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After Five Years Without, Syria's President Appoints Woman As New Environment Minister

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Syria, a country whose authoritarian government has often been rife with corruption and human rights violations, has again reshuffled its cabinet as President Bashar al Assad attempts to deal with a number of problems his country now faces.

With the economy being one of the top issues, some of the first “changes” appear to be appointing some new ministers in interior affairs, health, local governments (apparently rotten with corruption), justice, and presidential affairs.

The Syrian economy is in particularly bad shape, which also affects the country’s state of security as Syria owes arms suppliers like Russia and China considerable sums of money.

The concern about the country’s security also stems from the recent Israel attack on a Syrian nuclear facility as well as the January 2008 assassination of Hezbollah military commander Imad Mughniyah in Damascus.

But the state of Syria’s environment, especially pollution and desertification, has probably resulted in the reinstatement of the Ministry for Environmental Affairs to deal with a number of pressing issues; especially Syria’s increasing lack of adequate water supplies.

kawkab-al-sabah-mohammad-jamil-dayehSyria has not had an environmental ministry for over five years; and the new one, to be headed by a woman, Kawkab al-Sabah Mohammad Jamil Dayeh, will have the assistance of the President himself who has become more interested in the state of his country’s environment.

The Arava Insitute Teaches Palestinians, Jordanians and Israelis To Solve Water & Environment Issues Together

(Cousteau interviews students from the Arava Institute in Israel. It’s a unique learning center that offers environment degrees to students from around the world.)

We’ve been following Alexandra Cousteau as she documents her travels in Israel and the Middle East.

In this video recently uploaded, she interviews students at the Arava Institute in Israel where Palestinians, Israelis and Jordanians study together to solve water issues and other environmental problems in the Middle East.

::Friends of Arava

More on the Cousteau Family:
It’s The Water That Binds Us Finds Alexandra Cousteau in Israel
The Cousteaus Set Sail For Israel
Expedition: Blue Planet Finds The End of An Era In Jordan’s Azraq Settlement

Win The $1.5 Million Zayed Future Energy Prize

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Once again, in the UAE Gulf state of Abu Dhabi, the Zayed Future Energy Prize contest is open for entries on new and innovative projects in various forms of alternative energy.

Inaugerated in January 2008 during the World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi, the contest, under the sponsorship of the Abu Dhabi government as a legacy to the late Sheikh Zayad bin Sultan al Nehyan, the prize will be awarded for the person or company with the most innovation and leadership in their contributions to the global need for future energy solutions. A prize of $1.5 million is up for grabs.

"The Compost Guy" on Compost Awareness Week

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This week marks International Composting Awareness Week, a week meant to be celebrated in Canada and the US, but which as far as I’m concerned should be truly global in scope.  

Though I’ve been in transit on the West Coast, I’ve commemorated the week by throwing my food scraps in the city issued scrap bins that sit in the kitchens of San Francisco, Berkeley and Oakland residents–which are then emptied into the green bins pictured above.  

I’ve sifted through the newly harvested top soil from a compost of an Oakland Homesteader, and I’ve pined for such composting solutions in New York and the Middle East.

Boston Globe: Who wins and loses from wildland conservation?

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Israeli nature advocates are proud of their efforts at both nature conservation and cultivating a love of hiking among the people. However, an article this week in the Boston Globe points out that creating nature preserves often means expelling the indigenous people who once lived in them. Author Mark Dowie writes that the practice began in the American parks of Yosemite and Yellowstone, but spread worldwide to places as diverse as Kenya, Botswana, Thailand, Peru and Panama. Conservation groups as a result must grapple with this unflattering picture:

“Not only has it dispossessed millions of people who might very well have been excellent stewards of the land, but it has engendered a worldwide hostility toward the whole idea of wildland conservation – damaging the cause in many countries whose crucial wildland is most in need of protection.”

A Jarring Reminder Why Bottled Water Conflicts With Green Values

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This article is not first one on Green Prophet dealing with water and other beverages sold in polyethylene and polystyrene bottles; and it probably won’t be the last either. But the increasing environmental damage, as well as health hazards being caused by this method on containerizing beverages, especially H2O, is something that should be dealt with more urgently, and the sooner the better.

Bottled water has become such an issue in spoiled, modernized societies (especially the USA) that people have this “commodity” at the top of their shopping list when they go to their neighborhood Costco or Walmart Super Center in American cities.

Although sometimes packaged and sold as “mineral water,” i.e. pure, mountain spring water that is free of chlorine and other chemicals, most bottled water is simply ordinary tap water that has gone through a filtration process to get rid of these chemicals and improve the water’s taste as well.

Bottled water sold here in Middle East, whether it comes from Lebanon’s Mt. Lebanon (where those stately cedars still grow and are threatened by climate change), the pristine springs and streams on Mt. Hermon (where Israel’s Mei Eden brand is made from), or the ones that flow into the Dead Sea (Ein Gedi brand), is still bottled water that came from somewhere, whether from an actual mountain spring or not.

Recently, even Israeli companies like Mei Eden and Netivot had to suspend their bottling temporarily when contamination was found in the water due to insufficient rainfall.

Forget Submarines, Send In The Robotic Octopus Instead

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Explore where no man has gone before, with tentacles? Now building the world’s first robotic octopus, and the world’s first soft-bodied robot, Israeli “octopus” scientists have joined a seven group international team to help marine scientists explore nooks and crannies on the ocean floor, like an octopus would.

Instead of dropping down clunky metallic submarines to the seafloor, which offer little in the way of precision, scientists are working on a soft-bodied robotic device that can gingerly walk over delicate objects, making sure not to damage coral reefs and pristine marine environments.

The initial goal of the octopus robot is to monitor the effects of global warming on the sea. But Prof. Binyamin Hochner, from the Octopus Group, Life Sciences Institute at Hebrew University of Jerusalem imagines that when complete, the robot will also have applications in medicine – inside the body – and in search and rescue missions after devastating natural disasters, like the recent earthquake in Italy.

Top of Jerusalem Mayor Barkat's Agenda Is To Green Jerusalem

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nir-barkat jerusalemAfter the recent Jerusalem elections Green Prophet hailed the new Mayor Barkat for placing an environmentalist so prominently on his list. Jerusalem Mayor Barkat not long ago presented his master plan for the city for the next two decades, and top on his list is to green the city.

His plan focuses on environmentally friendly construction as well as the use of solar panels, water recycling equipment, “green” roofing and other material for construction of public, commercial, industrial, residential and hotel buildings.

Daniella Unpicks Israel's Relationship With Land and Housing In Amiran Gonen's "Between City and Suburb"

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If you’ve heard about the demise of the kibbutz movement, then you may also know that financially strapped communal farms have recently climbed out of debt by building suburban-style detached housing developments and selling them to upwardly mobile Israelis.

Suburbanizing kibbutzim and moshavim (village settlements), along with several new suburban-style towns like Shoham (near Ben Gurion Airport), Kochav Yair (on the West Bank border in the country’s center) and Maccabim-Re’ut (between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv) are transforming the Israeli landscape from what used to be small villages surrounded by agricultural fields towards American conceptions of large, well-appointed homes in neighborhoods dependent on cars.

One of the best looks at the roots of this revolution is Amiram Gonen’s 1995 book ‘Between City and Suburb’, an extensive academic take on the changing forms of Israeli communities.

Looking for the Sustainable in Beer Sheva's Development Debate

rubik-danilovichWhile in the center of the country, the concern is to improve food quality, public transportation and vehicle efficiency, in the periphery Israel’s decision-makers worry about building a satisfying enough environment to attract and keep young people who otherwise flee to Tel Aviv. This reality was clear at a conference this morning on industry in the Negev, organized by Ben Gurion University and attended by newly appointed Minister of Development in the Negev and Galilee, Silvan Shalom.

The opening remarks were telling. Beer Sheva’s newly elected mayor Rubik Danilovitch (photo) was the first speaker. He announced that long-delayed plans to erect a high-tech park in the city were finally moving along, which would hopefully provide quality employment. He also thanked the chemical industry, whose representatives were at the conference, for their recent steps to improve their environmental record.

Afghan Opium Growers Get Burned Out

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afghanistan-poppy-opium-heroin-photo growers farm afghanAfghan farmers get “burned out” as government tows to US pressure. But for poppy farmers, it’s poppies or starvation. Wheat crops, or biofuel crops cannot compare in value.

Molar (not his real name) is an Afghan farmer living in the central Hazzrajat Province of Afghanistan. His 60 hectare farm along the Helmand River has been in his family’s possession for generations. The crop that he and his family grow to subsist on has also been the same crop for as long as his family has been living there.

And that ‘crop’ is opium.

“This type of farming is all we have to live for,” the bearded father of 12 children said recently when he was informed by Afghan police that they were coming to cut down his crop of opium poppies as part of a continuing crackdown on the growing of this crop.

Molar and his two wives, as well as all of his children over age 8 help grow, and eventually harvest, the raw opium that when finally processed becomes pure heroin sold in places like New York and other major American cities.

As heroin continues to make its way into North America, the number of addicts seeking help for heroin abuse remains significant.

Growing opium is a tradition that has been going on in poor Asian countries like Afghanistan for more than two millennium. In fact, opium is considered as this country’s major export and amounts to more than 90% of the world’s raw opium. But farmers there are getting burned out — their crops destroyed as a method of cutting back on the illegal drug trade.

Life has never been easy for farmers like Molar and his family. Afghanistan is an arid, mountainous country with scorching hot summers and frigid winters.

What tillable soil is available is located on the plains and in mountain valleys, along rivers such as the Helmand, which is the country’s largest. For centuries, the numerous warlords who ruled there made considerable sums of money by selling opium to dealers who shipped the narcotic to markets that included the royalty of Europe and the opium dens of Shanghai and Hong Kong.

And in more recent years, processed opium, otherwise known as heroin, found a ready market all over America.

Opium is the only “cash crop” that farmers like Molar have grown, as it is relatively easy to cultivate and harvest, and does not require a big investment in modern farming equipment. The most important part of the plant, known by its Latin name papaver somniferine, are the seed bulbs that form when the opium flower withers; usually in late summer.

The opium-rich sap is harvested by making slits in the bulb and then collecting the sap when it oozes from the cut bulb. The sap is then mixed with ammonia, and cooked to form a thick paste, which is then dried. At this stage, the opium is ready to be used as a narcotic by smoking it in a pipe. Although this is still done in many parts of the world, the most financially lucrative use of opium is to refine it into a fluffy white powder, known as heroin.

As an indication of the difference in price between harvested opium and finished heroin, a farmer like Molar only receives the equivalent of around $300 for 100 kg of raw opium sap.

When processed into a kilogram of processed heroin, it has a ‘street value’ at destination of half a million dollars!

To give one an idea of how much this stuff is worth to Afghan farmers, it is estimated that they made as much as $3.4 billion in exports in 2008 alone. Of this the Taliban received a cut of at least $15 million.

Since the ouster of the fanatical Taliban regime from Afghanistan in 2001, intense efforts have been made to curtail the growing and export of opium. New projects, such as one called: “wheat instead of poppies,” have been introduced to try to wean farmers off growing opium poppies and into other crops, such as wheat and other grains.

So far, this hasn’t worked out as the land available for agriculture is much less suited for cereal grains, and not nearly as profitable.

Even with the financial assistance of America and other countries, including paying subsidies for growing alternative crops, this still doesn’t replace the profits made from growing poppies.

A 1970 edition of Encyclopedia Americana makes no mention of papaver somniferine poppy growing as part of the Afghan economy. Other crops, including wheat, corn, barley, cotton, and a variety of fruits, especially apricots and pomegranates are noted; as well as a variety of minerals, including extensive natural gas fields. Due to continuous military strife in that beleaguered land, growing opium poppies has sadly become the occupation of choice.

Though the Taliban are no longer ruling, their continued presence is still felt by all, and frustrated farmers are again turning to them for assistance in keeping government forces away from the poppy fields. Terrorist elements, including Al Qaeda, still have their influence with the poppy farmers, and incomes derived from the sale of opium help fund these movements in both Afghanistan and abroad.

“This relationship between farmer and terrorist is propping up the Taliban,” an Afghan narcotics enforcement official remarked recently while supervising the cutting and burning of several poppy fields. Government corruption is rampant, however, and often poorly paid government officials corporate with the Taliban and the drug traders, including the country’s judiciary system.

Due to the country’s virtually porous borders with both Iran and Pakistan, the collected and crudely processed opium sap is merely loaded on the backs of donkeys and camels and carried over the mountains into Pakistan, where it is shipped out to waiting markets in both Asia and the West.

American narcotic agents have been working actively with the Afghans to find and destroy the poppy crops before the opium can be shipped out. Many farmers have become very agitated with the source of their livelihood being threatened.

They have been involved in this form of agriculture for so long that they consider it as a natural part of their way of life; even though many are aware that even in their own country, many people, particularly young men, have become addicted to opium and to a crude, locally processed form of heroin .

A televised documentary by CNN concluded that despite intense efforts being made to stem the growing and export of opium form Afghanistan, the narcotic will continue to be grown and sold to both terrorists and drug dealers who are more than willing to accept the risks involved in marketing a commodity that is responsible for so much human misery and is worth so much on the open market.

And an article published by Al Jazeera, noted a large amount of confiscated opium was burned recently by Afghan police authorities, most likely under orders from Gen. Mohammad Daoud, the Deputy Foreign Minister, who himself was probably under pressure from American and other Western governments.

As for Molar and his family, trying to eke out a subsistence living on their 60 hectare patch of land, it’s either the poppies or starvation.

What’s the solution in Afghan? Could biofuel crops compete with opium?

Agri Projects Offers Liquid Know-How To India

monsoon-pollution-india
(Monsoons in India channel pollution to potable water sources, contaminating water everywhere.)

Monsoons in India are both a blessing and a curse. As the heavy rains pour down, they provide the season’s much-needed water for irrigating crops. But monsoons also wipe out entire villages. They cause mudslides, and contaminate potable water. Diseases fester and spread quickly.

Now an Israeli company is using its expertise in water management to try to help Indians living in the Cherrapunjee region in the Indian state of Meghalaya – known as the wettest place on earth – to store rainwater and reforest.

Agri Projects, which is based in Petah Tikvah, combines clean technologies from about 15 major Israeli water companies like the Israeli firm, Plastro Irrigation, with other Israeli water management technologies to build clients in countries ranging from India, to the Ukraine, Thailand and Mexico, complete turn-key solutions in water management, and greenhouse construction and cultivation, offering people who need it most, the opportunity to grow food year round.

Providing water storage facilities

According to experts, the devastation during monsoon season in Cherrapunjee is particularly drastic. Clear-cutting of trees in the region has led to the disappearance of perennial springs, causing an acute water shortage despite heavy rains.

David Rumnong Ashkenazy, the business head and India representative for Agri Projects welcomed a team of Israeli experts recently to India where they are starting the new water conservation project that will give communities in India the ability to be self-sustainable by showing them how to build, water, and sustain their own nurseries and plantations.

The company is also helping the people redevelop and reforest the land based on the Israeli Jewish National Fund model.

“We have planned a holistic approach and steps will be taken wherein rainwater harvesting and a distribution system for livelihood, forestry and agriculture will be created together with the local experts for a phase-wise implementation,” Ashkenazy tells ISRAEL21c.

Building work on the $5 to $10 million dollar project, paid for by the Indian government, will start next month. The project will be a pilot that provides India with both the Israeli technology and know how for conserving water, and for growing and irrigating agricultural produce and trees.

“This is the first pilot project,” says the company director Motti Sharon. “The plan is for them to use this as a model and multiply it around the province, with the power to improve the lives of hundreds of thousands of people,” he says.

“We are not only transferring the technology solutions, but the know-how of how to manage these types of projects so they will be able to take care of themselves.”

The new project will be the third in India for Agri Projects. The company is working on a post-harvest project there and is also running a citrus scheme set up in an Indian state just above Bangladesh. While the citrus tree project only benefits a few hundred people, the Israeli model in agricultural is catching on. “It is a small and growing project,” explains Sharon.

Agri Projects was founded in 2005 by Sharon who now runs a team of 25 experts, based all over the planet, some in remote locations. Born on a kibbutz in Israel, Sharon has over 25 years experience in managing irrigation systems, integrating agricultural projects, and managing and establishing water delivery and agriculture projects around the world.

For-profit for the social good

Agri Projects is a for-profit company which gives people around the world access to Israeli greenhouse and irrigation technology, but along the way, also helps make the planet a better place.

In Mexico, Agri Projects set up cooperative greenhouses with a local partner, and the Mexican government. The idea was to give Mexicans in rural locations Israeli high-tech greenhouse equipment, so that they could grow greenhouse produce hydroponically for the US market in the winter, when fresh produce in some parts is rare.

Including about 100 greenhouses over a five-hectare area, Agri Projects helped give a viable income to about 25 villages in the Yucatan region. “These are not just regular greenhouses, but small, very high-tech and fully computerized ones,” says Sharon, adding that in Mexico the company has also helped set up large farms. “If they run it in the right way for producing in the winter, they can get excellent prices for their produce in the US.”

Infrastructure was paid for by the Mexico government, with an investment from the US.

“We are satisfied after we do a project in these kinds of regions,” Sharon says. “It gives you a great feeling.”

Not yet active in America, Agri Projects has only just started negotiating with some clients there, but the opportunities for expansion are great says Sharon.

“The US is buying most of its greenhouse vegetables from Mexico and Canada. The percentage of what Americans produce is quite low and I don’t understand why they don’t make their own greenhouses to produce vegetables,” he says.

“This is one of our strengths in Mexico and the Ukraine: a very cost effective-price, which is an advantage,” he adds.

ZenithSolar – The Most Efficient Solar Energy Collector In The World?

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(ZenithSolar’s Jetson-style sunshine-collecting DPV –  concentrating photovoltaic – dishes in the Negev Desert)

As the old saying goes: necessity is the mother of invention. And nothing appears to be truer than in the field of alternative forms of energy, especially solar energy. An Israeli company, Zenith Solar, has announced the invention of a new type of solar energy collector that is said to be much more efficient than current photovoltaic ones.

Green Prophet has covered the Israeli solar company ZenithSolar (or Zenith Solar) a number of times. Most recently when it launched its new solar energy farm last month.

The new collection device, is a series of rotating dishes made up of mirror which are said to be able to collect as much as 75% of the sun’s energy or five times those of ordinary solar collectors. The use of mirrors will reduce the need for so many photovoltaic cells as are required in other types of solar collectors, making the new system much more affordable, and even comparable to generating electricity with fossil fuels.

Walk for Love, Peace, and the Environment

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(Aboriginal men in Australia mark manhood by going on a long distance trek. Israelis too, are on a “walkabout,” but for love and the environment.)

Although a lot of people are getting into the act for environmental awareness in Israel. An organization that calls itself Walk About Love has decided to go about this in a most unusual way, by doing a “walkabout” of the entire length of Israel, from the southernmost city of Eilat to the foothills of Mr. Hermon in the north (about 1,000 kilometers).

The name of their organization is derived from the Australian term which means to go on a long distance trek, and comes from a walk that young Aborigines go on as part of their initiation into Manhood.

I caught up with the group who were spending the weekend at  a beach resort called Bamboo Village, on  Netanya’s southern beachfront.  A young participant named Avigail said that the group has been involved in a number of environmental related projects since the beginning of the trek on March 1.

The group had set up camp on the Netanya’s Green Beach beachfront and were involved in activities that included Yoga and other health related events, plus a disco tent for partying later that evening. Avigail directed me to another person, Sheri Sidot-Amir, who is one of the organizers of the project.

Sheri, age 40, and a mother, lives in Hod HaSharon, and has worked in occupations such as Graphic Art Design, Marketing, and Education. She became interested in doing something to help further ecology and environmental awareness in Israel and abroad, as well as improving cultural relations between peoples.

Sheri said that activities the project has been involved in up to now have included:

 1. Sharing environmental and cultural ideas with similar groups outside of Israel, including Columbia.

 2. Interacting with Black Hebrews living in Mitzpeh Ramon

 3. Working in an agriculture project in Modiin and with a group of Palestinians at the All Nations Café at the Beitar checkpoint in East Jerusalem

 4. In Jerusalem’s Old City, they participated in a musical jam festival with young Arab youths and in a cross religion and cultural event  ( with a Rabbi, Protestant minister, and priests) at a Franciscan Church

 5. Various community service clean up projects, including helping to clean up the Dead Sea area following a recent Dead Sea Festival “each one of us filled up at least one large garbage sack – and that after the area had been formally cleaned up by area workers!” Sheri said.

Group members have worked in a number of service projects to earn money to continue the journey (including the one at the Dead Sea) and have received assistance from both governmental and private sources, including the Ministry of Tourism, the Jewish National Fund and the Nature Reserves Authority.

Walk About Love video during the day:

Following their stay in Netanya, the group will be going to Hadera, Caesarea, then up north to Kibbutz Ziporit, and eventually to the end of  their journey at Kibbutz Dan in northern Hula Valley.

“We cover between 15 and 20 kilometers a day when on the road,” she added. 

“We have been working on various ecology projects and also conduct workshops to train people to head future environmental projects” she said.

At least 50% of the participants have been tourists, who have participated on a “come and go basis” while going on private tours around Israel. “One of them, a guy named Michael from California, was with us almost the entire time up to now.”

Many of the tourists are non-Jewish and just wanted to be involved with the project.

Sheri hopes that there will be other such events after this one is completed at the end of May. “It’s too early to tell now, as much work has had to be done to get this project going successfully,” she said. 

Go On "Hajj" To Mecca and Medina On Saudi's New High Speed Train

SAUDI ARABIA HAJJMillions of Muslims go on the annual Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina every year. A new high speed train planned by Saudi Arabia is bound to make the journey smoother, cooler, and much more environmentally-friendly.

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has long been thought of as a country where white gowned sheikhs drive luxury American, German, and Japanese cars along desert highways at break-necked speeds from one city or village or another, and then simply dump their car in the desert when it has outlived its usefulness.

Now, it appears that this mode of transportation may finally be augmented by a network of high speed commuter trains, which will be built alongside major highways, and will connect the country’s two holiest cities, Makkah (Mecca) and Medinah with the country’s largest port city, Jeddah.

A joint venture agreement singed between the London based Foster + Partners architecture and planning company, and the Buro Hapold engineering consulting giant (also headquartered in the UK) to design the fast commuter train network, which will connect the Kingdom’s holy sites with a four station train capable of reaching speeds up to 300 km per hour.

The project will be designed to make it easier for religious pilgrims to reach Makkah and Medinah, by an alternative and fast means of transport, other than buses and private vehicles, especially during the annual Hajj pilgrimage, when as many as 3 million pilgrims descend on the country in a short period of time.