Christ’s thorn jujube (Ziziphus spina-christi) also known as the sidr tree is a real, identifiable tree native to the Middle East, and it appears—directly or indirectly—in Islam, Judaism, and later Christian tradition. The connections between the three faiths are not theological agreements but overlapping uses, names, and symbolic associations rooted in the same landscape.
Air Tea is a new technology. Instead of drinking tea, you inhale herbal vapor through warm air extraction. There is no water and no combustion. The warm air releases essential oils that are often lost in hot water and digestion.
Health emerges from a continuous energy and material flow from water through food to human physiology. Technical energy systems support this cycle through water treatment, agriculture, and infrastructure.
Christ’s thorn jujube (Ziziphus spina-christi) also known as the sidr tree is a real, identifiable tree native to the Middle East, and it appears—directly or indirectly—in Islam, Judaism, and later Christian tradition. The connections between the three faiths are not theological agreements but overlapping uses, names, and symbolic associations rooted in the same landscape.
Air Tea is a new technology. Instead of drinking tea, you inhale herbal vapor through warm air extraction. There is no water and no combustion. The warm air releases essential oils that are often lost in hot water and digestion.
Health emerges from a continuous energy and material flow from water through food to human physiology. Technical energy systems support this cycle through water treatment, agriculture, and infrastructure.
Christ’s thorn jujube (Ziziphus spina-christi) also known as the sidr tree is a real, identifiable tree native to the Middle East, and it appears—directly or indirectly—in Islam, Judaism, and later Christian tradition. The connections between the three faiths are not theological agreements but overlapping uses, names, and symbolic associations rooted in the same landscape.
Air Tea is a new technology. Instead of drinking tea, you inhale herbal vapor through warm air extraction. There is no water and no combustion. The warm air releases essential oils that are often lost in hot water and digestion.
Health emerges from a continuous energy and material flow from water through food to human physiology. Technical energy systems support this cycle through water treatment, agriculture, and infrastructure.
Christ’s thorn jujube (Ziziphus spina-christi) also known as the sidr tree is a real, identifiable tree native to the Middle East, and it appears—directly or indirectly—in Islam, Judaism, and later Christian tradition. The connections between the three faiths are not theological agreements but overlapping uses, names, and symbolic associations rooted in the same landscape.
Air Tea is a new technology. Instead of drinking tea, you inhale herbal vapor through warm air extraction. There is no water and no combustion. The warm air releases essential oils that are often lost in hot water and digestion.
Health emerges from a continuous energy and material flow from water through food to human physiology. Technical energy systems support this cycle through water treatment, agriculture, and infrastructure.
Christ’s thorn jujube (Ziziphus spina-christi) also known as the sidr tree is a real, identifiable tree native to the Middle East, and it appears—directly or indirectly—in Islam, Judaism, and later Christian tradition. The connections between the three faiths are not theological agreements but overlapping uses, names, and symbolic associations rooted in the same landscape.
Air Tea is a new technology. Instead of drinking tea, you inhale herbal vapor through warm air extraction. There is no water and no combustion. The warm air releases essential oils that are often lost in hot water and digestion.
Health emerges from a continuous energy and material flow from water through food to human physiology. Technical energy systems support this cycle through water treatment, agriculture, and infrastructure.
Christ’s thorn jujube (Ziziphus spina-christi) also known as the sidr tree is a real, identifiable tree native to the Middle East, and it appears—directly or indirectly—in Islam, Judaism, and later Christian tradition. The connections between the three faiths are not theological agreements but overlapping uses, names, and symbolic associations rooted in the same landscape.
Air Tea is a new technology. Instead of drinking tea, you inhale herbal vapor through warm air extraction. There is no water and no combustion. The warm air releases essential oils that are often lost in hot water and digestion.
Health emerges from a continuous energy and material flow from water through food to human physiology. Technical energy systems support this cycle through water treatment, agriculture, and infrastructure.
Christ’s thorn jujube (Ziziphus spina-christi) also known as the sidr tree is a real, identifiable tree native to the Middle East, and it appears—directly or indirectly—in Islam, Judaism, and later Christian tradition. The connections between the three faiths are not theological agreements but overlapping uses, names, and symbolic associations rooted in the same landscape.
Air Tea is a new technology. Instead of drinking tea, you inhale herbal vapor through warm air extraction. There is no water and no combustion. The warm air releases essential oils that are often lost in hot water and digestion.
Health emerges from a continuous energy and material flow from water through food to human physiology. Technical energy systems support this cycle through water treatment, agriculture, and infrastructure.
Christ’s thorn jujube (Ziziphus spina-christi) also known as the sidr tree is a real, identifiable tree native to the Middle East, and it appears—directly or indirectly—in Islam, Judaism, and later Christian tradition. The connections between the three faiths are not theological agreements but overlapping uses, names, and symbolic associations rooted in the same landscape.
Air Tea is a new technology. Instead of drinking tea, you inhale herbal vapor through warm air extraction. There is no water and no combustion. The warm air releases essential oils that are often lost in hot water and digestion.
Health emerges from a continuous energy and material flow from water through food to human physiology. Technical energy systems support this cycle through water treatment, agriculture, and infrastructure.
If you’re going to shell out the extra shekels for organic food, you’re want to be confident that you’re getting the real deal.
Personally, I think the price of organic food is worth paying, whether you’re buying it for selfish reasons (taste, avoiding nasty chemicals and GMOs) or altruistic ones (treading lightly our small country) and until recently, as far as I was concerned, anything in Israel labelled with the O-Word must be licensed and inspected by a government-authorised organisation.
So it came as a surprise to find out recently that organic labelling in Israel isn’t such as a clear-cut issue. A new law was passed by the Knesset last week with the intention of ensuring that organic food on sale in Israel really is organic. But the Israel Bio-organic Agriculture Association (IBOAA) claims that the law will not prohibit or limit the use of the term ‘organic’, and that any farmer will still be able to label his produce as they wish, reports Ha’aretz.
Lithoplast, a new material from old plastic by Shahar Livne
Here at Green Prophet we’re big fans of environmentally friendly design. While it is greener, of course, to be a minimalist and avoid purchasing new products altogether – that sort of extreme attitude works for only a limited number of eco folks. For the rest of us, we can alleviate our consciences by supporting sustainable products.
So what is sustainable design?
Sustainable design (which is sometimes also referred to as eco design, green design, or environmentally friendly design) is the design of objects, buildings, you-name-it in compliance with the principles on environmental, social, and economic sustainability.
On Green Prophet, we’ve featured a range of sustainable designers – ranging from those who upcycle existing waste materials into new products (thus avoiding having perfectly good materials end up in landfills and eliminating the need to use additional resources), to those who create products that generate their own energy, to those who use resources harvested organically with sustainable agricultural practices. The possibilities are endless.
To recap some of our favorites, here’s a hitlist of 10Â sustainable Israeli designers that deserve our support.
1. Elanit Neutra, handbag designer extraordinaire, encourages us to get more mileage out of our purses by creating her designs out of recycled tire inner tubes. If you think her designs are only suitable for female auto mechanics and other various tomboys – think again. The chic black tones and geometric ridges of the tires make for an unforgettable fashion statement.
Inbal Dayagi
2. In other sustainable accessories, Inbal Dayagi has created an alternative to the energy-guzzling iPod. Her space-age looking boom box that is based on the aesthetics of the hula hoop not only looks cool, but its wheels recharge the music maker’s batteries as you groove along. Groovy sustainable grooves.
3. Street cool is also a factor in Abu YoYo‘s line of bags, wallets, book covers, kitchen accessories and purses made out of nothing other than street-side advertising – billboard material. Abu YoYo uses the existing designs and logos on the materials and takes them one step cooler. Considering the fact that about 6,900 meters of the toxic plastic substance are produced and disposed of in Tel Aviv alone every month – she’s doing us all a green and beautiful favor.
4. Men’s suits have never been more sustainable than with Israeli clothing company, Bagir’s, Eco-GIR line – where every suit is made of out 100% recycled materials (namely, 30 PET plastic bottles). Now that’s what I call Eurotrash. Good Eurotrash. And for those men not brave enough to wear a plastic suit just yet, Bagir also makes suits out of organic cotton.
5. For the ladies looking to build a more sustainable wardrobe, Cotton’s organic clothes are soft on the environment. Cotton’s motto, Individuality, Comfort, and Care for the Environment shows in the company’s actions: they use only organic cotton, produce all of their clothes in Israel (eliminating unnecessary transportation and carbon emissions), and feature environmental messages in their window displays and catalogs.
6. In the sustainable art scene, Inbal Limor recycles ubiquitous and omnipresent plastic bags into high art. Using the plastic bags that her family and friends religiously collect for her, she transforms the material into sculptures and frame-able artwork. Lucky for us, because otherwise these nasty non-biodegradable bags would end up in some gross landfill.
Yoav Kotik earrings
7. Yoav Kotik, another Israeli recycle artist, uses mostly aluminum cans, caps, and paraphernalia as his medium. Having recently exhibited an exhibition of recycled spring flowers at the Periscope Gallery in Tel Aviv, Kotik also creates light fixtures, home accessories, and jewellery made out of Israeli beer caps.
In the artist statement accompanying his recent show, he explained that he wishes to challenge the concept of what is considered garbage. We couldn’t agree more.
Lots of people these days make light of trash, not understanding how serious its effects are on the environment. Merav Feiglin turns that around and creates wonderful, whimsical, hilarious Trashlights. Combining bizarre and unusual materials such as shaving brushes, Barbie dolls, coffee grinders, and rubber alligators, her lamps truly have something for everyone. Sustainably speaking, her creations prevent these unusable items from ending up in the trash if they are your thing.
In terms of design, since many of the elements are old, her lamps have a warm retro feel. Nothing trashy about that.
9. In other trash design, Erez Mulay creates wastepaper baskets made out of… wasted paper. Pun intended. The materials used in his clever design reflect the function of the product itself (and find a use for hard-to-recycle glossy magazine paper). Even better, Mulay hires people with emotional disabilities to make the baskets – thus making his products environmentally and socially sustainable. Well done.
10. The last of our ten sustainable Israeli designers is Tel Aviv based design studio, Junktion, which stands at the intersection of waste and whimsy. Using whatever discarded materials they find in the city, they reinvent existing materials in clever, funny, and thought provoking ways. Our favorite is the suitcase-turned-medicine cabinet. (The bicycle chair, at the top of the post, isn’t too shabby either.)
Shahar Livne mines plastic waste
Got a great sustainable designer to tell us about? Like Shahar Livne? Share it with us via [email protected] we we will add their name to an upcoming story.
For most people, solar energy conjures up images of rectangular panels on roofs or lined up in rows somewhere in the middle of the desert. And indeed, this is what we can expect to see over the next few years, as Israel begins to develop its most significant natural (and renewable) resource – the sun.
But how will the next generation of solar energy look? Could solar energy production transcend its sterile, technical image and become an element that actually enriches the landscape?
Here is a good example of how it could do just that.
How many shades of green can a Jaffa orange be? Israeli fruit and vegetable grower and supplier Mehadrin (owned by Hadarim, a property and building group, and a succession of other parent companies) is working with British supermarket chain Tesco in a bid to mark all its Jaffa oranges with the Carbon Trust label, a carbon footprint. This label will show that 125kg of carbon per kilogram of oranges was used or created during the growing, handling and shipping of the product.
Mehadrin is so far the only Israeli food company to be working on displaying the carbon measurement of its products (see Bagir, which is carbon labeling its eco suits), and in doing so is cleverly tapping into environmental issues that are close to many British consumers’ hearts (and I speak as a sensitive British consuming expat).
During the summertime if you put your shades (trisim) down in the morning it will help keep your house cooler for the rest of the day. And don’t just use shades for your house! With the right name-brands you too can be cool as your protect your eyes…
Last Thursday fifty Muslim clerics gathered in Umm el-Fahm for a conference to raise awareness regarding environmental issues among imams. The first of its kind, the conference was an important stepping stone in improving the quality of the environment in Israeli-Arab towns.
Organized partially by the director of Environmental Quality Unit Northern Triangle and long term environmental and social activist, Mohammad Rabah Aghbarieh, the event was held at the Umm el-Fahm Science and Art Center.
In addition to helping organize the conference, Rabah Aghbarieh prepared materials together with the Environmental Protection Ministry that every imam took home. These materials included a poster with an outline of basic environmental guidelines to be hung in his mosque, stickers stating that environmental protection is a religious commandment, and a CD containing sources from the Koran and hadith supporting environmental issues, general environmental information sources, a movie about the ministry, and other informational resources.
Tons of soot is being released into the air annually as forest fires rage from California to the Amazon to Siberia and Indonesia. Climate scientists have generally assumed that the main effect of smoke on climate is cooling, as the floating particles can reflect some solar energy back to space as well as increasing cloud size and lifespan. But new joint research at the Weizmann Institute of Science, the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC), and NASA may cause them to rethink soot’s role in shaping the Earth’s climate.
Air-borne particles such as soot – known collectively as aerosols – rise into the atmosphere where they interact with clouds. Understanding what happens when the two meet is extremely complicated, in part because clouds are highly dynamic systems that both reflect the sun’s energy back into space, cooling the upper atmosphere, and trap heat underneath, warming the lower atmosphere and the Earth’s surface. Aerosols, in turn, can have both heating and cooling effects on clouds.
On the one hand, water droplets form around the aerosol particles and these may extend the cloud cover. On the other hand, particles, especially soot, absorb the sun’s radiation, stabilizing the atmosphere and thus reducing cloud formation.
“Nature is a language – can’t you read? Nature is a language – can’t anybody read?”
Morrissey & Marr: The Smiths, ‘Ask’ (1986) as played live in Tel Aviv last week.
We here at Green Prophet don’t often blow our own green shofar, but it’s always good to get praise from others, particularly when it’s in the national media. We were delighted last week to be described in a Ha’aretz books supplement book review as: “the useful (and, yes, hip) Israeli environmental blog in English.”
Thanks to the writer Daniel Orenstein, a postdoctoral fellow at the Technion and a faculty member of the Arava Institute, for that. Orenstein’s kind words came in the middle of a powerful review that blossomed into an overview of the burgeoning green revolution here in Israel: what the situation is, and what we as Individuals can do, as well as the politicians (see MK Dr. Dov Khenin’s plans for greening Tel Aviv sustainably here).
He ends his review, titled ‘What do we do now?’ with a punchy call for action from all of us, and emphasises the need for us to apply pressure to those with political clout:
“Greening should be a project we can all engage in. For this to be the case, we need legislation that will place the proper incentives on environmentally sound decisions, help people pay for the high up-front costs of energy efficiency, and make polluters pay for environmentally damaging activities. And for that, we need an abundance of genuine environmental advocates sitting in [the] Knesset whose concerns are for the long-term well-being of the land and people of Israel.”
The noise about the importance of fixing our climate has been growing louder and louder over the past few years. We can only hope the the damage we have caused to our planet is not irreparable.
But it’s easy to get overwhelmed by it all. To say: “What can I do?” and just give up. The truth is that everything single thing we do every day has an impact on the planet – good or bad. The choice is in your hands. The “little” you can at least mean that you are not adding to the problem. If we can get everyone to think green, well, no more problem. right? But to get there we’ll need to take it one person at a time… So why not start at home?
The truth is that “going green” isn’t just about helping to preserve equatorial rain forests, it can also mean improving your health, saving cash, and, ultimately, improving your overall quality of life. Why wouldn’t anyone want to green?
Read about blessings and the philosophy of a green lifestyle.
Stay tuned for our future eco-tour of Dubai, but in the meantime let’s take a look at some green goings-on in Dubai. Because we’ve been pleasantly surprised to discover that very interesting things are happening over there.
For starters, the Dubai government recently issued a requirement that all buildings in the emirate be constructed with environmentally friendly “green building” standards beginning in January 2008. What does “green building” mean?Â
It means the design, construction, operation, and maintenance of a building are altered in order to increase energy efficiency and reduce consumption of resources. These goals are obviously beneficial towards both the environment and the people using the buildings, and it is very impressive that the Dubai government has taken on this challenge. And this initiative makes Dubai the first city in the Middle East to implement green construction standards, so kudos are in order.
Scientists are predicting that climate change will cause upheavals in the patterns of rainfall, drought, floods, and desertification. Â The latest report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warns that temperatures in the Middle East have increased between 2-3 degrees Celsius in the last century, faster than the global average of about 1 degree. Â As a result, our region is expected to have fewer – but more violent -rain events, increased drought, and decreasing resources of fresh water. Â We are currently experiencing a water crisis that is considered severe, although a large part of it is due to chronic mismanagement of freshwater resources.Â
The latest projections of the IPCC predict a decrease of 15-25% in rainfall over large regions of the Fertile Crescent, leading to water shortages, and increased competition for increasingly scarce water resources.
But is the “conventional wisdom” accurate? Â Any modeller will tell you that the only certain thing about any forecast that we make is that it will be wrong. Â The only question is, how wrong? Â All models are a simplification of reality, and contain inherent errors. Â The closer the assumptions of the model are to reality, the better the results will be. Â
MK Dr. Dov Khenin announces his candidacy for the office of Mayor of Tel Aviv on Monday, flanked by members of the A City for All movement in Tel Aviv’s Gan Meir. (Photo by Yoav Lerman).
What would happen if a dyed-in-the-wool environmentalist were to take charge of a polluted and traffic-clogged city like Tel Aviv? We may soon find out.
Member of Knesset Dr. Dov Khenin announced his candidacy for mayor of the city on Monday. His campaign is expected to present a serious challenge to reigning Mayor Ron Huldai, who has run the city for the last ten years.
Khenin, an MK from the Arab-Jewish Hadash party, currently heads the Knesset’s environmental-social caucus, and has managed to rack up an impressive list of accomplishments in his two years of parliamentary work. Before getting elected to the Knesset, Khenin worked as a human rights lawyer and served as head of chairman of Life and Environment, the umbrella organization of Israel’s environmental movement.
Can environmental professionals from Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority help solve the epic water battles in California? How similar are the issues of water scarcity and political conflict in the Middle East to those in the Western United States? Can recent examples of successful conflict resolution and cooperation for environmental gains in the Middle East provide valuable lessons for application to California, Utah and Colorado?
A symposium coming to Los Angeles Sept. 9 will explore these critically important questions and showcase ground-breaking efforts for trans-boundary environmental cooperation in the Middle East. The seminar is presented by the Arava Institute for Environmental Studies and features a keynote address from Dr. Peter Gleick, co-founder and president of the Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment and Security.
Securing trans-boundary cooperation is critical as Israel and many areas of the Middle East are in the midst of historic water shortages. Similarly, a drought has been declared in California, adding to recent complications from court-ordered reductions in water deliveries to Southern California to protect endangered species. In addition, the Colorado River Basin is experiencing historic drought conditions.
Research director of the Arava Institute Clive Lipchin comments,Â
California’s history can and has been written as successive battles over water waged both within the state and with surrounding states and Mexico. Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority are waging similar battles, attempting to resolve their problems of scarcity, drought and allocation in the middle of a politically tense region.
One of the best ways to reduce your waste is to reuse it. If you want to get rid of something, perhaps there is someone else out there that would treasure your rejects. When reading the news keep your eyes open for community events which give such opportunities. None in your neighborhood? Organize one! It can be a fun way to catch up with old friends and meet some new ones.
Tonight you can have such an opportunity in Jerusalem.
Microwave ovens are an important cooking and food heating tool in many modern homes, especially here in Israel. Many people may not be aware, however, just how dangerous these gadgets are to human health. Recently, much attention has been given to microwaves, or “micro-gals” (as they are called by Israelis) in that they produce similar electronic frequencies as those who are found in cellular phones which are now being said to be very dangerous to human health and the cause of a number of types of cancer.
It’s not only the type of utensil that holds the food (such as those made from polymer plastics) but the actual appliance itself that is so dangerous that some countries, including Russia, have banned its sale for health reasons. And Green Prophet’s Eco-Mum has her own thoughts — see Safe Bottle Feeding.Â