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"Project Interchange" Invites Europe’s Green Makers, Movers and Shakers To Go On “Tour” in Israel

green cooperation in israel and europe project interchange illustration

From September 20-27, a delegation of European environmental journalists, policy makers (ie World Bank and EU parliament), energy and climate change specialists, and activism leaders are coming to the Middle East to explore Israel’s environmental issues, policies, and clean technology.

The whirlwind tour will take these leaders to Hiria (Tel Aviv’s rehabilitating garbage dump); they will visit the renewable energy company Ormat, see solar technology in action, and will learn about Dead Sea issues at the Dead Sea. They will essentially experience different shades of “green” in Israel and discuss and debate with their Israeli counterparts along the way.

This trip, sponsored by the Washington-based Project Interchange gives leaders from international communities, an opportunity to understand Israel’s complicated reality through a “green” lens.

Go Digital

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billsMany companies now offer to send a bill via email instead of it’s snail contemporary. Call your bank, phone company and others to see if you can make the switch. You’ll be surprised, some offer discounts and insentives to make the switch! In Israel, Orange now offers such benefits.

Looking to green your life? Find out more! Have a green-living tip to share?

The California-Israel Chamber of Commerce to Bring Top Israeli Cleantech Companies to the US

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cleantech israel drip irrigation image
For four days in November up to fifteen Israeli cleantech companies are to be given VIP access to top decision makers including potential partners, funders and clients in California.

The delegation is being billed as the first of its kind, and will bring the Israeli companies to meet with executives from cleantech leaders including General Electric (GE),  Pacific Gas & Electric Company (PG&E), Google, Applied Materials, California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), The Cleantech Group, Israel Cleantech Ventures, US Venture Partners, and Greylock Partners.

Green Prophet in the Garden State

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postcard from new jersey image

This prophet just made the flight from Tel Aviv to his childhood home of New Jersey. After a year of observing Israel and it’s eco-consciousness (and at times lack thereof), I was eager to see how the Garden State measured up to its nick name. I couldn’t help but compare my observations in New Jersey with the realities I’ve observed in Tel Aviv.

Transportation

As expected, the mini-vans and SUVs still dominate New Jersey roads despite the high gas prices. There are no scooters and very few small cars. A few hybrids can be spotted but they hardly enough to make a difference. Here Israel really has the advantage on New Jersey.

Recycling

Perhaps the greatest thrill of in New Jersey was the simple act of drinking Root Beer in a glass bottle and then ever so simply placing it in the recycling bin. This is nothing new in New Jersey but it speaks to a major deficiency in Israel’s green policies. Israel’s lack of recycling has always frustrated me to no end. It’s appalling. At my most motivated I’d collected hundreds of glass bottles and separated them into different sizes and varieties and walked them over to various supermarkets, sometimes being turned away and sometimes being forced to wait for upwards of half an hour. At my weakest moments I’ve…[gasp] actually thrown away foreign wine bottles that the supermarkets wouldn’t recycle. It felt awful. Then there’s the whole issue of plastic bottle recycling being controlled by the Mafia, which makes it hard to feel happy when placing one’s bottles in those yellow cages in Israel’s streets

Ormat, Leviev Group and Evogene To Produce Castor Oil Biodiesel in Africa

ormat leviev and evogene create biofuel in africa with castor oil picture

An Israeli Real Estate mogul partners with Ormat and gene company Evogene to investigate castor oil crops in Africa.

L.L Biofuel Namibia of the Leviev Group and Evogene (announced yesterday) that together with Orfuel, a subsidiary of geothermal power giant Ormat, they will establish a new company focused on the growth of specialized castor plants for use as feedstock for biodiesel. The new company will be headquartered in Namibia, with operations in Namibia and possibly other locations in Africa.

According to the terms of the agreement, the new company will examine various castor varieties in field tests in Namibia, and following the selection of best performing varieties, the new company will work to commercialize and grow the selected varieties on a commercial scale in Namibia, and possibly in other locations in Africa.

Two Books 'Spiritual Compass' and 'Free To Be Human' Direct Us To Act Local

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spiritual compass book cover image

Guest reviewer Jeremy Zauder relishes two views of ethical development in a special double review this week: part of our ongoing Green Prophet ‘Eco-Reads’ green book summer festival:

‘Spiritual Compass’ and ‘Free To Be Human’: Reading these two fine books in succession, I found that they could be companion texts: though different in style and focus, each appealed to a different part of my brain and stimulated lively discussions.

It was good to read “Spiritual Compass” [by Satish Kumar] first. The book is a pleasant, fast read, with nice hand-drawn illustrations. The preface (by Deepak Chopra), the foreword, and “An Invitation” may be too much as an introduction because the same principles are repeated throughout the book.

The framework of Kumar’s topic is the three qualities of life, or three gunas of the Vedic tradition: sattva is the shining moral example towards which we should strive; raja includes the transforming stimulating actions of pursuits for gain or display; and tamas is the inert, dark, destructive means and ends which we should strenuously avoid. For an in-depth comparison of these models, please see the chart I compiled while reading Three Gunas.

These three qualities can be applied to all aspects of life. Sattvic environmental solutions offer simple long-lasting benefits with minimum impact and maximum harmony between people and nature. Rajasic ideas are more complicated. They deal with symptoms, not causes, and are unnaturally forced upon the environment. The root of the word comes from “rajah”, or king. Governments may attempt to lead us towards good, but they usually fail because the goal is not achieved by worthy means. Too much rajas leads to tamas, an empty, depressing, harmful state of existence.

"Sustainability Brothers" a Model for Collaboration of Different Environmental Activists

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sustainabilityThere are many types of environmental activists.  Not only are there those concerned with one type of environmental issue rather than another (such as being more of an advocate for organic farming than for alternative energy), but there are those involved to a higher degree than others.

No matter their differences, however, the big picture and the overall goal remain the same and so it is important that environmental activists be able to collaborate instead of fight against each other.

Which is why the Sustainability Brothers (yes, they’re literally brothers – ask their mom) are so wonderful.  Active in different realms of the environmental world, they nevertheless work together and are strengthened by their differences.  And so even though these brothers are not active in the Middle East, we hope that their collaboration (despite their differences) can serve as a model for populations in this region that may not be inclined to work together on environmental issues.

So who are the Sustainability Brothers?

Have a Healthy Ramadan: Greening Your Fast

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ramadan iftar dried date

We’re now just over a week into Ramadan, and hopefully those of you that are fasting have settled into a comfortable routine.  For any of you that may still be trying to find your way, though, we thought we’d do a bit of research into the best ways to keep your eating healthy and earth-friendly during the month:

  • Make sure to eat a full range of foods, in manageable quantities. Your body will respond best if you eat a regular and varied diet, and avoid gorging – excessive quantities of food can stress your system.
  • Emphasize foods that are slow to digest, and that provide a gradual release of energy during your fasting hours. Complex carbohydrates, lots of fibre, protein, and nutrient-dense foods are your friends. Think whole grains, lentils, fruits and vegetables, dried seeds and nuts…

Do You Crochet?

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If you don’t, perhaps you know someone who does? Save your old t-shirts. If cut & sewn into long strips connecting them into one big ball of “yarn” they can be crocheted or knitted into heavy afghans, blankets, bedspreads, lap covers, rugs, or clothing, such as hats, scarves, or shawls and ponchos. Guaranteed, that you’ll have the hippest, funkiest looking clothing that everyone will want a piece of!

Check out other funky clothing opportunities!

Looking to green your life? Find out more! Have a tip to share?

Bedouin and "Bustan" Green The Desert With Tree Planting Event

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Bedouin Bustan tree planting eventOne of our favourite Green NGO’s in Israel, Bustan, are holding a special tree planting event tommorrow (Thursday the 11th of September) at Segev Shalom.

With the help of local Bedouin residents, Bustan are planting an orchard (bustan, Hebrew and Arabic) as the first event of their new ‘Tree’s For Life’ project, which aims to green the desert with Indigenous trees for Indigenous communities, both Bedouin and Jewish, and provide education about the local ecology.

At the event tomorrow, which starts at 8.30 am at the Segev Shalom municipality building, storytelling and information about the trees will be available: but everyone is expected to roll up their sleeves and plant!

Palestinian Eco-Activism is on the Rise

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How can you recycle your paper and plastic when there’s nowhere to put it in your neighbourhood? It’s not just recycling facilities that are in short supply in East Jerusalem, but also environmental consciousness in general, as I found out recently whilst researching environmentalism among the 200,000+ Palestinian residents of the Holy City. My lack of Arabic notwithstanding, looking for environmental activists in East Jerusalem (short-hand for Arab neighbourhoods situated in the north, south and east of the city) was like searching for a needle in a haystack.

But hours of phonecalls and combing the internet eventually brought me face-to-face with a handful of dedicated Palestinian activists, educators and NGOs working to raise ecological awareness among their community in Jerusalem, as well as nearby Bethlehem, Ramallah and elsewhere in the West Bank.

Without getting too sidetracked with politics here, many of the Palestinians that Green Prophet spoke to felt they have other matters on their plate instead of bothering with flora, fauna and global warming. Even so, dedicated activists and educators are working hard to raising awareness in their communities. One of those people trying to fill the green gap is Sami Backleh (pictured), based near the Old City’s Damascus Gate, who explained why his passion is educating young people in his community about the environment:

“It’s not an easy task, but it’s important and I have to work at it,” says the freelance environmental consultant who also works as a Middle East co-ordinator for the Quebec-Labrador Foundation. “I hope it will benefit them in the long-run. It is initiating ideas in the minds of students, they are fast learners and it is creating a leadership of the future.”

No Sweat Apparel's Organic Ts Help Bring Peace to the Middle East

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We’ve already covered a few types of organic clothing here on Green Prophet – from organic baby clothes to organic designer clothes for women and even organic cotton tailored suits for men

But this is something entirely different. 

Because although we believe that shared concern about the environment can lead to greater peace in the Middle Eastern region, this message has never been brought to organic clothing.  Let alone an organic t-shirt.

Organic t-shirts bearing peaceful messages are the initiative of Jewish-American entrepreneur, Adam Nieman, who is the former owner of a Boston roofing business.  That all changed in 2001 when he sold his business and started No Sweat Apparel – a label that is produced entirely in union shops with organic cotton.

Since 2006, No Sweat Apparel has been producing organic t-shirts in a factory on Virgin Mary Street in Bethlehem – an endeavor that both promotes the use of environmentally friendly clothing production practices and provides jobs in an area where many are unemployed.

To take a look inside the Bethlehem factory and see an interview with Adam Niemen, check out the video below (courtesy of Al-Jazeera):

Meet Eco Mom Sophie Ohana

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organic clothing green baby

Sophie Ohana is an Eco-Mum! Growing up on an organic farm in England instilled in Sophie a passion for all things green, a passion which she later transported to Israel. When it comes to children and babies, Sophie is an expert on living green–an expertise which she implements in her company, Tinok Yarok (“Green Baby”) and shares regularly on Green Prophet.

Sophie shares more of her green passions after the jump:

How would you define yourself environmentally?

I’m an entrepreneur.

How you get around?

By car and on foot.

Can you tell us about your biggest green passion? What fires you up?

Our children and their home environment.

What prompted you to start caring about the environment?

I grew up caring about the environment, and having my daughter pushed it a step further.

What do you think is the most important issue the world faces today?

It’s important that we be honest about the damage we are doing and start doing something about it now!

What is the most important issue in the Middle East?

Peace and water–which go hand in hand.

What’s the saddest environmental-related thing you’ve ever seen?

Intensive animal farming and the polar bear swimming with no ice in sight.

What’s the most hopeful project/company/event you’ve seen?

Organic cotton projects in India and Africa.

What do you do to play your part in greening the earth?

Building a green business, living a green life and disseminating knowledge to anyone willing to listen.

What green-related books, blogs or sites are you reading now? What’s your favorite post/topic on Green Prophet, and why?

I  recently finished “The World without Us” by Alan Wiseman–both terrifying and reassuring–and “Healthy Child, Healthy World.” On Green Prophet, I’m enjoying the Eco-Rabbi–I like the connection.

Who are your environmental heroes? If you could meet with one of these heroes what would you ask them?

My mum, because of the values in life she taught me and inspired in me. The same goes for my grandfather; he believed in “waste not, want not” and was a great grower of his own fruit and vegetables. Al Gore, because he made the environment more mainstream, although I would ask why he doesn’t live the greener life, in terms of downsizing.

What has been the biggest influence in your life?

Having a family.

If you could make one green wish (or have one of your prophecies come true) what would it be?

That people start to take more responsibility for the way they live and shop for their own health and the health of our planet.

To get up close personal with the rest of our writers in focus”

Green Prophets in Focus: Michael Green

Green Prophets in Focus: James Murray-White

Green Prophets in Focus: Karen Chernick

Green Prophets in Focus: Jesse Fox

EcoMum keeps it Green and Sexy!

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green sexy lingerieWell the kids are back at school, time to pamper ourselves a little. Being an EcoMum is not all about being knee deep in cloth nappies, eating organic and recycling.

Okay, I admit, I do not spend hours shopping for the new trendy look and yes second hand shops and organic clothing are my buzz words, and yes I am most likely to wear something until it falls apart but heh! whoever said that I couldn’t be sexy too! So here’s a fun way to enjoy ourselves: green sexy knickers!

There are several great companies out there, admittedly not here in Israel but maybe this will get the ball rolling.

Investment House Talk on Green Investments

renewable energy investment advisor

This interview features Eyal Hadas, managing director and head of renewable energy at Cukierman & Co. Investment House Ltd. (CIH) in Tel Aviv.

We met Eyal at a renewable energy conference at Tel Aviv University several months ago (when Al Gore was in town and Karen photo-ed him in his cowboy boots), and were impressed by his experience in the international clean technologies market.

Israeli companies have some strengths and limitations, says Eyal who has worked for years in Europe. He will explain more below.

For those interested in understanding the Israeli market a little better, Eyal offers some food for thought. I was particularly surprised to find out that Persian Gulf countries are already investing in Israeli clean technologies.

First – more about Cukierman: Founded in 1993, Cukierman is the leading European oriented investment house, headquartered in Israel. They provide a full array of investment banking services including corporate finance, private equity and strategic consulting to Israeli and European companies.  

Since its establishment, Cukierman has been engaged in transactions valued at €2.36 billion through private placements, initial public offerings and mergers and acquisitions. In addition, Cukierman has developed a dominant position in private equity through the Catalyst Fund.

Eyal, tell us a little about Cukierman, who it invests in, and how the organization is positioned to other investment banks in Israel, Europe: We are investment bankers based out of Tel Aviv, with an office in Paris. In general, we either act as principals through our private equity fund, Catalyst ($100 million under management) or as advisors in various transactions: $10 million to $100 million. Examples: IPOs, private & public placement, merger and acquisition, corporate & project (structural) financing.

We have several verticals division: Real-Estate IT, Bio-Technology & Energy.

We work regularly with all the major Israeli financial institutions for example IBI – Poalim Capital Markets, UNION Bank and institutional investors, and also in Europe. We are also the representatives of the Government of Hong Kong and of Dews, Switzerland. His firm also works abroad and if you are looking to expand to Hong Kong for instance, see HK tax advisors

Tell us what you do specifically: The Energy Division of Cukierman focuses primarily on financial advisory transactions backed by cash flow generating assets in renewable energy, mostly in the EU. We have been involved so far in wind, biogas and photovoltaics (PV). These transactions provide annual yields to the investor of 10 percent and upwards, depending on various factors, such as the technology type and geographical location.

CIH Energy functions as a “one-stop-shop” for its clients: due diligence, financial, legal & tax advisory services. In the course of our business, we have developed alliances with some of the leading renewable energy companies in Europe, who are projects developers, financial institutions, technology and engineering due-diligences services, legal and tax advisors.

What kinds of unique opportunities do you see here in Israel’s clean technology sector? Israel as a “technology development hub” is however, by in large, a rather small (“niche”) market for cleantech technologies:

1) Renewable Energy: energy storage, photovoltaic (PV) panels efficiency improvement

2) Water Treatment: biological (drinking water & wastewater Purification, “Water Safety”

3) Solid & Liquid Waste Treatment: biological biodegradable technologies primarily for hazardous waste treatment.

What do you think are the companies’ strengths, the hottest enterprises? Do you have any favorite companies? Israeli companies, which are most innovative normally, manage to develop a “cutting-edge technology” outside the box, so to speak. Due to a small market size they can hardly bring their products and service to the local market – to “scale it up’” Nor are Israeli clean tech companies capable of strategic marketing (usually the case).

Has your company invested in any Israeli ventures? If so, which ones? Our private equity fund, Catalyst, hasn’t made an investment in cleantech ventures in Israeli companies. However, suitable investments (annual company turnover of at least $5 million are being considered).

Some are saying that renewable energy might be the only way to stop global warming. What’s your position on that? It’s an unrealistic view! Renewable energy will provide a substantial contribution. More importantly from the perspective of global warming is energy saving and efficiency measures! 

Can you envision other Middle East countries investing in Israeli clean technologies in the near future, or is it a preposterous idea? Yes. Actually Persian Golf countries are already investing in Israeli cleantech ventures either directly (via companies in Cyprus for example) or through USA / European Private Equity Funds.

Can you offer any tips for young entrepreneurs who might want to apply to Cukierman for investment or counsel? Study the needs and the prices of your target market/s well!

How does your model work? We first screen, then due diligence the technology/products/service/ company (including its management), then we deicide if we will take an exclusive mandate (normally a retainer Euro 3,000-5,000 per month + success-fee of about 2.5 – 5 percent).

Do you have any environmental heroes? Please share them with us. Yes, several. For example, Dieter Ammer, chairman of the Management Board of Conergy AG, Hamburg Germany. Dieter managed to take –– within 10 years – Conergy from a “start up” of less than $1 million revenues in 1998, to one of the largest renewable energy systems and projects providers worldwide: in 2007 there were Euro 706 million in revenues.