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Turkey Water Exports To Iraq Will Double Thanks To Biblical Rivers From "Garden of Eden"

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Iraqi boys walk along the Euphrates River

New water cooperation could be a new beginning for tensions between Turkey and Iraq: Turkey has promised to give neighboring Iraq and Syria a larger share of water from both Tigress and Euphrates rivers; it was announced by Turkish President Abdullah Gul. Gul, on a state visit to Iraq, the first in 33 years by a Turkish head of state, said that his country will divert more water from these mighty rivers, both of which originate in Turkey.

Turkey undertook a massive project a few years back which included a series of dams on both rivers, to bring more water to its Anatolia region which was then affected by drought.This created several large reservoirs which seriously reduced to flow of the Tigress into Iraq and the Euphrates into Syria, both of which suffered from severe water shortages for both agriculture and human consumption.

Green Prophet of the Week: Avi Kuzi Is Israel's Animal Guardian Angel

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Do Israeli animals in distress have a guardian angel?

If a young man named Avi Kuzi has anything to say about this, they certainly do! If any of you Green Prophet readers caught the article in last Friday’s Jerusalem Post, you must have been touched, as well as impressed by the tireless work of this guy who has done so much save and relieve the suffering of so many of this country’s furry and feathered friends.

Whether it has involved rappelling down a ten story elevator shaft to extract a stuck cat, hoisting a dehydrated and emaciated camel out of certain death in the Arava desert, or retrieving a lost monkey from a high eucalyptus tree, Kuzi has literally saved thousands of animals in his 15 year career as an animal rescuer.

Kuzi must have been endowed with his special gift at an early age, as he used to bring home sick and wounded animals and secretly nurse them back to health before releasing them later when they could fend for themselves.

His parents never let him have a dog or cat or his own, so he made up for this by temporarily “adopting” them while tending to their health problems.

Switzerland’s 2000 Watt Society And Swiss Energy-Saving Practices Introduced To Israel

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Who would think that Switzerland and Israel have anything in common?

Switzerland brings to mind lush mountains, flowing streams and delicious chocolate. Israel has the well known (and personally loved) chocolad para but it doesn’t quite compare.

I guess it takes a diplomat to make the connection.

Monika Schmutz-Kirgöz, the Deputy Head of Mission of the Swiss Embassy, found ways to link Israel and Switzerland when she opened the international conference on “Green Architecture and Urban Sustainability: From Switzerland to Tel Aviv” at Tel Aviv University last week.

Apparently, the two nations have the same number of people, a lack of natural resources, and a strong R&D record. Also, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich) has built an eco-building on their campus, as will TAU’s Porter School of Environmental Studies.

EcoBaladi Sprouts Organic Vegetables From the West Bank Valley of Thorns (Wadi Fuqin)

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(Abu Ibrahim, 53, in a field of fava beans. Photo: Daniella Cheslow)

One of the most compelling parts of the West Bank is its Biblical landscape, shaped by the small villages and terraced farm plots that dot the rolling hillsides.

Yesterday, I saw that landscape up close on a visit to Wadi Fuqin (Valley of Thorns) a village of about 1,200 southwest of Jerusalem nestled in a valley under the brow of the apartment blocks of the neighboring Beitar Illit settlement. The 100 village farmers use old and new techniques to raise chemical-free vegetables for themselves, for Bethlehemites and for idealistic Jewish residents of neighboring Tzur Hadassah, Jerusalem and Tel Aviv through the EcoBaladi Web site.

Haaretz writer Ronit Vered recently waxed poetic about Wadi Fuqin here.

My host was Abu Ibrahim, 53, a school teacher who helps his 73-year-old father farm about 5 dunams (1.25 acres) on the valley floor. Abu Ibrahim has a wife and eight children.

Stephen Colbert on Israel’s National Bird

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When Israel declared its new national bird, the hoopoe, Green Prophet was on the story. Little did we know that so was American fake newscaster Stephen Colbert, complete with Hebrew pronunciation.

“Congratulations, Israel. Just as America soars like the might eagle, may you emulate the noble long-billed hoopoe by squirting fecal matter at intruders,” says Colbert.

Colbert also had some exciting news about the kosher status of the giraffe.

In other online green news, “Stuff White People Like” author Christian Lander has written a five-part guide to “Stuff Environmentalists Like” for Plenty magazine:

“While many environmentalists are vegan or vegetarian, others can talk for hours about how it is possible to eat meat and still be green. Their requirement of course is that the animal is raised on a small farm and allowed to run around and eat grass.

“If you are hoping to impress a host in the latter camp, tell a story about how you are raising a few chickens in your backyard. For extra points, use the following terms: free-range, factory farm, and antibiotics.”

Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, a Review

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Harvey Stein waxes lyrical on American author Cormac McCarthy’s soon to be filmed epic, post-apocalypse novel, ‘The Road’ :

“When he woke in the woods in the dark and the cold of the night he’d reach out to touch the child sleeping beside him. Nights dark beyond darkness and the days more gray each one than what had gone before. Like the onset of some cold glaucoma dimming away the world. His hand rose and fell softly with each precious breath.”

I couldn’t put it down.The novel “The Road” is an amazing, humbling, breathtaking book, containing both the most horrible nightmares you can imagine, and small moments of heartbreaking intimacy.

An “environmental” novel but not intentionally so, far from ideology, it fully deserves the Pulitzer Prize it won in 2007. (McCarthy has also won a Macarthur “genius grant” and has written 10 novels.) McCarthy has created a metaphorical world, but one that is so real we can taste, smell, gasp at it.

cormac-mccarthy-the-roadIt is post-apocalyptic, taking place somewhere in the Eastern seaboard of the United States, after a disaster that is never made totally clear: post-nuclear, post-global warming.

In almost biblical cadence, the nameless man and boy walk, and walk, every morning the same:

“Are you okay? he said. The boy nodded. Then they set along the blacktop in the gunmetal light, shuffling through the ash, each the other’s world entire.”

Nature is everywhere in this novel, but it is almost entirely dead. Remember, ash is what has been burned. Many charred trees and plants stand, but if touched, fall to the ground. Rivers still twist and flow, but grey and lifeless.

One day, they find a small dam, by a lake.

The boy asks, “Will the dam be there for a long time?

I think so. It’s made of concrete. It will probably be there for hundreds of years. Thousands, even.

Do you think there could be fish in the lake?

No. There’s nothing in the lake.”

Nothing grows anymore in this world – their desperate daily search, in abandoned homes and cellars, is for the only food left – cans and preserved food packed away before the disaster. Once, by an abandoned orchard, they find an apple:

“He picked it up and held it to the light. Hard and brown and shriveled. He wiped it with the cloth and bit into it. Dry and almost tasteless…He ate it entire, seeds and all.”

The specific cause is not painted out, but it is starkly clear this dead world is man-caused. And in this world, the sight or signs of other humans is almost always a sign of mortal danger, because this world contains the worst of man: bands of cannibalistic survivors march down the roads.

There are daily moral dilemmas, which they must confront as any father and son would. One day, in a house they were exploring, they had found some chained humans.

That night, “The boy lay with his head in the man’s lap. After a while he said:

They’re going to kill those people, arent they?

Yes.

Why do they have to do that?

I dont know.

Are they going to eat them?

I dont know.

They’re going to eat them, arent they?

Yes.

And we couldnt help them because then they’d eat us too.

Yes.

And that’s why we couldnt help them.

Yes.

Okay.”

Through the story, man and boy push their metal cart, with a few tools, some “stinking robes and blankets,” a can or two, and a pistol. They travel with the vague purpose, besides survival, of somehow reaching the sea eastward.

There is no single climax in “The Road.” They do finally reach the sea, but it is just as lifeless as what has come before. The man’s cough gets worse and worse, blood coming up now. The boy realizes that the man will be gone soon, and he will have to somehow learn from all the things they have experienced together.

The man advises his son,

“You need to keep going…Just don’t give up. Okay?

Okay.

Okay.

I’m really scared Papa.

I know. But you’ll be okay. You’re going to be lucky. I know you are. I’ve got to stop talking. I’m going to start coughing again.

It’s okay, Papa. You don’t have to talk. It’s okay.”

On the final page of “The Road,” a memory of a time when nature still lived, and had magic:

“Once there were brook trout in the streams in the mountains. You could see them standing in the amber current…on their backs were vermiculate patterns that were maps of the world in its becoming.”

Why did I reread passages of this book over and over, why did scenes haunt me for weeks? The struggle for survival is boiled down, elemental: two humans, trying to find enough food for surviving another day, trying to avoid becoming food for the human beasts.

Can we create a world that will sustain us in return? Or will we slowly destroy our world – nature and other humans around us – that in its turn will create our own excruciating end? That is the question asked in “The Road.”

The answers seems to be found in day by day efforts, day by day choices. To gaze at, in one hand, the black nightmares that are already happening around us, to feel the hopelessness and despair that are impossible to ignore sometimes.

Or to feel our responsibility, like kin, towards the entire natural world, and towards each other. Because in the other hand are the utterly delicate seedlings of care and love, the only things that can grow life.

harveycubest
Harvey Stein is a filmmaker and writer, originally from New York, who moved to Israel in 2006. He is currently working on two feature length documentaries, “RxCannabis – a Freedom Tale” and “Heart of the Other,” and can be reached through either of these sites.

Innowattech's Coming To Sidewalks and Electric Avenues, Near You

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Prof. Haim Abramovich, from the Faculty of Aerospace Engineering at the Technion Israel Institute of Technology.

We’d written about the energy harvesting company Innowattech earlier on Green Prophet, and not long ago, I got to interview the company about their latest news.

Here’s a feature story I wrote for ISRAEL21c on the Israeli company that’s planning to harvest energy, as you walk and bop down the street, in your car, and while eating Big Macs:

Eddy Grant’s song Electric Avenue has come to life: An Israeli company Innowattech has built a technology that allows us to collect the mechanical energy created by cars, planes, and trains, and our feet walking on the surface of a sidewalk. 

Now building a pilot plant in Israel, which will be ready within two to three months, Innowattech is testing its technology on real roads, and is also, the company says, developing a system to harvest energy generated by pedestrians walking through New York City subways and busy shopping malls. 

While the energy collected by people walking over a specially developed system called IPEG for Piezo Electric Generator, amounts to little, about .0002 joules per step — maybe enough to power streetlights — the energy harvested by cars on the street system, could power homes in an entire neighborhood. 

Innowattech’s track, made from piezoelectric crystals on the road, can harness energy from the vibration of moving vehicles, or the temperature changes that take place on the road. A stretch of road less than a mile long, four lanes wide and trafficked by about 1,000 vehicles per hour can create about 0.4 Megawatts of power, enough to power 600 homes. 

Eco Rabbi Explores Passover Cleaning To Reduce, Reuse, Recycle

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In last week’s Eco Rabbi I discussed aspects of vegetarianism and Judaism. This week’s Eco-Rabbi post I discuss cleaning for the holiday of Passover.

This week Jews all over the world are cleaning up their homes in preparation for the festival of Passover (Pessach in Hebrew).

On Passover one cannot own, in their home, an edible amount of leavened bread.

What is chametz or unleavened bread?

Take one of the five following grains, wheat, barley, spelt oats and rye, and let it sit in moisture for longer than 18 minutes. This includes any derivative of any of these products, so no beer either.

So if you think about it, what can you eat? Well, if you mix up a dough and before 18 minutes have passed you bake it in such a way that it does not rise, you get matza, a cardboard-like wafer with little taste. But is pretty good with butter.

Because one cannot own any leavened bread over Passover, for the month before Passover, religious Jews comb through their house for any remnants of leavened bread, which is a good opportunity for regular spring cleaning. I think it’s a good chance to think about reducing, reusing and recycling…

One can find a beautiful prayer in the Tractate Berakhot (17a) which explains that man sins as a result of the leavening of his heart. When a man’s heart becomes to full of hot air, that’s when we sin. One spiritual explanation of this Passover ritual is that for one week we abstain for eating leavened bread in order to contemplate the leavening of our hearts that takes place throughout the year.

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Sam Barsky knits matzas for Passover

In this vein I personally find that cleaning anything is a good way to not only put my home in order, but also to put my thoughts in order. I find myself cleaning up when I need to figure out a difficult problem (my wife LOVES that).

In lieu of that thought, I would like to suggest that while you are cleaning your house this year for Passover, take stock of your home, and life. See how you can include ways to heal our planet in your day-to-day life, specifically, how you can implement the three ‘R’s of environmental awareness: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.

When cleaning out your closet (figuratively) it is a good time to look through your house and see where you can do a little better, and when have you been shovelling junk under the carpet.

Is there any way you can reuse things that you normally would throw out?

Can you cut costs anywhere by using less? You can save money and water in the laundry? But what else? Do you know where your nearest recycling bins are?

Happy Cleaning!

Our Friends From "Friends of the Earth Middle East" Get $750,000 From Skoll For Water Work

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EcoPeace / Friends of the Earth Middle East (FoEME) today announced it is the recipient of a three-year, $750,000 award from the Skoll Foundation to expand its cross border community based activities and deepen its organizational capacity to advance water and peace issues in the Middle East.

“In the midst of conflict, we have produced very tangible results. All of the key issues that the organization has led are on the local, national, regional and often international agenda”, said Munqeth Mehyar FoEME’s Jordanian Director.

The award is one of seven new Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship presented by the Skoll Foundation to recognize the most innovative and sustainable approaches to resolving the world’s most urgent social issues.

Earth Hour Competes With Football in Israel, Jordanians March With Candles

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Jordan’s Environment Minister Khalid Irani, RSCN Director General Yehya Khaled, Amman City Manager Ammar Gharaibeh and Wild Jordan Director Chris Johnson hold candles during an event marking Earth Hour on Saturday night (Photo via RSCN)

Regional Earth Hour celebrations mixed:

On Saturday night at 8:30 p.m. when many people in both Jordan and Israel were watching their favorite TV programs or weekly football match, others were marking International Earth Hour, when more than 4,000 cities in 88 countries all over the globe commended this special environmental awareness hour be either dimming or extinguishing non-essential lighting.

The action was mooted by environmental activists to make people aware of the threat that climate change is having on our environment as a result of too much reliance on fossil fuels to create the electricity that enables us to enjoy the comforts and pastimes that most people take for granted.

The event went unnoticed for many Israelis however, as it virtually coincided with an important football match being played against Greece in Israel’s national stadium in Ramat Gan.

In neighboring Jordan, however, much more attention was being given to this event

Israel's Knafo Klimor Architect Firm Build Agro-Housing Apartments In China

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Slated for a 2011 finish date, Knafo Klimor Architects look to be the first Israeli firm hired to design a green building in China. Their concept: to bring the greenhouse inside the house. The team breaks from the model, where historically, Israelis look to the United States, or at least Europe to fulfill their design and architectural dreams.

Their specs:
Program: 150 apartments, multi-stories greenhouse, tenant’s club & kindergarten
Client: Living Steel
Area: 10,000 sqm
Status: completion 2011

Aora Powers Up "LEGO-like" Units For Solar Energy Production in the Arava Desert

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Aora Solar Energy Company, formerly known as EDIG Solar, is ready to begin producing clean tech energy at their power station located at Kibbutz Samar in the Arava Valley.

The station, which uses a combination of solar generated electricity thermal power and alternative fuels such as bio-diesel, bio-gas, and natural gas, is expected to produce around 100 kilowatts of power as well as 170 kilowatts of heat capacity. The idea of placing this initial plant in the Arava region is due to the availability of sunlight and space to install the photo-electric collection plates needed to collect the solar energy needed to operate the thermal gas turbines.

The company was recently successful in raising $5 million in needed operating capital by offering a round of Series A bonds to various investors. The funding was raised with the assistance of EZKlein Partners, EDIG Construction and L&Q Solar, who are active in investing in international solar energy projects.

By using a “hybrid approach” which means using other fuels sources during the night or on cloudy days, the company can assure continuous electrical power generation twenty four hours a day.

Less Government Bureaucracy Would Solve Israel's Water Crisis

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Sea of Galilee

Two interesting articles were published in the past week about Israel’s water shortage and possible solutions. In the first one, “Drops in the Bucket,” which appeared in Haaretz, the article discusses how Israelis can expect water rations and increased fees for water in the near future, like the inhabitants of countries such as Cyprus and Jordan, if the government continues to be slowed down in making decisions by lengthy bureacracy and legislation. 

The CEO of Mekorot, Ido Rosolio has been particularly vocal about preventing this, as Mekorot, which is the national water utility, is a company that should be and is able to handle Israel’s water needs and provide the necessary infrastructure to maintain it in the longterm.

However, the government has thus far failed to pass the necessary legislation to do so. 

Sustainability In The City (of Tel Aviv), To Celebrate 100 Years Now And 100 In The Future

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Some green groups are criticizing the city of Tel Aviv for not being sustainable at all; they’re also criticizing the city for this new conference happening April 1-2, on urban sustainability. It is part of dozens of events to celebrate Tel Aviv’s 100 year birthday this year.

For your reading pleasure, and interest, Green Prophet has posted the City’s handout about the event. Propaganda from the Mayor’s office or real and true efforts at making Tel Aviv sustainable? You decide. Here’s their blurb:

The Centennial Conference: In recent years, Tel Aviv-Yafo has been undergoing major processes of development. The international symposium will relate to these processes from a critical point of view, offering academic and professional insight into how the city should develop. The Centennial Conference on Urban Sustainability will consist of two parts that will address the future of the city and present ideas on urban renewal in relation to sustainability:

  1. An international symposium
  2. An international student competition and exhibition

The international symposium will consist of presentations by keynote speakers, case studies from around the world, round table discussions of mayors, city planners, architects, designers, artists, journalists and academics from leading universities, and debates between local and international speakers. These sessions will lead to a discussion on the future of Tel Aviv-Yafo in the next 100 years.

(Green Prophet adds: Some skeptics wonder with the state of security affairs in Israel, if there will be a next 100 years).

Video on Israel-Jordan Water War On Jordan TV

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Clean water, and water resources dominate the news over here in the Middle East. Recently Green Prophet reported on Israel’s “water” compensation to Jordan, and the Jordan crisis dealing with radioactive water.

This video segment from Al-Arabiya offers a Jordanian view on the water story, or “war” as they report, between Jordan and Israel.