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Lebanon Farmers Market Makes Food Not War

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lebanon-farmers-marketAlthough Lebanon’s Christian and Muslim communities live in an uneasy balance, a trendy farmers market has helped bring the nation’s diverse groups together to sell traditional food.

According to Agence France-Presse, 47 families sell fruit, vegetables, preserves and bread in Beirut’s Souq El Tayeb, the first farmers market in the country.

Chef and TV personality Kamal Mouzawak started the souq in 2004, and refused to close it during the 2006 war between the Hizbollah terror group and Israel.

He told AFP, “Whether Christian or Muslim, we all eat the same foods. The differences are more regional.”

Souq El Tayeb is part of a farmers market trend across the Middle East: Eco-Baladi markets Palestinian produce, while Tel Aviv hosts a slow food market at the city’s port.

Related: Pope Leo visits Lebanon in an act of faith and peace

Mouzawak has also begun a traveling with his vendors to reach other parts of Lebanon. A new restaurant called Tawlet Souq El Tayeb featuring freshly made regional fare will soon open as well. According to AFP, far from pursuing political turmoil, the farmers’ focus on pushing good food out the door:

Their interests revolve more around who can bake the best kebbeh (or kibbeh), a traditional dish made of minced meat and burghul (crushed wheat), or come up with the tastiest tabbouleh, a parsley-based salad, or grow the most mouth-watering vegetables and fruits.

One caveat of the farmers market may be it audience: the vendors cater to “well-heeled Beirutis.”

Green Prophet writer Jeff Yoskowitz visited the Tel Aviv market last summer and noticed a serious class problem:

This farmers market was so ridiculously expensive as compared to the shuk that I only bought purple potatoes and blackberries and then left after sampling all the free foods I could. The choice to hold the market at the port, in the North of Tel Aviv, pretty much shows the kind of constituency they’re hoping to develop: yuppy Tel Aviv types. Had they held the market more in the center of the city perhaps the ideals would spread. Instead I was surrounded by iphone carrying Israelis enjoying a luxury market.

On the other hand, high prices may be the only way to keep rural farmers in business. Whatever the case, we wish Souq El Tayeb good luck.

 

Taga Hybrid Bike-Stroller and 8 Israel-related Cleantech Headlines, Week of August 16, 2009

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taga-stroller-mom-kids-israel

During the week of August 16, 2009, researchers from Ben Gurion University began taking steps towards commercializing their cheaper method of reverse-osmosis desalination to clean dirty groundwater. GreenProphet covered Taga’s hybrid bicycle and baby stroller in one and Globes reported on plans to install solar energy systems at Ben Gurion Airport. For these stories and more, check out this week’s 8 Israel-related cleantech headlines below.

Water
Water Desalination Using Novel Method Of Reverse Osmosis Promises High Recovery Levels

Aqua Soft’s Drone Plane Collects Water From Air, Drops It As Rain

Israeli researchers start pilot for new desal technology

Solar/Wind
HelioFocus harnesses the power of wind and sun for electricity

Investments and Partnerships
Venture Capitalists Decrease Risk Appetite

Central Florida seeks business deals with Israel

Inside Israel
Ben Gurion Airport to install solar energy systems

The Taga Hybrid Bike-Stroller Goes from Road to Whole Foods Shopping in 30s Flat

Israeli Parents Organize "Walking Bus" to Transport Schoolchildren

Walking Schoolbus in Missouri, USA
Walking Schoolbus in Missouri, USA

Groups of parents in the Israeli cities of Kiryat Ono, Raanana and elsewhere have organized “walking schoolbuses” to transport children to school in the mornings.

Elementary-school children walking to school used to be a common sight in Israel. But modernization has led large numbers of parents to take them in the car each morning. Recent campaigns warning against allowing children under 9 to cross the street alone have further discouraged walking.

Chicago Muslims Launch Green Ramadan

minaret-mosque-jaffa-israel-islam-photo

Suburban mosques in Illinois are preaching carpools, recycling and reduced meat consumption this month as part of a Green Ramadan campaign launched by the Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater Chicago. According to the Daily Herald, the Council includes 50 mosques with 40,000 members.

Five mosques have officially signed on, including the first solar mosque in the United States, the Bridgeview Mosque Foundation (left).

From the Herald:

“Ramadan is the month where you change your lifestyle, so it makes a lot of sense to use the month to change our behavior in terms of consumption, environmental consciousness and stewardship,” said Zaher Sahloul, Bridgeview Mosque Foundation president and chairman of the Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater Chicago.

Aqua Soft’s Drone Plane Collects Water From Air, Drops It As Rain

solar-drone-plane-water-photo-aqua-softGlobal warming increasingly threatens humankind’s reliance on rainfall, but now an Israeli inventor has come up with an ingenious solution to diminishing water sources: a hovering unmanned plane powered by solar energy that harvests water from the air and drops it to the ground as rainwater.

The idea may sound wacky, but Mayer Fitoussi, CEO of Aqua Soft, a Haifa-based company specializing in environmentally friendly solutions to real-life problems, is serious.

“Have you noticed how condensation forms on airplane windscreens at high elevations because of the water vapor contained in clouds?” he asks. “That’s water that doesn’t necessarily reach the ground, and there are millions of tons of it in the atmosphere.”

Fitoussi, 53, an avid inventor with a knack for thinking outside the box, already has seven US patents registered to his name, despite dropping out of high school at an early age. “I’m autodidactic,” he explains. “Everything I know I taught myself.”

After his compulsory military service he traveled for 15 years throughout North America, including several years spent in Santa Clara at the time when the term ‘Silicon Valley’ was entering public consciousness. “My neighbors
down the road were busy in their garage developing the first version of Apple computers,” he recalls.

 

Higher flights mean more water

His vast and varied technical knowledge, he says, was acquired mainly in the libraries of Stanford and Berkeley, where he would immerse himself in informal studies. “Of course, that was in the days before the internet changed the world. Later, back in Israel, it reached the stage where the Technion’s librarian knew me so well that she offered me coffee every morning.”

He returned to Israel 15 years ago. Since then, he has earned the support of Israel’s Chief Scientist’s office in his quest to develop some of his innovative products. “I’m probably the only person in the world to receive a government development grant despite not having a formal education,” he quips.

Fitoussi says his team has completed a feasibility study of the water-producing drone project, and is looking for an investor to finance the construction of a pilot.

“The system involves harvesting water from air, and can be adapted to a pilotless plane,” he tells Israel21c. “The higher the plane flies, the colder it is and more water can be harvested. The water from air is garnered using a well-known technology. What we did was to combine this technology together with solar, wind, heating and cooling energy to make the water production more efficient and much cheaper.

“The drone will be powered by natural energy sources: the sun, wind and evaporation. There is no limit to the amount of water it can produce. Air circulation powers its turbines. This invention combines existing technologies. Beyond this, I cannot tell you more.”

A prototype in Israel’s north

For now, the project remains just an idea on paper. “We have to generate some $2 million to bring it to the pilot stage. The prototype will not fly – it will stand on a high place in the Galilee or Golan Heights and produce water. The colder it is there, the more water it will produce. Once we’ve proved that the system works, we will be able to advance to the product development stage.”

Israel is a world leader in the development of unmanned aerial vehicles, mainly for military purposes although civilian applications are increasingly in demand. No longer resembling children’s toys, UAVs can now be the size of jets. They can stay in the air much longer than manned airplanes, fly higher and further, and negate the need for considering the pilot’s personal comfort and safety.

Drones are increasingly being used worldwide for applications such as traffic monitoring, policing, airborne irrigation, scientific research and ionization of the atmosphere above large cities suffering from air pollution.

“A drone can be controlled from the ground and guided through strong winds,” Fitoussi points out. “Rafael Advanced Defense Systems and the Israel Aerospace Industries have already expressed interest in the project.”

Fitoussi says that the idea is economically feasible. “It currently costs between 60 and 80 cents to produce a cubic meter of water via desalination. Using this system, the price will be five cents per cubic meter,” he claims.

A glider with wings like solar water heaters

“The amount of water produced will depend on the size of the plane – the larger it is, the more economical. Each square meter of solar cells will be able to produce 500 liters (1,057 pints) per day. The wings will resemble solar water heaters, like those on the roofs of almost every house in Israel. It will stay in the air like a glider, and never needs to land.”

The rain-generating drone is but one of Fitoussi’s inventions, developed and marketed through Aqua Soft. The start-up spent four years based in a technological incubator in Beer Sheva before Fitoussi returned to his native Haifa a year ago. “The company is growing at a tremendous rate – green products are the way forward,” he says.

Aqua Soft’s main money generator is its unique natural water filter, which consumes no energy or chemicals, eliminates chlorine tastes, locks pollutants, dissolves minerals into easily absorbed particles, needs no filter replacement and produces no scale. “It’s for all your life, and the magnetized water is as tasty as mineral water,” he enthuses.

Another field his resourceful mind has delved into is that of producing ‘green’ fuel. “We know how to make gas from air using the ZSM-5 catalyst [a heterogeneous catalyst for hydrocarbon isomerization reactions patented by the Mobil oil company in 1975 and widely used in the petroleum industry]. I’ve been developing this method for seven gears, and have improved the production costs by 80 percent by recycling the organic materials,” he says.

“The added advantage is that the catalyst is produced using solar and wind energy – like everything else I do, the whole process is green.”

 

 

Is Egypt back-tracking on GM crops ban?

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GM biohazard

The Egyptian government has apparently performed an astonishing U-turn on banning controversial Genetically Modified crops from the country. According to reports in the press earlier this month (hat tip: Treehugger and Reuters), authorities declared that Egypt had officially become the Middle East’s first GM-free nation. On 12 August, Egyptian Agriculture Minister, Amin Abaza, told the government news agency MENA:

“…it was necessary that all crops imported from abroad and exported from Egypt be accompanied by a certificate from the country of origin stating they are free of genetically modified materials.”

“No agricultural products especially wheat, corn and soya bean would enter except after examining samples from the cargo.”

But it was too good to be true apparently.

Jordan Bankrolls Cheap Vegetables for Ramadan

jordan-marketJordan  opened 15 lower-cost vegetable markets Saturday in several cities in honor of Ramadan, the month-long Muslim fasting holiday that began Friday.

According to the Jordan Times, the government began the market program last Ramadan. In exchange for a free stall, water and electricity, farmers agree to mark their produce down 30 percent. The program cost 6 million Jordanian dinars last year.

We reported earlier this year on a failed Israeli plan to tax vegetables and fruit, which drew this reader reply:

Recycled and Recyclable Cardboard Furniture For Kids of All Ages

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Krooom's Naggie Bookcase, which can hold up to 10 kgs per cell

Here on Green Prophet we love to hear about green design.  In the world of green furniture design we’ve already covered Green Lullaby, which makes cribs, doll houses and doll cradles for kids out of recycled cardboard paper.  But now there’s a new recycled cardboard furniture design company in town and they’re making furniture for everybody.

Krooom, an Israeli design company with international representation (website no longer working 2021), is producing eco friendly DIY cardboard furniture for the home, office, and kid’s room.  Fun cardboard furniture isn’t just for kids anymore.

With a focus on the environmental impact of their products, Krooom makes a conscious choice to use cardboard with at least 60% recycled content (which consumes less energy than producing products from virgin fibers) and to also ensure that their products are recyclable.  According to Krooom’s website, precycling is just as important as recycling.  P

recycling is “the process of making a conscious choice to purchase or use products and services which will have a less harmful effect on the environment.”

Krooom's Storage Trunk can hold 32 kgs
Krooom’s Storage Trunk can hold 32 kgs

But beyond being environmentally conscious and friendly, Krooom’s designs are beautiful.  Check out their Naggie Bookcase above, or their convincing faux wooden storage trunk on the right.  Other products include file cabinets, magazine racks, wine holders, and a child’s table with chairs.

Nitzan Bertele, the founder of Krooom and the company’s chief design offer, said that “the challenge we faced was to bring cardboard to a level where it can compete with similar products from plastic and wood at the mass retail level.”  But once they figured that out, the sky was the limit.  Bertele continued to say that “we brought in a new concept, we are penetrating all sorts of markets, and once we do that we will keep refreshing them on a seasonal basis with new designs and products.”

Krooom’s designs are also NTR – No Tools Required – and intended for easy assembly.  Arriving flat and with easy instructions, a la IKEA, their products are truly intended for the widest possible market.  Bringing eco design to everybody.

Read more about environmentally conscious furniture design::

Danit and Yinnon Simhi Upcycle Retro Amcor Fridge in Their “Groovy” Kind of Way

Brigitte Cartier Creates Baladi Recycled Design

EcoMum on our Chemical World: Formaldeyhde in Nursery Furniture

The Taga Hybrid Bike-Stroller Goes from Road to Whole Foods Shopping in 30s Flat

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taga-stroller-mom-kids-israel

I’ve not yet had kids, but when I do I might buy a Taga – a hybrid bicycle and baby carriage developed by Dutch and Israeli designers.

The Taga is a bike, a stroller or a biking stroller. All 3. And it’s good for little kids (babies), bigger kids too, as well as twins and kids of all sizes.

We can see the Dutch influence (I’m half Dutch too), while the baby part is very much an Israeli thing. Unlike in some metropolitan cities where young families move to the burbs after the birth of their first, Israelis tend to stick around in the city if it’s in their blood. And they have lots of babies, much more than the average family in Europe or the US.

Sulha's Environmental Message: If Jews, Muslims and Christians can Live Together, the Environment Will Benefit too

sulha peace project israel palestine photo

 A year ago, James wrote an article on Green Prophet about a unique organization known as the Sulha Peace Project and its role in reconciliation among peoples of different religious faiths and cultures, which is what the word sulha or reconciliation  in Arabic is supposed to be about.  

The Sulha Peace Project was founded in the year 2000 in the aftermath of the beginning of the Second or Al Aqsa Intifada,  with the hope to find some positive ways to bring people together, including those at variance with each other (Israelis and Palestinians, in particular) in order to acquire a better understanding of issues that separate people –  and to help find solutions to achieve tolerance to live together as fellow human beings.

This led to the first Sulha gathering in the late fall of 2001,  which occurred coincidentally during the time and period leading up to three important interfaith religious holidays: Ramadan, Hanukah, and Christmas. Their environmental message is strong:

Israel's Social Economic Academy to Lead Food Politics Course this Fall

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food politics israelThe Social Economic Academy, a non profit organization aimed at promoting social and economic change in Israel that opens its courses to the entire general public, will be leading a course on food politics this fall – starting in September.

The name of the course is What Are We Nourished By? and will be held at Kibbutz Revadim in south-central Israel.

The course will not be taught by a single lecturer, and will rather be taught by a variety of people with different perspectives on food – ranging from chefs, to environmentalists, to farmers, to devout vegetarians.  All of the lecturers are participating in the course on a volunteer basis.  Each class will present a new issue and be lead by a different lecturer.

Check out the course syllabus:

The Politics of Food, Ami Atinger (Heschel Center) – 9.2.09

The Ecological Footprint of the Food Industry, Eran Ben Yamini (CEO of the Green Movement) – 9.9.09

Tooth Enamel Biomimicry Inspires Lighter, More Fuel Efficient Planes and Spacecraft

plant sharing two women holding pots
Smile it’s free

It’s been a mystery: how can our teeth withstand such an enormous amount of pressure, over many years, when tooth enamel is only about as strong as glass?

A new study by Prof. Herzl Chai of Tel Aviv University’s School of Mechanical Engineering and his colleagues at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and George Washington University gives the answer. And it has applications in the field of green aeronautics.

The researchers applied varying degrees of mechanical pressure to hundreds of extracted teeth, and studied what occurred on the surface and deep inside them.

The study, published in the May 5, 2009, issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, shows that it is the highly-sophisticated structure of our teeth that keeps them in one piece — and that structure holds promising clues for aerospace engineers as they build “greener” aircraft and space vehicles of the future.

How Israel's NewTECH Is Watering The Economy

oded-distel-newtech-israel-photoWater is fast becoming the new oil. Without it, nations starve and conflicts ensue, like the piracy off the Somali coast we’ve written about. Predictions become direr as we factor in global warming. And new conflicts in the Middle East could erupt at any time over that most innocuous and life-sustaining element.

With limited resources and no cooperation from neighboring countries, authorities in Israel quickly understood that they would have to bootstrap what little water options they have, to irrigate their very dry land. Necessity spurs innovation, and along the way, Israel created an industry.

Cost effectiveness, familiarity with both the business and geographical climates, innovation, and solutions that really work, are among the factors that draw water infrastructure representatives from all over the world to meet with Israeli companies.

One of the best channels to Israeli water solutions and investments is via Oded Distel, director of the government-run NEWtech, a new initiative to help countries access Israeli water technologies. Before its establishment, contacts were usually forged at conferences, like the upcoming WATEC water conference in Tel Aviv in November.

NEWtech, which stands for the National Water Technology program, is a one-stop shop for advice and solutions pertaining to your water needs and investment goals. Read on to see more about what they do, and about some of the hottest Israeli water companies.

Israel Ditches Historic Land Administration

ariel-atiasHomeowners in Israel can take title to the land under their houses and apartments after the Knesset voted in early August to privatize the Israel Land Administration.

The reform passed 61 to 45, above the protest of environmentalists, Jewish nationalists and Arab parties. The law will transform the ILA, which historically controlled 93 percent of Israel’s land, into the Lands Authority. This body will sell state land, beginning with 100,000 acres and expanding to double that by 2014.

We’ve covered the land reform as it was debated; for more background, check out this post on land in Israel and this one on the last vote.

According to the JTA:

Gil Yaacov, director of the Green Course student environmental group, part of a 13-organization anti-privatization coalition, says the government’s plan relinquishes control under the cover of efficiency.

“Out of the total 800,000 dunams, 550,000 are open spaces — places that are not built yet,” Yaacov said, citing coastal areas, among others. “Once you privatize those open spaces, the government loses control over the conflict between private investment and the public interest.”

New Biofuel Company "MME New Diesel" Links Jordan, Gaza and Israel

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biofuel bubbles israel gaza and jordan green gas photoLast week we had news that Gaza and Israel are smoking a peace pipe for water. Now this is more news that should bring a smile to the face of every leader in the Middle East: A true regional partnership, brokered by three peace foundations – that is about to reduce biomass pollution for Israelis, Jordanians and Palestinians.

Even better, it will transform biomass waste into biofuel, so that farmers and industrialists can turn a profit while simultaneously creating much-needed jobs in the region.

The idea was initiated by the Peres Center for Peace (we’d reported earlier) at an annual conference in Germany – the Jordanian-Israeli Forum on Economic Cooperation in 2008. A joint Jordanian-Israeli company, MME New Diesel Company, with technology supplied by a German company, will run the biofuel initiative.