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August 07, 2007

Israelis teach social justice 'out of their backpacks' in Nepal

DEMOCRACY


By Karin Kloosterman August 03, 2007

Doctor Livingstone, Columbus, and Neil Armstrong had at least one thing in common: all three were keen on chartering new territory. Today it isn't so easy for adventurers to set their sails towards land never before encountered. Instead, the adventurous are turning to other realms of discovery - bridging the distance between cultures.

Continue reading "Israelis teach social justice 'out of their backpacks' in Nepal" »

Israelis teach social justice 'out of their backpacks' in Nepal

DEMOCRACY

By Karin Kloosterman August 03, 2007

Doctor Livingstone, Columbus, and Neil Armstrong had at least one thing in common: all three were keen on chartering new territory. Today it isn't so easy for adventurers to set their sails towards land never before encountered. Instead, the adventurous are turning to other realms of discovery - bridging the distance between cultures.

Continue reading "Israelis teach social justice 'out of their backpacks' in Nepal" »

August 04, 2007

Good eggs from the West Bank

Haaretz

August 2, 2007

By Nadav Shragai

Avri Ran is a leader of the Hilltop Youth movement from the West Bank settlement of Itamar. He has been acquitted of charges of assaulting an Israeli Arab and a left-wing activist, and residents of the Arab village of Yanun accuse him of harassing villagers. But Ran's right-wing activities are not his only claim to fame: He is also one of the largest suppliers of organic eggs in the country.

Continue reading "Good eggs from the West Bank" »

Ayla Oasis project on track

Jordan Times

July 30, 2007

By Dalya Dajani

AMMAN --The Ayla Oasis Development Company is on track with its plans for the
mega-lagoon resort project in Aqaba, with evaluation underway of seven
international contractors who have submitted their tenders for the project.

Continue reading "Ayla Oasis project on track" »

In 'Sewage Valley,' no solution in the pipeline

Haaretz

August 2, 2007

By Jack Khoury

From a distance, the eastern neighborhood of the Galilee village of Majdal Krum looks pastoral, its relatively new homes sitting along green hills. Yesterday at dusk, a lone horse was even wandering in the fields. To the south, the nearby villas of Karmiel come into view. But as you come closer, you quickly see why residents call it "Sewage Valley."

Continue reading "In 'Sewage Valley,' no solution in the pipeline" »

July 24, 2007

Knesset declares 'Environment Day'

The Jerusalem Post

Jul. 17, 2007

Ron Friedman

A series of "green" motions were passed in the Knesset on Tuesday, as part of a day dedicated to environmental causes.

In their attempt to make Israel a more environmentally-friendly country, "Green" lawmakers and activists decided to start from the top. The leaders of the Knesset Socio-Environmental caucus, together with environmental student organization "The Green Course," submitted a report to the Knesset providing practical proposals for making the country's governing body more environmentally conscientious.

Continue reading "Knesset declares 'Environment Day'" »

Greywater Treatment and Reuse in MENA: A Method that works

Arab Environmental Monitor

July 14, 2007

Batir Wardham

In Arab countries with scarce water resources and shortage of money and technologies for desalination, the option of greywater reuse and treatment is gaining a lot of potential. Despite problems that appeared in small-scale applications of greywater resuse in households the technologies are getting better and cheaper. The main element will be for the local community itself to adopt the technologies even when the donors leave.

Continue reading "Greywater Treatment and Reuse in MENA: A Method that works" »

Gov't to name winning Disi project bidder

Jordan Times

Jul. 19, 2007

Hana Namrouqa

AMMAN -- The winning bidder of the $600 million Disi Water Conveyance Project will be announced in two weeks, Ministry of Water and Irrigation sources said on Wednesday.

Continue reading "Gov't to name winning Disi project bidder" »

July 17, 2007

New strategy warns of dangers plastics pose to environment

Jordan Times

Jul. 12, 2007

Hana Namrouqa

AMMAN -- The Ministry of Environment on Wednesday signed an agreement with the Jordan Environment Society (JES) to implement a comprehensive awareness programme aimed at reducing the use of plastics and encouraging the segregation of waste materials.

Continue reading "New strategy warns of dangers plastics pose to environment" »

Environmental protection's gray market

Haaretz

July 11, 2007

By Zafrir Rinat

Two years ago, the Elcon Recycling Center wastewater treatment plant in Haifa Bay received the approval of the Environmental Protection Ministry to transfer hypersaline waste (fluids that contain unusually high concentrations of salt) to treatment pools in an industrial zone in the Galilee region. The ministry later received data that indicated that Elcon's purification process had failed to rid these brine-like substances of dangerous pollutants. Transport of the hypersaline waste to the Galilee was halted. The ministry now maintains it is taking action to remove this environmental hazard.

Continue reading "Environmental protection's gray market" »

Green life in the city: Clothes from the street, recycled water

Haaretz

July 10, 2007

By Tamara Traubmann

In the early afternoon, Tami Zuri picks lavender, melissa and mint from the flower pots on her balcony in north Tel Aviv. She is preparing a drink for the participants in a workshop she will be giving shortly on producing vegetable dairy products.

Continue reading "Green life in the city: Clothes from the street, recycled water" »

July 12, 2007

Bill passed requiring solar powered water heaters in public housing

Haaretz

July 2, 2007

By Zvi Zrahiya, Haaretz Correspondent

The Knesset approved the third reading of a bill Monday calling for solar powered water heaters to be installed in all public housing apartments so that poverty stricken families will be able to reduce their electric bills.

Continue reading "Bill passed requiring solar powered water heaters in public housing" »

Studies on 20 establishments show possibility to conserve 20% of their

Jordan Times

2 Jul 2007

By Samir Ghawi

Jul. 2--AMMAN -- Technical and economic studies conducted on 20 establishments showed that there is a possibility of conserving 20 per cent of their energy consumption, Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Khalid Shraideh told an executive club lunch on Sunday.

Shraideh spoke about the future strategy of Jordan's energy sector saying that the National Petroleum Company (NPC) is seeking a joint venture partner to explore and develop the Risha gas field and the necessary infrastructure.

Continue reading "Studies on 20 establishments show possibility to conserve 20% of their" »

July 11, 2007

Green campaigners keep watch on Dubai's man-made isles

Jordan Times
Agence French Presse

July 5 2007

Laith Abou-Ragheb

Giant islands taking shape off the coast of Dubai are sparking interest not only from celebrities but also from environmental campaigners jittery about the man-made structures so large they can be seen from space.

Continue reading "Green campaigners keep watch on Dubai's man-made isles" »

Israeli discovery paves way for cost-efficient wood alternative

Israel 21c

July 01, 2007

DEMOCRACY

By Ilana Teitelbaum

From the moment we wake up in the morning and open a box of cereal to the hours we spend at work among printers, faxes, and copying machines, to times spent relaxing in the evening with a magazine or mass market paperback, we are constantly surrounded by paper.

Continue reading "Israeli discovery paves way for cost-efficient wood alternative" »

Study: Israeli cars emit more than 14 million tons of CO2 anually

Haaretz

July 7, 2007

By Zafrir Rinat, Haaretz Correspondent

Vehicular emissions count for one-fifth of the total amount of global warming-gas carbon dioxide emitted in Israel each year, according to a report issued last week.

Continue reading "Study: Israeli cars emit more than 14 million tons of CO2 anually" »

July 09, 2007

"Palestinian Water Crisis: Bilateral and Regional Perspectives"

The Palestine Center

Edited transcript of a presentation by members of the Negotiation Support Unit of the PLO’s Negotiations Affairs Department on Water
“For the Record” No. 280 (27 June 2007)

At a 14 June 2007 Palestine Center briefing, Dr. Shaddad Attili, Mr. Fuad Bateh and Mr. John Murray of the Negotiations Support Unit of the PLO’s Negotiations Affairs Department, proposed a positive-sum approach for the resolution of the water crisis in the Middle East. As for the allocation of water, both on the political and topographical level, they maintained that an equitable allocation of water is not only essential for the establishment of a viable Palestinian state but will also help restore relations with Israel and its neighboring countries. They also emphasized the dire need for clean water in Gaza and the creation of a much needed desalinization plant. Ultimately, the question of a viable and sustainable Palestinian state and the long-term interests of all the water-sharing parties—Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Syrian and Palestine—depends on a sound and just resolution to the water conflict.

Continue reading ""Palestinian Water Crisis: Bilateral and Regional Perspectives"" »

Water Authority chief warns of possible shortage in 2008

Haaretz

July 2, 2007

By Zafrir Rinat, Haaretz Correspondent

It will be difficult to meet projected water demand for 2008 if next winter's rainfall levels are similar to those of last winter, said the head of the Water Authority Council, Prof. Uri Shani.

Lecturing at the Hebrew University Faculty of Agriculture in Rehovot last week, Shani warned that Israel's water problems will worsen significantly in the coming years unless the production of desalinated water rises sharply. The lecture was not intended for media coverage.

Continue reading "Water Authority chief warns of possible shortage in 2008" »

July 01, 2007

Wilderness almost non-existent on planet Earth: study

Middle East Times

June 28, 2007

AFP
SAN FRANCISCO-- Humans have domesticated the planet to such a degree that few untouched spots remain, researchers report in a review article published in the journal Science.

Earth is so tamed that conservationism should shift focus from protecting nature from humans to better understanding and managing a domesticated world, the authors said.

Continue reading "Wilderness almost non-existent on planet Earth: study" »

Experts underline local resources to raise electrical power generation

Jordan Times

June 27, 2007

AMMAN (Petra) — Energy specialists reiterated on Thursday the need to rely on local energy resources to increase electrical power generation and reduce the country’s oil bill.

Continue reading "Experts underline local resources to raise electrical power generation" »

US supports water conservation efforts

Jordan Times

June 27, 2007

ByHani Hazaimeh, Jordan Times, Amman

AMMAN -- American Ambassador to Jordan David Hale on Tuesday awarded a total of JD133,000 in grants to 19 community-based organisations (CBOs) in Amman and Madaba in support of their water conservation efforts.

Funded by US Agency for International Development (USAID), the grants are part of the Community-Based Initiatives for Water Demand Management.

Continue reading " US supports water conservation efforts" »

June 26, 2007

Turning Business Green: The experience of EMS Company in the Arab World

Arab Environmental Monitor

Source: Jordan Business
June 2007

By: Nina Robertson

When Khaled Bushnaq decided 16 years ago to set up a firm that would provide technical consultancy in the field of energy conservation, most people were more than a bit skeptical. Energy conservation was almost entirely unheard of in the Middle East, and businesses were certainly not factoring energy-saving measures into their budgets.

Ignoring the cynics, Mr. Bushnaq, along with a business associate, established Energy Management Services (EMS) in Jordan in 1991, with a paid-up capital of JD30,000. Two years later, the company received the Special Recognition Award at the 16th World Energy Congress in the U.S. Today, EMS capital is JD2 million and is the leading energy service company (ESCO) in the Middle East, providing its services to over 500 companies in Jordan and the region.


Continue reading "Turning Business Green: The experience of EMS Company in the Arab World" »

Clean waters

Jordan Times

Listing Jordan River among the top most endangered cultural heritage sites
in the world comes as no surprise.

The Friends of the Earth Middle East Society and the World Monument Fund,
the renowned international watchdog of cultural heritages worldwide, have
sounded the alarm about the inevitable demise of the river and showed what
protecting it from becoming altogether extinct entails.

Continue reading "Clean waters" »

June 09, 2007

'Green power' could help solve many problems

The Jerusalem Post

Jun. 6, 2007

SAUL ELBEIN

Outsourcing, global warming and terrorism are very different problems, but "green power" could wean the West and the developing world off cheap oil and its accompanying problems, New York Times Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Thomas L. Friedman said Wednesday.

Continue reading "'Green power' could help solve many problems" »

On World Environment Day, PCBS reveals the state of the Palestinian Environment

Ma'an News Service

June 5, 2007

Bethlehem - Ma'an - On the occasion of World Environment Day, celebrated every year on 5 June since 1972, when the United Nations declared World Day at the opening of the Stockholm conference on human environment, the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) has issued a press release on the state of the Palestinian environment.

Population density

Continue reading "On World Environment Day, PCBS reveals the state of the Palestinian Environment" »

June 01, 2007

Avoiding a Water Crisis

Avoiding a Water Crisis
asharq alawsat

May 19, 2007

Hussein Shobokshi

With the growing number of reports and books confirming the words of political experts and strategic analysts that the next war in the Middle East will be fought over water and water resources, it is extraordinary that another type of war is actually being fought now.

Continue reading "Avoiding a Water Crisis" »

Conference involves schools in environmental programmes

Jordan Times

May 26, 2007

AMMAN (JT) — The UNESCO Amman office, in collaboration with the Swedish-based NGO Life-Link Friendship-Schools (www.life-link.org), brought together school teachers from different countries in the region in a two-day workshop this week.

Continue reading "Conference involves schools in environmental programmes" »

Analysis: Six months of negotiations may open way to long-term Israeli deal to buy Gaza gas

Middle East Times

May 26, 2007

Marian Houk

JERUSALEM -- Movement was reported this week on an Israeli government decision to authorize a long-term agreement to purchase gas from Gaza's offshore wells at market price from the Palestinian Authority. The Israeli cabinet made the decision to go ahead with negotiations to buy Palestinian gas on April 29.

The exploitation of the offshore gas field is expected to generate much-needed revenue for the Palestinians. Some analysts argue, however, that the main advantages of the deal are not only financial - it is hoped that the mutual dependency that will be created by the deal will help create an atmosphere more conducive to peace.

Continue reading "Analysis: Six months of negotiations may open way to long-term Israeli deal to buy Gaza gas" »

May 25, 2007

Not green enough for the green groups

Haaretz

May 8, 2007

By Zafrir Rinat

Last week the future of the mineral water plant next to the Ein Gedi nature reserve was ensured. The Israel Nature and National Parks Protection Authority (INNPPA) signed an agreement with Kibbutz Ein Gedi, one of the owners of the plant, to make it possible for the kibbutz to use a large quantity of the water from the springs. In return, the kibbutz will supply the nature reserve with flood water that it pumps from the slopes of the streams in the region.

Continue reading "Not green enough for the green groups" »

March 11, 2007

Environment Ministry proposes alternate location for Dibbeen tourism complex

Jordan Times

March 1, 2007

Mohammad Ghazal, , Amman

AMMAN -- The Ministry of Environment on Wednesday proposed an alternate location for the construction of the JD100 million tourist complex in Dibbeen.

"The ministry suggested the new site due to many reasons, mainly because it believes that implementing the project in the new site will cause no environmental damage to Dibbeen Forest," Minister of Environment Khalid Irani told The Jordan Times yesterday.

Continue reading " Environment Ministry proposes alternate location for Dibbeen tourism complex" »

March 03, 2007

Chouf Cedars Reserve teams up with goats and their masters to protect greenery

The Daily Star

March 02, 2007

By Maher Zeineddine
Daily Star correspondent

CHOUF: Administrators of the Chouf Cedars Nature Reserve have struck a deal with local goatherds in an effort to protect the area's vegetation. Grazing will now be conducted outside the reserve and according to strict schedules and in specific regions, in an attempt to prevent deforestation and limit notorious and all-too-frequent brush fires.

Continue reading "Chouf Cedars Reserve teams up with goats and their masters to protect greenery" »

February 28, 2007

On Location: A sustainable development

The Jerusalem Post

Feb. 22, 2007


LEAH GRANOF, THE JERUSALEM POST

A single snapshot could capture the entire settlement of Haruv's long row of temporary houses built on a solitary street. But that picture would hardly encapsulate the essence of this community, 20 kilometers east of Kiryat Gat. Located next to the agricultural community of Shekef, Haruv's one street, adorned with playgrounds at each end and dogs cavorting with unabashed freedom, is only a temporary stopover for the community of 35 families awaiting construction of a permanent location atop the green hills two kilometers away.

Continue reading "On Location: A sustainable development" »

February 23, 2007

Green Star of David isn't backed by solid criteria

Haaretz

February 7, 2007

By Ronny Linder-Ganz

The green Star of David stamped on products to indicate that the product is environmentally friendly does not appear to be backed up by any environmental criteria, testing or supervision, an investigation by TheMarker, in conjunction with consumer law expert Dr. Shmuel Becher, has found.

Continue reading "Green Star of David isn't backed by solid criteria" »

February 19, 2007

The threat that unites us all

Haaretz / Jordan Times

February 15, 2007

By Margaret Beckett

[listserve note: published in both Jordan Times and Haaretz, unusual for the region]

All too often the news is dominated by conflict and disagreement. Then a threat of such magnitude comes along that it forcefully reminds us of our common humanity - in other words just how much all of us, whatever our background, creed or colour hold in common. For our generation that threat is climate change.

Continue reading "The threat that unites us all" »

January 30, 2007

The garbage in Kerem Maharal doesn't stink

By Fadi Eyadat

Haaretz- 10:36 25/01/2007

Two garbage containers stand in front of MK Ami Ayalon's house at
Moshav Kerem Maharal - one for general and the other for organic
garbage. The Ayalons are among the community's 161 residents who
recycle their organic garbage for compost production.

The trash cans were provided by Ayalon's former navy subordinate and
neighbor, Amiad Lapidot, who initiated the Kerem Compost project.

Lapidot, 38, founded the Eretz Carmel non-government organization
(NGO) in July to process organic garbage at Kerem Maharal and turn it
into compost, or plant fertilizer. The NGO won this year's Ford
Foundation first prize for environment preservation.

Moshav residents separate organic garbage - food leftovers, fruit and
vegetable peels, tea bags, coffee and matches - from the rest of the
garbage. Lapidot, the NGO's director, collects the organic garbage on
his three-dunam farm. "We bring eight tons of garbage here a month.
There are no flies or stink here, although hundreds of tons of garbage
have passed this site," he says.

This is because of the natural decomposition process that turns the
garbage into compost. The organic garbage must be put into the pile
with grass clippings, hay, leaves, newspapers, sawdust and weeds.
Microorganisms (bacteria and fungi), earthworms and insects work in
the compost pile to break down the materials into compost. The
temperature rises to 60-70 degrees Celsius, sterilizing
disease-causing bacteria.

After a month and a half, special worms of the Eisenia Fetida species
are introduced into the pile.

"The worms eat the organic materials and leftovers, break them down in
their bodies, and their secretions are the best fertilizer," Lapidot
says.

After the pile has decomposed for six months, the parts that have not
broken down are taken out, leaving plant compost. "This could be done
anywhere in the country or city. It doesn't stink, and doesn't bother
anyone," he says.

When organic garbage is not separated from plastic bags and other
garbage, it decomposes without oxygen, a process that emits methane
gas and contributes to global warming and "climate imbalance," Lapidot
says. "Without recycling, we are enhancing the greenhouse effect."
Almost 40 percent of Israel's household garbage consists of organic
materials that can be recycled into fertilizer. "We create an organic
circle that could go on forever," Lapidot continues. "The food I eat
goes to the compost pile, with which I fertilize the tree that
provides my food. This food goes to the compost heap and so on," he
says.

The garbage recycling in Kerem Maharal prevents the emission of
500,000 cubic meters of "greenhouse" gases into the atmosphere,
Lapidot says.

Lapidot built his house with earth bricks and straw, and uses dew for
cleaning and irrigation. Now he is thinking of producing methane gas
from his home's sewage for heating. In the summer, he cools his house
with a pipe stuck a meter deep in the ground, where the temperature is
16 degrees Celsius. Thus he saves water and energy. "My motto is to
live without infringing on the future generations' ability to
survive," he says.

Globalization, population growth and consumption have increased
environmental damage, he says. Israeli culture has "mutated." "It's
built into our society, we are raised to compete, to consume
endlessly, regardless of the laws moving the earth. There are laws,
and we've decided to ignore them. We must understand that we live by
the same laws that move and manage the planet," Lapidot says.

He is dedicated to creating a model to balance out modern
globalization and consumption, and preserve an environment "rich with
nature's free services."

"We must create a situation in which everything we do enriches the
environment. A tree, for example, develops and grows, yet it
contributes to cleaning the air, and produces fruit."

Lapidot is operating this model by recycling organic garbage, living
in his his earth-brick and straw home, and using dew. "I am the
environment," he says.

"As educators, we must teach others about nature's laws so that future
generations are able to survive," he says.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/817442.html

January 14, 2007

Citizens reeling under steep fuel prices in Jordan

Jordan Times

By Ramsey G. Tesdell
and Hugh Naylor

AMMAN — Last year, Mahmoud Ibrahim was earning a modest living selling bread and
sweets at his Raghadan bakery. But things have changed: Business has taken a
turn for the worse this year, stripping him of the income he needs to feed and
clothe his family.

Ibrahim, a father of six young daughters and a 13-year-old boy, is one of many
Jordanians experiencing the side effects of a price increase on oil-based
fuels.

“I had to raise my prices to 200 fils for a pastry. I used to sell them for 150,
even 100 fils, if people bargained,” he said, adding that raising his prices has
failed to compensate for hike in the cost of cooking gas over the past year.

Gas cylinders now cost JD4.25 each, compared to JD3.25 in 2005.

“My rent’s JD300 a month… but I’m not making enough to pay for it,” he said.

The spike in oil-based fuel prices is a consequence of a plan by the ministries
of finance and energy and mineral resources to reform the energy sector.

Announced in 2004, the plan aims to wean the Kingdom off subsidies that have
placed a huge burden on the state budget due to soaring international oil
prices and the loss of preferential rates from Saudi Arabia and Iraq, which
used to provide Jordan with 5.5 million tonnes annually before the March 2003
US-led invasion.

According to Ezzeddin Kanakria, assistant secretary general at the Ministry of
Finance, the treasury is currently paying around JD250 million annually in
subsidies.

“But for every $1 increase in the price of a barrel of oil,” he said, “it costs
the treasury an additional JD35 million.”

The elimination of subsidies will relieve the government of this onus and “allow
the Jordanian market to compete on the international market,” Mahmoud Al Ees,
director of the planning department at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral
Resources, told The Jordan Times. “The people will be paying the market price
for oil products.”

The initiative, originally projected to occur under a phased lifting of
subsidies over a four- to five-year period, has apparently been accelerated to
take place over a two-year timeframe. The final removal, according to Kanakria,
is slated to occur sometime early this year.

But Ibrahim, who has never heard of a government plan to remove subsidies, said
he had been forced to take drastic measures to heat his home and feed his
family.

“I sold off my wife’s jewellery to get money, but it’s not enough,” he lamented.
“I’m now JD5,000 in debt to my neighbours. I am forced to borrow — my family
depends on it.”

The effects of the reforms and an apparent lack of advertising of the
programme’s timetable and objectives have drawn scrutiny from economists and
members of civil society.

Yusuf Mansur, a local economist, said the enormous financial burden of the
“elimination of oil grants from Iraq and Saudi Arabia” and a simultaneous
increase in “world oil prices” — once assumed by the government — is
effectively being passed on to citizens as subsidies are lifted.

He believes the government’s reform initiative has not given enough
consideration to the economic welfare of citizens in the Kingdom, which hosts
roughly 850,000 people living under the poverty line and an unemployment rate
of 15.5 per cent, according to government figures.

“Has the government been clear about fuel subsidies and prices? No,” said
Mansur. “Has there been enough public debate on this subject? I don’t think so.
Has the government clearly announced the breakdown of prices and aid? Again, the
answer is No.”

The reform initiative is taking a heavy toll on Abu Ahmad, a 43-year-old truck
driver from Aqaba.

“It’s affected me a lot. It costs me JD8 every three days to heat my house,” he
said, adding it was an increase of around one-third of what he was paying a
year ago.

Even though his house in Aqaba requires less kerosene to heat compared to colder
areas of the country, Abu Ahmad said escalating fuel costs are depriving him of
income for his five children.

“It’s harder to feed my children, even if I work all day and all night,” Abu
Ahmad told The Jordan Times, adding that he receives no financial assistance
from the government.

“I’m considering making a move to Dubai to find better paying work,” he said.

In order to offset some of the side effects of this programme, the government
intends to set aside JD65 million in next year’s budget. “These cash subsidies
for families will be available to help them accommodate the higher prices,”
Kanakria said. He did not elaborate further.

Despite repeated attempts to contact the concerned ministries, The Jordan Times
was unable to obtain detailed information of the compensation strategy.

But Mohammad Obeidat, president of the National Society for Consumer Protection,
said the system to disperse funding to low-income families is confusing and may
not be enough to dampen the effects of a surge in the price of oil derivatives,
particularly in light of increasing demand resulting from the influx of up to
800,000 Iraqis.

“There is no real organised system to promote and bring special assistance
programmes to the people,” Obeidat told The Jordan Times. “It’s very
complicated… People don’t understand it; I don’t understand the system,” he
added.

For Ibrahim, government policy was of little concern — his thoughts were with
his family in Ruseifa and his struggling bakery business. “I receive JD75 a
month from the government, but it doesn’t cover my needs or my family’s
needs... I’m not sure what I’m going to do.”

October 06, 2006

Swanky Savyon is country's top waste producer, study shows

From: Stuart Schoenfeld

Jerusalem Post
Sep. 27, 2006 22:38 | Updated Sep. 27, 2006 22:47
Swanky Savyon is country's top waste producer, study shows
By NOAM PRIMAK

Savyon may have a reputation for having some of the fanciest homes in the
nation, but the upscale community also leads the country in a less desirable
area: its residents produce the most waste per person of any community in
Israel.

According to Enviroment Ministry data, the average Israeli produces more than
one and a half kilograms of waste every day, but Savyon residents produce
almost triple that much, at 4.47 kg. Following Savyon in producing the most
waste were Eilat (3.45); Ramat Efal (2.98); Tel Aviv (2.62) and Tiberias
(2.62). Jerusalem produces 1.26 kg. per person.

According to the ministry's annual report, Israelis produced some 5.7 million
tons of waste in 2005 - an average of 560 kg. per person per year, or 1.53 kg.
of garbage per day. The figures include industrial waste.

Plastics make up about 35% by volume of the garbage disposed of in Israel, while
paper products and cardboard account for about 29% (1995 figures). Organic waste
makes up 15% by volume, but 38% by weight.

In 1993, the government ordered the closing of most of the country's smaller
garbage dumps and the channeling of most solid waste to authorized disposal
sites. Hundreds of dumps were closed down, resulting in a shortage of available
disposal space.

Environment Minister Gideon Ezra said the percentage of waste being collected
for recycling has been growing in recent years. The rate of recycling has gone
up from just three percent of total waste collected in the early 1990s to 23%
in 2005.

Israel lags several years behind Europe and the United States in recycling. Ezra
estimated that a joint effort by the Environment Ministry and local authorities
could increase the rate of recycling to 35% - the current level in the US - by
2010.

Currently, local authorities are required to collect at least 15% of waste for
recycling.

Ezra said that recycling could be increased by levying a garbage disposal tax
and by encouraging the development of new recycling technologies.

Israel employs a combined plan known as Integrated Solid Waste Management that
aims to make waste disposal more efficient. The plan combines traditional
burial of solid waste in dump sites with efforts to reduce, reuse and recycle
waste materials.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1159193331484&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull