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Breastfeeding and Keeping Up With "Supply and Demand"

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mom-kissing-baby photo milk production

Breastfeeding involves no processing and no waste, and helps protect the environment, as we’ve been exploring here on Green Prophet’s breastfeeding series.

Even though breastfeeding is a natural continuation of pregnancy and birth, mothers still worry about producing enough milk. An understanding of  how milk production works can help mothers avoid problems and know when to seek help.

From mid-pregnancy a woman’s breasts produce a concentrated, antibody-rich milk called colostrum. Quantities are small to suit a baby’s tiny stomach.  A few days after birth, the breasts begin to produce large amounts of “mature” milk.  Most mothers experience engorgement at this point, but if the baby has nursed well from birth it may be less noticeable.

Agritech 2009 Expo In Tel Aviv Aims To Help Feed the World

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(Tal Ya Water technologies, featured at the Agritech expo in Tel Aviv next week, could provide the world’s best – possibly first – effective dew drop collector for watering crops.)

Growing tomatoes and raising dairy cows in 113 degrees Fahrenheit is no easy feat, but over the last 30 years or so, Israeli agriculture technologies have been made to cope with whatever Mother Nature throws at them.

It’s taken special fans, software, innovative dew collectors, drip irrigation, integrated pest control tactics, and state of the art greenhouses along with some “mother of invention.”

Old Macdonald would be proud: mainly as a means to survive in the hostile desert climate, Israeli agronomists, entrepreneurs, academics, and government agencies, started focusing on agriculture.

The fruits of their labor will be on show next week at Israel’s international agriculture exhibition Agritech, from May 5 to 7 in Tel Aviv.

We Come From Comets, Finds New Icy Research

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(A picture taken by NASA of McNaught comet in Australia)

Comets have always fascinated us. A mysterious appearance could symbolize God’s displeasure or mean a sure failure in battle, at least for one side. Now Tel Aviv University justifies our fascination — comets might have provided the elements for the emergence of life on our planet, finds a new study.

While investigating the chemical make-up of comets, Prof. Akiva Bar-Nun of the Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences at Tel Aviv University found they were the source of missing ingredients needed for life in Earth’s ancient primordial soup.

“When comets slammed into the Earth through the atmosphere about four billion years ago, they delivered a payload of organic materials to the young Earth, adding materials that combined with Earth’s own large reservoir of organics and led to the emergence of life,” says Prof. Bar-Nun.

Subsidized Sustainable Food Tour in Israel in November

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At Green Prophet, we often post on organic vegetables and dairy products being grown in Israel; this November two Jewish environmental organizations are offering a heavily subsidized chance to see the farms and produce yourself. Hazon (which runs an annual Food Conference in the USA) and the Heschel Center will lead an Israel Sustainable Food Tour from November 15-19.

Trip highlights  include farms near Modi’in and Emek Hefer, as well as  Palestinian organic farms in Wadi Fuqin. The itenerary also includes Jerusalem’s Mahane Yehuda market, Bedouin permaculture sites in the Negev, and Kibbutz Maagan Michael on the Mediterranean coast. In fact, the trip is by happy coincidence a sort of “Greatest Hits of the Green Prophet.”

Hazon’s Web site stresses that the trip is not only about eating, but rather about understanding the complex webs behind Israel’s food delivery system. Some Jewish learning will further round out the itinerary.

The five-day tour is an outrageously cheap $400, although if you are coming from abroad the flight is on you. The application deadline is June 15. Get more information here. (Photo from Hazon.org).

::Hazon website

Swine Flu and The Future of Israeli Pigs – Domestic and "Wild"

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wild-boar-nose-israel swine flu israel photo
(Israel raises non-Kosher pigs? Yup. And it has a pretty healthy wild population of wild boars, as well).

They are calling to cull all the “swine” in Egypt, as an apparent “pandemic” of swine flu appears to be on the verge of being something out of a nightmarish version of a Stephen King novel. Following the breaking news of more than a hundred deaths from the disease in Mexico, virtually shutting down the country’s Federal District and capital, Mexico City, cases of the disease have appeared in France, the USA, the UK and two cases are reported in Israel.

A 26 year old Sharon region resident is now hospitalized in an isolation section of Laniado Hospital, after returning from a holiday in Mexico with symptoms that resemble this very strong type of influenza, which has symptoms like high fever, coughing, headaches, and other maladies.

Like all cases of flu, including the dreaded avian or bird flu, weaker individuals, including young children, the sick and the elderly, and people with chronic respiratory problems, can develop complications such as pneumonia and heart seizure, that can result in death.

The young man, Tomer Vajim, a resident of Moshav Geulim outside Netanya, went to the emergency room of Laniado after complaining of flu-like symptoms.

Egypt Culls 300,000 Pigs In Response to Swine Flu Virus

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pigs egypt luxor swine-flu

At the time of writing this post, there are 6 confirmed cases of swine flu now in Israel. Out of fear that the virus might spread to Epypt, authorities there have ordered the slaughter of the country’s 300,000 pigs, reports the Associated Press.

“It has been decided to immediately start slaughtering all the pigs in Egypt using the full capacity of the country’s slaughterhouses,” Health Minister Hatem el-Gabaly told reporters after a Cabinet meeting with President Hosni Mubarak.

Egypt Culls 300,000 Pigs In Response to Swine Flu Virus

At the time of writing this post, there are 6 confirmed cases of swine flu now in Israel. Out of fear that the virus might spread to Egypt, authorities there have ordered the slaughter of the country’s 300,000 pigs, reports the Associated Press. You would assume that Israel being a “kosher” Jewish country wouldn’t be raising pork, but certain loopholes that don’t raise the pigs on the land allow the pig industry to survive.

“It has been decided to immediately start slaughtering all the pigs in Egypt using the full capacity of the country’s slaughterhouses,” Health Minister Hatem el-Gabaly told reporters after a Cabinet meeting with President Hosni Mubarak.

While it’s not exactly clear how swine flu first started –- reports are that it “jumped” to humans in Mexico where the animals where being raised in squalor (and in mass feeding operations) – it is still not sure if killing all pigs will effect the transmission of the flu.

“But where did it originate? David Kirby has some ideas, and they involve “confined animal feeding operations”, or CAFOs. There are hundreds of such operations with pigs in Mexico. The more animals get clustered together, and the more time they spend in that state, the more viruses will spread between them—and the thousands of humans that work at the CAFOs. Free range proponents take note–this could’ve been pevented with more sanitary animal living conditions.”

A Reuter’s report, via the blog ConnectAfrica, also from today, says that Egypt is “just considering” the mass slaughter, and this has been prompted mainly because the pigs in the country are raised in terrible conditions:

““The question now is should we kill them or relocate them, and the prevailing idea now is to kill the existing (pigs) and of course compensate their owners,” cabinet spokesman Magdy Rady said on Wednesday. He put the number of pigs that could be culled at between 300,000 and 400,000, and said a decision was expected in days.

““If you see the conditions of the swine farms in Egypt, they are not healthy at all. They are hazards in themselves, even without the swine flu. That’s why people are really getting afraid,” he told Reuters.”

Will culling all the world’s pigs stop this virus from reaching pandemic proportions?  When will us humans learn that when we don’t treat nature with respect, and raise animals with dignity, that nature will just bite us back.

Update: As of April 30, the cases of swine flu in Israel has been downgraded from 6 to 2

Ronald Macintyre Excavates 'The Nature Of The State'

scottish highlands natureReading has its own geography. I read this book The Nature of the State while I traveled back and forth from the West Highlands of Scotland to London for work . . . while Israeli-Palestinian relations erupted into open conflict in Gaza, while fire in Greece turned to fire Australia, while it snowed hard in the South of England, while the rulers of neo-liberal advanced capitalist economies cowed, begged, and then apologised to elected officials.

I read it with the words of the book review editor of Green Prophet in mind: ‘make it relevant to the Middle East.’

The review refused to emerge. I admit this volume sat on various desks and was carried many times in bags back and forth to work and further afield.

I think the reason for keeping hold of the review was fear.

As a UK based researcher I was cautious about how to place this book in a Middle East context. This was compounded by the bombing of Gaza by Israel that ran alongside my reading of the volume, and echoed in my thoughts afterwards. After all, this is a book that explores the relationship between nature, nations and states.

In the UK their charge raises a little static, transposed to a context where the material and symbolic boundaries of these terms are violently contested, it is like a mains shock.

Stop Kissing, A Simple and Green Way To Prevent Swine Flu

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kiss-israel-lebanon swine flu photoThe Inner Circle blog in Lebanon is reporting what it calls “an absurd” idea proposed by the Lebanese Heath Minister Mohammad Khalifeh as a means to prevent the Swine Flu from spreading. Israel, the country bordering Lebanon to the south, has already confirmed one case of the virus.

“If you visit someone, don’t exchange kisses… Let’s stop the social kissing habit,” Khalifeh said in a Reuters news story.

Like in Lebanon where people traditionally greet each other with 3 kisses, over here in Israel, you can find the younger secular generation opting for a single smooch on the cheek or a double — on each side of the cheek. It’s delivered along with a semi-hug.

With the country’s first reported case of Swine Flu announced yesterday, abstinence from the social norm of kissing, may be a cheap and effective method from coming into contact with the infection.

Since it appears to be afflicting totally healthy people, it’s not yet clear if taking immune boosters, or natural remedies will do anything to keep the immune system in check and protected.

It’s probably hype anyway, but instead of investing in expensive and probably ineffective solutions, maybe just refrain from the kiss?

::Reuters
[image via iloveblue]

A Dubai Disneyland Coming To Lebanon? Plans Call For Artificial "Cedar Island" Mega Development Deal

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(Illustration of Cedar Island, a new artificial island project proposed for off the coast of Lebanon).

Environmentalists in Beirut’s American University are calling it a disaster:  A Lebanese company is looking to build mega artificial islands like Palm Island in Dubai, but in the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Lebanon.

They are calling it Cedar Island, modeled after the Lebanese Cedar, the country’s national symbol. And Panasonic Corporation, and Chinese partners and Arab investors are already on board.

VIDEO: The American University of Beirut In Lebanon Fights For Sustainable Research Through ISBAR

This documentary film describes the activities of IBSAR, an interfaculty center at the American University of Beirut dedicated to nature conservation and sustainable research.

According to IBSAR members, “Nature is a special trust to be enjoyed and conserved for future generations. Conserving the biodiversity of nature in the Middle East is the foundation on which we can build an improved quality of land and ensure a sustainable future for the people of the region.”

ibsar beirut lebanon logo american universityThis video outlines some research activities of the 20 or so faculty members at the University; and includes plant hunters looking for new drugs, and specifically how the researchers are making clinical investigations on plants like the local Lebanese herbs hindbeh and kishk.

I love how the film crew transitions from the lab to the field, interviewing locals who’ve been picking and using the herbs for generations in their food (for loads of recipes from Lebanon, click here). And then how the researchers are using the herbs to promote the use of traditional foods (PDF), as a means to generate income for the women, and to promote biodiversity.

The diet in the Eastern Mediterranean and especially Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan is characterized by a heavy reliance on refined grains (white flour) as the primary source of energy.

These countries also experience an increase in the rates of chronic non communicable diseases (cardiovascular disease, diabetes), a reflection of the emerging “nutrition transition” experienced by these countries. The “nutrition transition,” reports ISBAR scientists, seems to be occurring alongside chronic problems of under nutrition, specifically micronutrient deficiencies reflected in high rates of anemia among certain subgroups, particularly the urban and rural poor.

IBSAR is engaged in a project that aims at increasing dietary diversity in the urban and rural poor through the promotion of the sustainable use of wild edible plants, ultimately improving general health status in the targeted communities.

For more information see the Wild Edible Plants website.

This is a model the rural Palestinian, Beduin and Druize populations in Israel could benefit from.

Watch the video. You’ll learn something new.
::ISBAR

Try Renewable Energy Jobs For "Green" Jobs In The Middle East

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Green Prophet readers, as we know, are not only dreamers, they are doers. For all those that want to play your part, a job in clean technology might be up your alley. Today we interview Sam Newell from Renewable Energy Jobs, on trends and renewable energy jobs up for grabs in the Middle East.

Green Prophet: Tell us a little bit about your background and why you founded Renewable Energy Jobs

Sam Newell: I’m a career recruiter, and have been in recruitment for about 12 years. I ran technology recruitment businesses as well as focusing on financial services. I have also held roles such as Head of Recruitment & Resourcing for a global consulting business and Leadership Recruitment Manager for a FTSE listed financial services firm.

I started my own executive search firm in 2006 specialising in the early stage cleantech market and I noticed that there was very few quality advertising opportunities within the renewable energy recruitment sector.

In my opinion many of the existing sites where too broad in their scope for what I needed. There were quality ‘green’ or ‘environmental’ sites but little specifically for renewables.

Those that were renewables focused often appeared badly designed or were overpriced in my opinion. I was a technology recruiter during the internet boom of the 90’s, I also had a go at building my first online business at that point which wasn’t a huge success, it did teach me a few things though and so I have a few more tools to use when assessing websites than many recruiters I guess.

Charging hundreds of dollars or pounds to advertise on a site with little traffic is pointless.

Independence or Interdependence? Both Are Vital for Survival

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Tonight begins Israel’s Independence Day, and a lot of recent articles on Green Prophet have been about the regional water crisis, and what must be done to alleviate it.

Both agronomists and hydrologists in our region have tried to find ways to deal with the increasing lack of water resources, including recycling of sewage and other wastewaters, building of reservoirs to collect winter rains and runoffs from winter snow falls in mountain areas, and most of all, desalination plants to change salty sea water into potable fresh water (after all, the earth’s surface is 70% water).

The recent water article by Professor Hillel Shuval, Director of Environmental Health Services at the Hadassah Academic College in Jerusalem probably summed it up by his opinions as what is the real cause of the current water problems in Israel.

The real cause, according to Prof. Shuval, has been government policies concerning water use and conservation for the past 20-25 years. There is a lot of truth in what he says, and it doesn’t take an expert in this area to conclude that he is right.

The Agricultural Roots of Israel’s Water Crisis, by Prof. Hillel Shuval

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Hillel Shuval
Prof. Hillel Shuval

Green Prophet is honored to present this opinion piece written by one of Israel’s foremost experts in environmental science and policy. Professor Hillel Shuval was the director of the Department of Environmental Health Sciences at the Hadassah Academic College in Jerusalem. Prof. Shuval describes the harmful consequences that stem from agricultural overuse of Israel’s scarce water resources, and calls for a change in the water management policy to preserve natural areas and green spaces.

This country is facing one of its most severe water crises, triggered by the harsh droughts of 2006-2009.

However the crisis is no less the result of the long-term chronic problem of overutilization of its limited natural water resources. This resulted mainly from demands for more and more water from the agricultural sector, even after the country’s natural water resources were fully developed to their limit in the 1980s. To meet these growing demands, the agricultural and water authorities embarked on a conscious program of dangerous overpumping of ground and surface water resources, the precursor of the water crisis.

Why was this done? We must examine the question of the relationship between water management problems and the role of the country’s deep historic and cultural commitments to agriculture and a romantic vision of a pastoral Israel which still influences water policy.

“It is illogical and immoral to dry up the urban parks, gardens and green areas, while exporting flowers grown with subsidized drinking water to Europe.”

Since water resources are limited, we need to reevaluate the division of water allocations between the sectors resulting from rapidly growing domestic and urban demand associated with the growing population and the continued demands of agriculture for water.

Agriculture has, up to now, used some 50 percent of good quality drinking water, despite the fact that it represents only 2%-3% of the country’s GDP and 3%-4% of the population. To understand this deep commitment to agriculture, an overcommitment as far as allocation of water resources is concerned, it is necessary to understand the historic evolution of the role of agriculture in our society and culture.

The first period, which established the roots of Israel as an agricultural nation, goes back to biblical times when the Jewish people lived in its own land.

During the 2,000 or so years of the Diaspora, the image of Israel as an agricultural nation was continually reinforced in the collective memory by religious rituals and Jewish holidays mainly based on the agricultural seasons in Eretz Yisrael. However, we only began to reestablish our national roots in the land with the establishment of the first settlements in the First Aliya of 1880-1905.

This was followed by a more ideologically motivated period of settlement of the land of the Second Aliya led by such thinkers as A.D. Gordon, who in 1910-20 preached the religion of labor and the mystic need for the nation to reestablish its roots by working the soil in its native land. In the prestate period, the ideology, dream and vision of a pastoral agricultural nation was promoted in the popular culture – poems, press, books, youth movements, popular songs and children’s stories. Every child worked in agriculture in school.

The issue of the limitations of land and water became a serious existential political threat to the Yishuv when attempts by the British to cancel the Balfour Declaration where made by the Hope-Simpson White Paper in 1930 to end Jewish immigration to Palestine due to “lack of economic absorptive capacity… specifically lack of water and land.”

This led to a massive national drive to establish agricultural settlements – “dunam after dunam” – by the Jewish Agency. The national commitment to urgent agriculture development deepened.

Thus, with the founding of the State of Israel in 1948 the drive to establish hundreds of new settlements – moshavim and kibbutzim – became top priority, both to settle the land and assure the borders of the new state as well as to provide jobs for newly arrived immigrants and to provide food security.

Over the years some 700 new agricultural settlements were valiantly established. However, in the view of Meyer Ben-Meir, former water commissioner, we overdid it and could never have met their water needs.

Simultaneously, major efforts were made to develop the nation’s water resources, regardless of costs and economic implications, including the National Water Carrier and more than 1,000 new wells.

As a result of the very high cost of water produced by these heroic national projects, which was greater than most farmers could afford, the subsidy of water for agriculture became a basic part of national policy. While agriculture became highly efficient in water utilization, the heavy subsidy has resulted in farmers growing many crops that would otherwise not be economically feasible and using more water than economically justified.

When natural water resources development reached its limit in about 1980, the country faced a dilemma – not enough water to meet both the growing urban needs and maintain the same level of allocations for agriculture. The agriculture-dominated water establishment developed a new strategy of “temporary” overpumping and “one-time draw-down” of aquifers to justify maintaining the high levels water of allocations for agriculture.

The State Controller’s Report points out that “as a result of overpumping and overutilization, underground water levels were lowered to dangerous levels below the red line, water reserves held for emergency use in case of droughts have dwindled and seawater pollution has intruded to contaminate ground water.”

The water planners naively even promised that eventually these dangerous overdrafts would be repaid with cheap desalinated water, which never came. Thus, based on the deep overcommitment to agriculture, the seeds of the water crisis were planted, which has resulted in the near collapse of rational water management.

This short article cannot go into details, but some of the solutions to this crisis include a reevaluation of the role of agriculture, painful as that may be.

This country can survive only as a hi-tech society and will have to reallocate water from agriculture to the domestic/urban/industrial sectors. We must end wasteful water subsidies to agriculture. It is illogical and immoral to dry up the urban parks, gardens and green areas, while exporting flowers grown with subsidized drinking water to Europe. New ways must be found to maintain as many of the agricultural communities as much possible by subsidizing green areas as the Swiss do, but not by subsidizing water.

We must make major efforts to speed up the construction of seawater desalination plants and the building of treatment plants to increase wastewater recycling and reuse which can assure agriculture a growing source of water to replace fresh water. We will need to increase the allocations of fresh and recycled water to nature, gardens, parks and the environment to keep the country green so as to provide the green lungs required for the health and welfare of those who live in such a crowded urban society.

A solution to our water crisis is possible, but requires giving up many deeply imbedded dreams and visions of the past.

Professor Hillel Shuval has been active for over 50 years in protecting environment and health, founding the National Program for Environmental Protection, and led the development of reclaimed sewage water as a resource. As part of the 60 year Independence celebrations, he was presented last year with a lifetime achievement award.  Prof. Shuval is a professor emeritus at Hebrew University’s Environmental Studies Program and is currently the director of the Department of Environmental Health Sciences at the Hadassah Academic College in Jerusalem (where our contributor Daniel Pedersen teaches).

Join the Israel Teen Adventure this summer

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What is the best way to visit Israel? By plane, by bus, or maybe by car? Derech Hateva believes the best way to see this small but fascinating country is by foot.

Registration is now open for Derech Hateva’s annual Israel Trail Teen Adventure (ITTA), a month-long outdoor program for Jewish teens from North America and Israel.

Covering parts of the Israel National Trail by foot (as well as mountain biking and rock climbing thrown in), combining environmental education, leadership and Torah-learning along the way.

“Derech Hateva teaches our kids how to be independent, strong mensches who are caring members of a community,” says Elena, an alumni parent.

This summer’s adventure dates are June 28th to July 27th for girls, and June 29th to July 27th for boys (ages 14 to 19).

For more information or to apply visit www.derechhateva.org or contact [email protected] (Israel) 02-624-8743, (USA) 212-537-6280.