe energy shortage.

His innovation consisted of a modified  electric water boiler that was erected on the roof of a building and attached by pipes to two simple glass faced collector plates that heated water running through them from the boiler, when the sun’s rays struck them during certain hours of the day. The heated water then returned by gravity feed to the insulated boiler, where it was stored for later use in kitchens and bathrooms.

Yissar, an engineer, and entrepreneur, soon opened the first company selling such devices, the Neryah Company, in 1953. The device soon became so popular that people waited for weeks to purchase their own “dude shemesh” ; and it wasn’t long before other companies got into the act. By the mid 1960’s, one in every 20 households already had their own sun boiler, and more than 50,000 had been sold.

2009 World Water Week Honors Young Turkish and Israeli Innovators

rain water conservationWorld Water Week, an annual meeting in Stockholm about the world’s most urgent water-related issues, took place this year between August 16-22.  Organized by the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI), it brought together water experts, practitioners, decision makers, and global leaders in order to come up with solutions to international water crises.

It also recognized the achievements of innovators in the field of water conservation.  Including those of two young women – Ceren Burçak Dag of Nisantasi, Turkey and Emily Elhacham of Israel.

Both young women were recognized as part of the Stockholm Junior Water Prize, which is open to young scientists between the ages of 15-20.  The prize is intended to encourage these scientists’ continued interest in water conservation and often draws thousands of international participants.

Think Again: What to Do With That Old Pair of Jeans

9

jeans apron reuse designThink Again is a new series that provides fun ideas for how to reuse items in your home that you would normally throw out or recycle.  Reusing is higher on the “green” food chain than recycling, because getting another use out of an object is always more effective than spending the energy to recycle it.  Plus, trying to reuse can force us to be creative!

The three R‘s – reduce, reuse, and recycle – are listed in that order for a reason.  Reducing the amount of products, or materials, or energy that you use is the most environmentally conscious.  After that comes reuse – which means giving the materials that you did use a second life without going through any type of intensive recycling process.  And the third is recycling, which does require energy but is still more effective than using completely new materials.

But the three R‘s don’t have to be so boring!  Reusing can be a lot of fun since it forces us to think of ways to use an item that differ from its original purpose.  It’s a way to bring a little bit of whimsy into your life, to surprise yourself with creativity, and to enjoy a product in a new way.

For our first installment in the Think Again series, we will be working with an old pair of jeans – an item that almost everyone has lying around.  Jeans are the staple of many wardrobes… which means that at some point or another, they wear out.  And even if you try to repair them, after one or two repairs or patches it is time to give up wearing them.

But that doesn’t meant that you have to throw them out!  What else can be done with an old pair of jeans?

Bill McKibben Talking in Beer Sheva

7

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kiYWXEuktO0[/youtube]

Legendary American environmentalist Bill McKibben is paying the region a visit in early September. On Monday, September 7th McKibben will speak at 9.30 AM in Beer Sheva, in Israel’s Negev. Exact location TBA.

Born in 1960, McKibben founded the 350.org campaign to address the climate crisis. He published his first book as a serial in the New Yorker, later printed as The End of Nature (Random House 1989). It was one of the first climate change books printed for a wide audience.

Tel Aviv’s Junktion inspires us to upcycle our junk

14
juntion barrel seat drum seat
Green Prophet’s Karin Kloosterman finds a seat in Jaffa with her baby

The last time we covered Junktion Studio – a Tel Aviv based design studio that creates whimsical designs out of reused and repurposed “junk” – they were making medicine cabinets out of old suitcases and foosbal soccer player hangers.  Their designs took the material of the original items completely out of context in a manner that was both comical and surprisingly functional.

Their designs also kept the original items out of the landfill, proving to us that we should always think twice before throwing things away.  Because who knows?  That chipped mug may have a second or third life still in it, and those outdated t-shirts could still surprise you.

Seats made out of wooden window shades
Seats made out of wooden window shades

So just when we thought that the folks at Junktion couldn’t get any more creative or hilarious, their latest set of designs proved us wrong.  Check out the telephone desk lamp above, or the seats made out of old wooden window shades to the right.

Shower head hangers
Shower head hangers

As Junktion has described itself, “Junktion people take everyday objects out of context, sometimes attaching them to others, unrelated, and at other times just turn them upside down on the table, take a step back and say: hmmmm….  Junktion people love seeing objects in new ways, stuff that makes us think, stuff that makes us act, stuff that makes us laugh.”

Junktion's Telephone Desk Lamp (comes in blue and pink)
Junktion’s Telephone Desk Lamp 

All of Junktion’s products are handmade and one-of-a-kind, bringing a warm human touch to discarded, industrially mass-produced items.

:: Junktion

More upcycled design:

Elanit Neutra 

“Waste Lb” Design Company Encourages Lebanese to Waste Fewer Plastic Bags

Merav Feiglin Doesn’t Make Light of Trash, She Makes TRASHLIGHTS

Beer Sheva's Old City Battles Shopping Malls

8

shachar-udi-3One of the most pressing needs in countries with little open space is to make urban life desirable enough that city folk won’t want to flee to the suburbs. But in Beer Sheva, a strange phenomenon is underfoot – suburbanization inside the city that drags commerce away from the historic district. A story I wrote for Tablet Magazine explores whether Israel is turning into sprawling California, particularly in light of the recent land reform.

Memorable quote by urban planner Yodan Rofe, discussing a major Beer Sheva strip mall: “It’s the 1950s style of the U.S. A big parking lot surrounded with sh*t.”

Jordan Water Company Organized Water Festival for Kids, With a Focus on Conservation

6

jordan water conservation festivalLast week we heard about the Jordan Water Company (Miyahuna) going into private homes in Amman and installing water conservation devices, but now they’ve gone straight to Jordan’s youth.

Aiming to raise children’s awareness of the importance of water conservation, the Jordan Water Company held its first ever children’s water festival in Amman last Tuesday.  350 kids between the ages of six and twelve participated.

According to Miyahuna Executive Director Zakareya Tarawneh, the festival aimed “to inculcate a sense of responsibility amongs children in terms of the value of water, water use and the commitment to do something to protect water.”  He added that it was important to educate children on the real and positive impact they could have on the preservation of water resources.

Green Ramadan Org Plans to Focus on the Environment During Ramadan

New Green Ramadan LogoA new NGO, known as Green Ramadan, plans to make Muslims and non-Muslims more aware of protecting the environment. Daniella touched on the new Ramadan project earlier.  Meanwhile the organization is so new that its website, www.greenramadan.org is still in the development stages.

Yet, the message being given will hopefully bring a new awareness among Muslims, particularly younger ones, concerning the importance of protecting and preserving the natural environment in countries where many of live.

Some of these countries, where environmental mismanagement has resulted in severe damage to both land and water habitats, include Indonesia and Malaysia, the countries bordering on the Persian Gulf and other bodies of water (the Gulf of Aden, Bay of Bengal, Mediterranean and Red Seas, for example); and those situated in and adjacent to large desert regions such as in North Africa and other parts of the Middle East.

Istanbul Considers 3rd Bridge Over Bosphorus

2

bosphorus-istanbul

With one half in Asia and the other in Europe, the cultural hub of Turkey has long depended on two bridges to link the city over the Bosphorus Straits (above).  But a proposed third one has raised the ire of environmentalists who say it will damage the city’s forests and water resources, reports the English-language Turkish paper Today’s Zaman.

Supporters of the new bridge say it will make Turkey an important transportation corridor. They point to other highways that have crossed the three largest water reservoirs of Istanbul as evidence that mega infrastructure projects can be built safely. Cahit Turan, general director of public highways in Ankara, told Zaman:

“The important part of the project is preventing the construction on the direction of the third bridge. To discourage new buildings around the route, there will be a few necessary connection points from the main road to the city and these connections will not be throughout the forests but to already populated areas like Ümraniye and Beykoz.”