Environment and Climate in the Middle East

news, conferences, policy discussions and academic publications on environmental issues and climate change in the Eastern Mediterranean

Environment and Climate in the Middle East

Archives for February, 2012

Jordan working to avert ‘energy crisis’ – Jordan Times

by Taylor Luck | Feb 07,2012 | 22:55 A fire is seen on a gas pipeline in the town of Al Arish, North of Sinai on Sunday. The pipeline, which supplies gas to Jordan and Israel, has come under attack at least 12 times since Egyptian resident Hosni Mubarak was toppled in 2011 (Reuters photo) […]

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Blast hits Egypt’s gas pipeline to Israel – Ma’an

CAIRO (Reuters) — An explosion hit a gas pipeline running from Egypt to Israel on Sunday, witnesses and state television reported. The pipeline, which also supplies gas to Jordan, has come under attack at least 12 times since Egyptian resident Hosni Mubarak was toppled in 2011. The latest blast took place in the Massaeed area […]

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Israeli prospector says natural gas found offshore – Al Arabiya

The Associated Press Jerusalem American and Israeli gas prospectors say they have discovered a large amount of offshore natural gas in Israeli waters near the Lebanese border. Delek Group Ltd. announced the discovery to Israel’s stock exchange Sunday. U.S.-based Noble Energy Inc. is partnering with Delek on the offshore drilling. The prospectors say based on […]

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Plenty of solutions to electricity crisis, but no will – Daily Star

February 04, 2012 01:52 AM By Osama Habib The Daily Star The Zahrani power plant was the last project the government completed in the energy sector. The Zahrani power plant was the last project the government completed in the energy sector. BEIRUT: Energy experts and officials are still at loggerheads over the best way to […]

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Illegal, underground: Palestine’s electricity ‘threat’ – Ma’an

By Charlotte Alfred MASAFER YATTA (Ma’an) — There is an underground bunker in the South Hebron Hills, camouflaged by bracken and heavy sacks, where a tiny Palestinian village is sheltering a secret. Building quietly at night and securing backing from foreign governments, experts are working to share this secret with communities across the area. The […]

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Study: Visitors at Israel’s Hula reserve make feathered friends take wing – Haaretz

Researchers find that during times of the day when the birds are normally eating or sleeping, their routines are disrupted by the presence of humans. By Zafrir Rinat Lake Agmon, which was created in the 1990s in the Hula Valley in the north, has become one of Israel’s favorite nature spots, but its popularity has […]

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WATCH: Israel nature authority destroys caves in new national park – Haaretz

Activists claim park is attempt to stop expansion of Isawiyah and A-Tur villages, authority says park needed to protect archeological sites; four Israelis, one Palestinian arrested trying to stop bulldozers. By Nir Hasson Bulldozers constructing the Mount Scopus National Park near Jerusalem destroyed on Monday what looked like hewn caves of possible archaeological value. No […]

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NGOs petition court over air pollution program – Jerusalem Post

By SHARON UDASIN 02/06/2012 03:52 Tel Aviv reports drastic improvement in air over past decade. air pollution By Thinkstock Adam Teva V’Din (Israel Union for Environmental Defense) and the Coalition for Public Health submitted a petition to the High Court on Sunday morning to compel the government to confirm the national air program to prevent […]

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Tel Aviv says its air is clean, but Israel’s Environment Ministry thinks otherwise – Haaretz

Ministry seeks to declare Tel Aviv a pollution-stricken area; city says recent data shows sharp decline in concentration of air pollutants. By Zafrir Rinat The Environmental Protection Ministry is planning to declare Tel Aviv a city with polluted air – but the Tel Aviv municipality released data Sunday showing that the city’s air quality has […]

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New Publication “Hydro-political Baseline of the Upper Jordan River.” Beirut, Association of the Friends of Ibrahim Abd el Al.

Zeitoun, Mark, Karim Eid-Sabbagh, Muna Dajani and Michael Talhami (2012) Hydro-political Baseline of the Upper Jordan River. Beirut, Association of the Friends of Ibrahim Abd el Al. http://www.uea.ac.uk/watersecurity/publications abstract: The Hydropolitical Baseline of the Upper Jordan River study examines the history and current politics of water use in the basin – specifically the Liddan, Banias […]

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Christian Pilgrimage and Middle Eastern Water Scarcity – Huffington Post

At today’s Jordan River, the long history of Christian pilgrimage intersects with religious tourism. For many Christians, baptism in the Jordan provides the opportunity for a second baptism or a rebirth experience. Christian pilgrims cannot help but experience the Jordan as a border if they seek baptism near Jericho where Jordan and Israel have established […]

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Omanis stay put despite flood fears – Al Jazeera video

Locals living near stream-filled “wadis”, or valleys, resist government advice to leave. Last Modified: 27 Jan 2012 17:12 The stream-lined valleys of Oman have supplied a vital water source to generations of families. Now, however, the government wants thousands of residents of villages near Wadi Dayqah, a massive watershed with a year-round stream, to leave […]

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Israel approves first rail linking Asia to Europe – Al Arabiya / Haaretz

Israel’s government on Sunday gave the green light to building the first rail link between its Mediterranean and Red Sea coasts, offering a new Asia-Europe trade route to compete with the Suez Canal. “This is a strategic decision,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told ministers at the cabinet’s weekly meeting. “In the coming decade, new (economic) […]

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Tel Aviv’s urban hole – Haaretz

Keeping Kikar Hamedina a ‘green lung’ runs contrary to both contemporary urban planning concepts and social justice. By Esther Zandberg Like an inborn reflex, once again the suggestion is being raised to cancel the building plans for Kikar Hamedina in Tel Aviv and transfer the building rights elsewhere, leaving this enormous area as a “green […]

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How much should the polluter pay? – Haaretz

The Environmental Protection Ministry has started imposing stiff fines on companies that contaminate. By Zafrir Rinat Last week the Environmental Protection Ministry set a record for issuing environment-related fines: It notified Tnuva that the company would be fined NIS 15 million for violations of the Prevention of Sea Pollution law. An administrative procedure was used […]

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Obit for the sand dunes? – Haaretz

Since we don’t know, and may never know, which species are keystones for our survival, and which are ecologically superfluous, we should protect them all. By Daniel Orenstein “With little regret but out of respect to protocol, the State of Israel announces the loss of Cerbalus aravensis, a newly discovered species of spider, which made […]

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Ecologists aim to save endangered fish – Jerusalem Post

By SHARON UDASIN 01/31/2012 04:45 Known scientifically as Nemacheilus dori, the fish are found only in Israel and exclusively in waters of a tiny wetland reserve. Nemacheilus dori fish By Israel Nature and Parks Authority In a tiny mud-drenched nature reserve just off Road 90, on the way to Beit Shean, black pin-sized baby fish […]

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Spotlight on slimy, speckled swamp species – Jerusalem Post

By SHARON UDASIN 02/05/2012 06:06 INPA celebrates frogs, salamanders for World Wetlands Day. Salamander By Thinkstock/Imagebank This weekend, the Israel Nature and Parks Authority (INPA) celebrated the lives of some slimy, speckled swamp species, devoting events on Saturday to animals such as the salamander and the Hula painted frog in honor of World Wetlands Day. […]

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Report: Jordan, Israel to build solar thermal power plant – Ma’an

BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — Jordan and Israel are planning to build on a large solar thermal power plant on their border, Israeli press said Monday. The power plant is designed to start producing 50-150 mega watt in 2016, and cost an estimated $300 – 600 million, the Hebrew daily Maariv reported. Israel’s Ministry of Regional Cooperation […]

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North Lebanon can generate 140 MW of wind power, say experts – Daily Star

February 02, 2012 02:16 AM The Daily Star BEIRUT: A visiting delegation of Danish experts believe that wind-generated electricity in the northern region of Akkar, expected to produce some 140 Megawatts of power, could be available in as little as 13 months. Beirut MP Mohammad Qabbani, who chairs Parliament’s Public Works, Energy and Water Committee […]

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