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Brown Seaweed Liquid Morphs to Heart-Healing Gel

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Come on guys: this is just another umpteenth reason why people need preserve nature and our seas and respect them — BioLineRx just got a $282 million deal to license its heart healing medicine based on the common brown seaweed.

No doubt it is the most expensive seaweed known to medical history – the Israeli company BioLineRx, founded in 2003, just released the news that one if its two compounds – the BL-1040 – to repair damaged heart muscles after cardiac arrest, has been licensed by the New Jersey-based company Ikaria Holdings in a $282.5 million deal, confirms a BioLineRx representative, Dganit Bar.

Ikaria now owns the worldwide exclusive license to BL-1040, and what could be a potential breakthrough treatment for preventing repeat heart attacks after an initial event.

City Waste Dubai Event Sets To Manage Middle East Garbage

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pile-of-trash-shook photo

City Waste is an inaugural four-day event that will take place from 11-14 October 2009. The Middle East’s rapid growth over the past years has brought about significant waste management challenges to the region.

In response to these challenges, the City Waste 2009 will be a platform to discuss and share strategies on the increasing quantities of generated waste as well as the need for innovative waste management solutions.

The event will be officially inaugurated by the UAE Minister for Environment & Water, H.E. Dr. Rashid Ahmad Bin Fahad, on the first day of the main conference, Monday 12 October 2009.

Eng. Hassan Mohammed Makki, Director of Waste Management Department, Dubai Municipality, will provide a keynote presentation on strategic insights into the Clean Up the World Campaign. He will reveal new waste systems and upcoming green technologies that are being utilised by the municipality, such as vacuum waste collection systems, underground storage facilities, and underground compactors for commercial districts.

Will You Be A Middle East Climate Refugee? Escape To An Underground Desert Living Unit

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loki-underground-desert-unitCan’t stand the climate change heat? Why not move underground?

For Reynard Loki and Jennifer Daniels, the future might lie, for some people in places such as Israel or Australia, in what they are calling Underground Desert Living Units, UDLU for short.

Loki began working on the idea in March 2008, and he later found Daniels to do the illustrations.

When asked how he was inspired to create UDLU, Loki said a news article titled “Exotic climate study sees refugees in Antarctica” got him thinking about where such refugees might live. Another news article titled “Global Warming Threatens Australia’s Iconic Kangaroos” spoke of climate models showing up to a six-degree rise in Australia’s temperature by the year 2070.

The article predicted that large swaths of Australia will become dry and parched.

And then a radio interview with British scientist James Lovelock about New Zealand serving in the future as a “lifeboat” for climate refugees in the southern hemisphere convinced Loki that the idea of UDLU might be useful to think about and envision.

“You’ve seen it happening in Australia already: Desert is spreading and things just won’t grow,” Lovelock told a New Zealand radio station reporter last year. “The island nations like New Zealand will be spared that kind of damage.”

IQWind and 7 Israel-related Cleantech Headlines, Week of July 12, 2009

shari-arison-miya-waterDuring the past week, IQWind raised $500k from U.S. investors and N-Viro launched a clean soil facility in Israel.

Israel’s water situation was compared to Tanzania’s and Shari Arison (pictured left) made the news about looking to increase her solar-energy holdings.

For these stories and the rest of this week’s 7 headlines, check below.

Citizens Shut Out as Tel Aviv Debates Skyscraper City

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Neve Tzedek Skyscraper Map

The Tel Aviv City Council held a discussion yesterday on a handful of building plans that, if approved, would effectively transform some of the city’s most historic areas beyond recognition.

The discussion, which council members described as “fateful” and “dramatic,” drew a large number of city residents, eager to have a say in the planning of their neighborhoods.

However, the discussion was conducted in a manner that seemed to exclude the public, while avoiding a serious discussion of the city’s future development.

Water Rich and Water Poor – A Tale About Israel and Tanzania

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Israel is very small country, as compared to most African countries, such as Tanzania.

Yet despite this vast land difference (Israel has a land area of 8,019 sq miles compared to Tanzania’s 364,900 sq miles) Israel has been able to utilize 95% of its renewable water resources, estimated at 1,800 million cubic meters, and grow a significant part of it’s own food.

Tanzania has significantly more fresh water resources available, including more than half of Lake Victoria, Africa’s largest fresh water lake; Lake Tanganyika, and part of Lake Nyasa (otherwise known as Lake Malawi).

Yet despite this, Tanzania has a chronic food shortage due to a severe water shortage problem, and millions of children suffering from various physical ailments attributed to malnutrition. Can Israel help them?

N-Viro International Smells Lucrative Sewage Sludge in the Center of Israel

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Dan region’s sewage sludge smells like an appetizing business venture for N-Viro International.

The Ohio-based environmental and materials operating company, which pioneered the conversion of sewage sludge  into commercial soil fertility products, is expected to open a new N-Viro Soil manufacturing facility to serve Israel’s Greater Tel Aviv region by the end of this year.

Abu Dhabi Company Aabar to Get into the Electric Car Business

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The Tesla Roadster, a purely electric sports carThe Tesla Roadster is a purely electric sports car. Coming to Abu Dhabi?

The oil-rich United Arab Emirates owe most of their wealth to their natural abundance of petroleum.  But what they’re starting to do with that wealth is very interesting.  Abu Dhabi, for example, is increasingly leveraging its oil wealth in favor of positioning itself as a center for clean energy.

Last week Aabar, a company controlled by the emirate of Abu Dhabi, acquired 40% of Daimler’s interest in Tesla Motors Inc. in order to jointly work on the development of lower carbon emission vehicles.

Khadem Al Qubaisi, the Chairman of Aabar Investments, said that “when we acquired our stake in Daimler in March we identified a number of potential areas for cooperation between our two businesses.  One of these was a desire to focus on the development of electric vehicles and projects aiming at the reduction of CO2 emissions.  Our joint involvement with Daimler in Tesla is completely in line with this strategy.”

The CEO of Daimler, Dr. Dieter Zetsche, similarly expressed a positive outlook about joint work with Aabar, and explained that “Aabar is supporting us with the development of battery systems and electric power trains, accelerating the worldwide commercialization of electric vehicles.”

Lebanese Expats Build Suburbia in Bint Jbeil

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lebanon-map-bint-jbeilAccording to Lebanon’s Daily Star, the war-ravaged southern town of Bint Jbeil is remaking itself as a suburban summer getaway for expatriates who left over the last three decades of strife.

Suburban living has made deep imprints across the Middle East, particularly in the shopping malls that have sprouted up in the West Bank and the mega-mall planned for Israel’s Beer Sheva.

In the war of 2006, Bint Jbeil was a major flashpoint between Hizbollah and Israeli troops; Hassan Nasrallah delivered an incendiary speech there. But the violent history starts earlier: Bint Jbeil was invaded by Israeli troops in the 1978 Operation Litani. From 1982-2000, Israel occupied southern Lebanon, including Bint Jbeil, following the country’s civil war.  The Daily Star reports that thousands of Lebanese left the country during the 1970s and 80s to start anew in the American Midwest, particularly Dearborn, Michigan. Since 2000, they’ve come home for summers spent in villas that remind them of their adopted home:

Pollution in a Promised Land: Alon Tal on Israel and the Environment

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Here in Israel a few months ago we celebrated Yom Ha’atzma’ut or Independence Day with fireworks, barbecues, and mutual congratulations on how much we’ve achieved in 61 years –– absorbing millions of immigrants, sustaining a vibrant democracy, building a dynamic economy –– and a certain amount of soul-searching about how much we still haven’t: peace, intra-Jewish harmony, a national soccer team that qualifies for the World Cup finals and more.

In honour of Yom Haatzmaut, I read a brilliant 500 page book ––rather sad, I know, but that’s the kind of kid I’ve always been ––Prof. Alon Tal’s “Pollution in a Promised Land: An Environmental History of Israel” is the definitive work on the subject. In retrospect it was also the perfect read for the day.

Tal’s book does much more than its subtitle claims. As you would expect it tells the story of how Israel’s rapid economic development has come at a high environmental price; it traces the roots of Israel’s current water crisis to bad planning and short sightedness in the early years of the State;

BGU Makes Green Plan for Bedouin City of Rahat

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ahmad-amraniAs a geography Master’s student at Beer Sheva’s Ben-Gurion University, this semester I took a class in environmental law and policy with Alon Tal (we profiled him here). Our final project was to work on a green plan for Rahat, an Israeli Bedouin city that suffers from serious issues of garbage control, shade, green spaces and environmental awareness.

The Jerusalem Post’s Ehud Zion Waldoks covered our final meeting. As a member of the open spaces team, I went on a field trip to Rahat with Ahmad Amrani (left) who is trying to green the city. Rahat is not the first Bedouin locale to take on the environment; Darijat is Israel’s first solar village.

Eco-Activist Yeshiva in Jerusalem Brings the Torah Down to Earth

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A volunteer working in the Hansen Community Gardens
A volunteer working in the Hansen Community Gardens

The links between religion and environmental concern/activism are no news to Green Prophet.  We’ve covered them in our Eco Rabbi series, discussion of the environment and the Qu’ran, and in stories about multi-faith perspectives on the environment.

But it was news to discover an Eco-Activist Beit Midrash (EABM) in Jerusalem’s Yeshivat Simchat Shlomo, which, in their own words, tries to “bring Torah down to earth.”

Founded last year and based in Nachlaot – a neighborhood near the center of Jerusalem – EABM’s founder’s statement proclaims that “we envision a learning center for people inspired by the natural world and dedicated to it’s current struggle with humankind to have a chance to connect to their own Jewish roots and tradition of change… The tremendous body of Jewish law is about fixing the relationship between people and the Creator, through the land we live on and through the interactions we face with each other.”

EABM’s mission is “to become a serious center for a deep Torah ecology, connected to land and our modern people, cultivating a cadre of rooted, informed and inspired activists to bring lights of Tikun (fixing) into our own communities and the world.”

Israeli Tycoon Yitzhak Tshuva Sees Red-Dead Canal As A Money-Maker

Map Red Dead Canal

Billionaire entrepreneur Yitzhak Tshuva, a man whose parents couldn’t afford to buy him a watch for his Bar Mitzvah, is now planning to undertake an even greater project on himself.

The self-made Real Estate and business wheeler dealer is now planning to become fully involved in the construction of the proposed “Red-Dead” canal, that is hoped will not only save the Dead Sea from drying up, for lack of water, but result in fresh water from desalination and the generation of electricity as well.

 The monumental project has been under consideration for some time, and had reached a state that the Kingdom of Jordan has almost decided to undertake the project on its own – until Tshuva decided to become involved. 

In a report by Israel’s Globes financial newspaper, Tshuva gave a speech at the opening of the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange in which he said that his project of developing some off shore gas fields in the Eastern Mediterranean will make Israel completely energy independent for some time and may even resulting Israel becoming an energy exporter.

CartaSense Keeps A Tab On Pigs With A Chip

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With today’s factory farming methods blamed by many as the cause of outbreaks like the swine flu epidemic now infecting people globally, it’s no surprise that interest in Israeli start-up CartaSense is running so high.

The company has created technology that can pinpoint a sick pig or cow in real-time, and help the farmer isolate sickness without contaminating the rest of the animals.

Based in Petah Tikva, CartaSense has developed a small chip-based sensor that can be attached to the ear of a pig. The sensor, which should be ready for market by the end of this year, tracks and traces a number of parameters for all kinds of livestock – even bees.

Tal Ronen Wants To Reboot Planet Earth

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After watching the Al Gore movie on global warming, Israeli-American business coach and transformational thinker Tal Ronen was motivated to “reboot” his career, and at the same time, to “reboot” the planet, starting with America.

“We are embezzling the planet,” Ronen says. “Based on what I’ve studied, we’ll need about 15 to 30 planet earths to sustain what we are doing today.”

Shortly after seeing Gore’s film, Ronen was invited to give a talk to Agenda 21 in Brazil. Agenda 21 is a United Nations (UN) blueprint of a global agenda for transition to environmental sustainability in the 21st century.

It is an action plan to be implemented globally, nationally and locally by UN organizations, governments and major groups in every area in which humans impact the environment.

During his talk Ronen says he “realized we need to align the leaders and that we’re not doing that well at it. I pledged to make earth a suitable home.”

Working to save the world

That was some five years ago, and since then Ronen has been working tirelessly in conjunction with large corporate powers in Israel and America to devise a solution to help businesses change their practices so that they stop harming the planet. As an outgrowth of his work, he is creating a guidebook modelled on the Bible’s 10 commandments.

A father of three and grandfather of two, Ronen firmly believes that time is running out. Individual efforts, he says and these will not reverse climate change. Instead he offers up a solution that he believes can fulfil all the basic needs of business, the environment and society. He says: “It’s time for a reboot. When you press the restart button, the computer’s working and shutting down at the same time.”

Born on Kibbutz Hamadia, Ronen had a successful business career in the US from the late 1970s to the late ’80s, during which he helped to transplant the term “coaching” from the world of sports to the business world.

He worked with the NBA, Monsanto and Hughes Aircraft in the US and among many Fortune 500 companies internationally before relocating to Israel.

For the past 15 years he has been a coach/consultant to current Israeli president Shimon Peres, Shari Arison – the richest woman in the Middle East, and CEOs and VPs from the largest companies in Israel including Lucent, NICE Systems, McCann/Erickson, Dun & Bradstreet, Intel, United Way of Israel, Bank Hapoalim, The Ted Arison Family Foundation and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.

Taking his show on the road

Now Ronen is taking his show on the road to the US. His ambitious hope is to help save the planet and to improve the world economy at the same time, starting with the US.

Ronen fervently believes that if he could get America’s top 15 CEOs – from GM, Chrysler, AIG and more – into one room, he could change America’s economy making it healthy and sustainable.

In Israel, Ronen has already managed to transform traditional businesses into entities for which the environment is a priority. He operates his consultancy through Global Transformation Group, the organization that he founded in Israel. Experts are hired per project, as needed.

His radical ideas include transforming businesses into entities that take the environment as seriously as they do the social welfare of their employees and their company’s bottom line. And he has been so successful that those who have taken his advice – a bank in Israel is one example — have actually improved their bottom line.

Ronen, who runs a number of enterprises and consultancies, explains that his model for transforming the planet has a very efficient strategic design and takes into account mega trends in the market.

Willing to steer the planet

He believes that his unique approach, which has proven itself in Israel, will make businesses in America greener, as well as more profitable in the long-term, adding that trying out his approach is a win-win situation, since his clients only pay up if his approach leads to success.

One of Ronen’s first sparks of inspiration in the world of “transformational thinking” occurred when the self-made business coach heard Buckminster Fuller speak in the US. Fuller was already an old man, and Ronen was about 24 at the time. When Fuller, an architect and futurist, asked rhetorically who will steer planet earth, Ronen was the first to raise his hand.

Today, at 53, Ronen recalls: “I looked around and noticed I was the only one in the room with my hand in the air. If planet earth is a spaceship and someone needs to drive it, then why not me?”

Ronen relates that he truly felt that it was up to him to take the problems of the planet into his own hands. He wants to steer planet earth – to be a “trim tab,” the small but crucial steering tab on the back of a boat – an idea first defined by Fuller.

“It was a time of personal transformation. Buckminster struck a chord for responsibility for the planet earth. I think he was amongst the first to bring the concept of sustainability, versus survivability to the world.”

With his overwhelming passion and devotion to his cause, we can expect to see Ronen sharing a podium with (or perhaps coaching) the likes of Al Gore and David Suzuki in the very near future.

More green leaders from Israel:
Israeli Heiress Shari Arison Says Goodbye to Wasted Water With Miya
Gal Luft Gives Americans The Real Story on Oil
Isaac Berzin, Israel’s Green Giant
Shimon Peres and Environment Protection Team