نصائح لتحسين جودة الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة

يعتبر تلوث الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة واحدا من أكبر المخاطر على الصحة العامة في جميع أنحاء العالم بسبب تزايد عدد الأمراض المرتبطة بالمباني. وجدت الدراسات أن تركيز الملوثات في الأماكن المغلقة هو أعلى بكثير في الداخل مما هي عليه في المناطق المفتوحة (الخارجية)، وتقارب النسبة مرتين إلى خمس مرات وفي بعض الأحيان مئة مرة أعلى من المستويات في المناطق المفتوحة (الخارجية). وبما أن معظم الناس يقضون 80٪ – 90٪ من حياتهم في الأماكن المغلقة، فإن جودة  الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة لها تأثير كبير على الاستدامة.

indoor air

يؤثر انخفاض جودة الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة على نوعية حياة السكان في المباني، ويؤدي إلى زيادة المخاطر الصحية، وأيضا زيادة المسؤولية على مالك المبنى، حتى انه يقلل من إنتاجية السكان، ويقلل من قيمة المبنى المالية. وبإمكان سوء نوعية/جودة الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة ان يتسبب بحدوث بمرض “متلازمة  مرض المباني”، وهي حالة طبية مرتبطة بضعف الصحة والتغيب المزمن.

ويعود سوء نوعية الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة إلى عوامل عديدة منها على سبيل المثال لا الحصر: عدم ملائمة تصميم المباني، والتهوية غير الكافية، وتدفق الغازات من المركبات العضوية المتطايرة من الأثاث والسجاد والدهانات ومواد التنظيف ومن التنفس البشري. كما تساهم الذرات المتطايرة مثل ذرات القماش والغبار والعث والعفن والبكتيريا وحبوب اللقاح ورذاذ الطيور والحيوانات في سوء نوعية الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة. وتشمل المؤشرات المستخدمة لقياس نوعية الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة : الجسيمات الكلية والمركبات العضوية المتطايرة و الفورمالديهايد وثاني أكسيد الكربون وأول أكسيد الكربون والأوزون (O3) ودرجة حرارة الهواء والرطوبة النسبية. إن تركيز ثاني أكسيد الكربون في البيئة الداخلية أو الأماكن المغلقة هو مؤشر على وضع التهوية إن كانت كافية أم لا.

في منطقة الشرق الأوسط، يعيش معظم الناس في أماكن مغلقة في أجواء ذات هواء مكيّف. مع النمو السكاني السريع، وإزدياد عدد المركبات على الطريق، بالإضافة الى ارتفاع درجة الحرارة، وأنشطة البناء المتزايدة، والعواصف الرملية، فإن تركيز تلوث الهواء في المنطقة  يعد من بين أعلى المعدلات في جميع أنحاء العالم.

وحيث أن الهواء في البيئة الداخلية يعكس أيضا نوعية الهواء في المناطق المفتوحة ونسبة تلوثها فإن انتقال ملوثات الهواء الطلق إلى البيئة الداخلية  يمكن أن يعرض الساكنين فيها إلى أوضاع صحية خطيرة. وبالإضافة إلى ذلك، توجد العديد من مصادر التلوث في الأماكن المغلقة في مواد البناء، ومواد التنظيف، العفن والنمو البكتيري، والرذاذ المتطاير من المفروشات ، والتشطيب والأدوات أو المعدات.

نصائح لتحسين جودة الهواء في البيئة الداخلية

كما أسلفنا سابقا فإن نوعية الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة تتأثر بتركيز تلوث الهواء في الخارج، بالإضافة إلى المصادر الداخلية للتلوث، والتي تكون بالعادة من خصائص البناء أو من عادات سكان هذا المباني. ومن شأن التصميم المناسب للمبنى واستراتيجيات التحكم في النظام الميكانيكي وكذلك تغيير سلوك السكان أن تحسن نوعية الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة وكذلك الصحة والراحة ورفع الأداء والإنتاجية لدى سكان المباني. وللعلم هناك مجموعة من الاستراتيجيات المتبعه لتحسين نوعية الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة:

تصميم مناسب: تغليف البناء، اتجاه البناء، موقع دخول الهواء، وموقع أنظمة التهوية الميكانيكية ، كل هذه العوامل بإمكانها المساهمة في تحسين نوعية الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة. لذان يجب أخذها بعين الاعتبار خلال مرحلة تصميم المشاريع حتى تتم مراقبة المصدر الرئيسي للتلوث في المبنى بأكمله.
تصميم للتهوية الميكانيكية الشاملة: إذا تم تصميم نظام تهوية صحيح فإنه يمكن أن يؤمن إدخال وتوفير الهواء من الخارج بكميات كافية إلى المناطق المغلقة. يتم بالعادة اتباع معايير صناعية  مثل (ASHRAE Standard 62) في معظم أنظمة تقييم المباني الخضراء، لضمان نوعية الهواء في المناطق المغلقة.

في منطقة الشرق الأوسط، يعيش معظم الناس في أماكن مغلقة في أجواء ذات هواء مكيّف

استخدام التهوية ذات النمط المختلط: إن الدمج بين أنظمة التهوية الميكانيكية والطبيعية المستخدمة في المباني، مثل أنظمة التحكم الآلي في النوافذ والنوافذ القابلة للتشغيل، يمكنه أن يساعد في الحفاظ على جودة الهواء في الأماكن المغلقة.
إدارة نوعية الهواء أثناء البناء: خلال مرحلة البناء، يمكن لبعض البكتيريا أن تنمو على مواد البناء بسبب تعرضها للرطوبة، كما يمكن أن يتراكم الغبار والرذاذ بسهولة على مواد البناء إذا لم تكن محمية. لذلك يجب حماية نوعية الهواء من خلال حماية مواد البناء من الغبار والرطوبة.
استخدام مرشحات (فلاتر) الهواء عالية الكفاءة: هذه الفلاتر تقوم بمنع انتقال المركبات العضوية المتطايرة في الهواء الطلق، والغبار، وأنواع الرذاذ والأوزون إلى الأماكن الداخلية. إن استخدام مرشحات (فلاتر) عالية الجودة مثل MERV أثبت بانه الأكثر فعالية في تصفية الغبار في الهواء الطلق والملوثات العالقة.
الصيانه الدورية لمرشحات (فلاتر) HVAC (نظام التسخين، التهوية، وتبريد الهواء): إن استخدام المرشحات وعدم صيانتها وتنظيفها يمكن أن يسبب تهيج الحواس. ولذلك يجب عمل جدول صيانة دورية لهذه المرشحات (الفلاتر).
استخدام المواد ذات الانبعاثات المنخفضة: إن استخدام المواد التي تحتوي على مستوى منخفض من المركبات العضوية المتطايرة مثل السجاد الداخلي والأرضيات المطاطية والمواد الأخرى للأرضيات والسيراميك والأطراف والألواح الجبسية، أو استخدام مواد مانعة للتسرب والمواد اللاصقة الأخرى. هذا إضافة إلى استخدام المواد ذات المستوى المنخفض من الفورمالديهايد، يمكن أن تكون مفيدة.
إجراء عملية تنظيف شاملة للمباني: يساعد التنظيف الشامل للمباني قبل إشغالها بالسكان على التخلص من الملوثات الداخلية فيها ويساعد على استبدال الهواء الداخلي الملوث بالهواء النقي من الخارج.
برنامج التنظيف الأخضر: يكون باختيار مواد التنظيف المصنوعة من مواد منخفضة الانبعاثات وتحديد برنامج تنظيف أخضر للحد من التعرض للتلوث.
شاشات رصد ثاني أكسيد الكربون: تثبيت ودمج شاشات لمراقبة ثاني اكسيد الكربون في نظام التهوية  لتنظيم دخول الهواء النقي وفقا لطلب ساكني المباني. من خلال القيام بذلك، يمكن زيادة تدفق الهواء تلقائيا إذا زاد تركيز ثاني أكسيد الكربون عن مستوى محدد.

ترجمه – ماجدة هلسة

أردنية متعددة الاهتمامات، لديها من الخبرة ما يقارب العشرون عاماً في مجالي المالية والإدارة في المؤسسات المحلية والدوليةوتعملماجدة حالياً مع الوكالة الألمانية للتعاون الدولي كموظفةٍ ماليةٍ في برنامج البيئة و المناخ في الأردن، والذي يعمل لصالح وزارة البيئة في الأردن. ومع ذلك كله وعلى الصعيد التطوعي، فإن لديها شغفاً كبيراً بالترجمة في كافة المواضيع والمجالات، وقد بُني هذا الشغف بالخبرة الشخصية والعملية على مر السنين.

How To Set Up Your Online Store: 5 Crucial Steps

Market enthusiasts have rightly said not everyone possesses the art of running a business but if you think you can be the one, the recent craze of online shopping has made it easier for you. Now setting up an online business does not cost you your lifetime wealth, time, or even test your technical expertise. The global ecommerce market is expected to reach $4.8 trillion by the end of 2025. So if you are looking for any motivation on how to set up an online store along with your brick and mortar business, now is the time.

steps to launch a sustainable online store

From creating a fusion of your own to selecting from the diverse range of businesses like selling products, dropshipping, warehousing, wholesaling, or even private labeling, eCommerce comes with a pool of options. To further simplify your needs in setting up an online store we have discussed five critical steps while starting a sustainably running online store.

1. Product/Niche Selection Accuracy

In order to begin with how to set up an online store, the foremost step is to find the product or niche which is the soul of your online selling platform. Here you must select the option which is rare or holds a significant touch of your individuality yet meets the demand and supply nature of the market in the longer run.

By choosing the term right niche or right product we mean that your selected option must show your individuality with the spice of uniqueness. As it will ultimately be the reason for your store’s success.

2. Filling The Industry Gaps

Though when you will first step into the ocean of e-commerce retailing you would feel all the right niches are already taken. That’s totally a matter. With the usage of apt keyword research for niche selection, conduction of SWOT analysis, and efforts you can still find the unfulfilled gaps and demands of consumers. And yes, here you’ll rise and begin to serve as a consumer’s hero or their true savior.

In order to be more accurate with findings of industrial gaps you can hop on to:

  • Researching through social media the complaints requests or recommendations of consumers.
  • Hopping on Google trends to contrast or compare the search volume of products.
  • Studying top sellers and finding out what their consumers ate missing or complaining about.

3. Forum Preferences

After the selection of a niche, the most crucial step is to identify which form of eCommerce platform you want in the search of how to set up an online store. To ease the confusion you can also go for eCommerce service providers or builders but before that select which form of eCommerce, you are willing to have. The options include;

  • Buying a domain with the hiring of professional developers to start it from scratch
  • Getting a domain with the option of an open-sourced eCommerce forum
  • Simply purchasing an established online platform

4. Designing The Interface

Though the idea of judging the book by its copper is considered shallow by many, in the case of how to set up an online store you must care about how the online store will give its first impression. That can only be created through designing a picture-perfect yet user-friendly website interface. Make sure your selected layout or theme is the actual depiction of your business’s nature whereas customized forms of layouts may offer you the following options to design the site;

  • Customization of text sizes
  • Addition of branded assets with high-resolution visuals
  • Color scheme configurations
  • Embedment of social media handles
  • Experimentation with listing of products with diverse and creative page layouts

5. Mastering Marketing

Wait, your struggle has just begun as the main task of promoting your website has arrived i.e. marketing the platform. The idea of promotion has become the easiest with the help of marketing your platform through different online channels, PR campaigns, SEO ads as well as social networking advertisements.

Ways to Make Your Business Eco-Friendly

Ads highly help in increasing the visibility of your brand’s content as well as uplifting your revenues. Firstly, you can earn from running ad campaigns through Google Ad revenue. Secondly, you can generate bigger sales as the more the ads will be run around different sites the greater will be the visibility, and the higher will be the number of viewers who are your ultimate potential buyers.

With the higher recommendation of other digital marketing methodologies, you can also opt for blogging, online advertising, and running social media campaigns.

The Bottom Line

The scope of setting up an online business has been increasing with each passing hour with the uncanny indulgence of digitization in mundane lifestyles. Having said that 50% of the time of today’s generation is spent on mobile phones which is a good touchpoint to connect with a variety of interactions all around the funnel.

Setting up an online store is yet another example where one can easily generate higher profits especially if you are following sustainable business practices.

So don’t forget to go green and shine as bright as the queen!

The Link Between Holy Quran and Sustainable Development

In the Holy Quran, there are many verses which emphasizes the importance of sustainable development, and the responsibility of human beings towards the environment. The mankind has the right to use the environment for getting the essential benefits like water, land, air, minerals etc. But there is no right given to man to damage the environment.

Awareness about Sustainable Development

The public awareness about sustainable development is increasing day-by-day. The people feel the necessity to include religious influence in maintaining the environment. The Holy Quran play a significant role in our lives to fulfill our responsibility as the Khalifah of Allah (viceregent of Allah).

a Muslim reading the Holy Quran

Sustainable development is not a new concept for Muslims. In the Quran, we can find more than 500 verses in which Allah guides us on matters related to the environmental sustainability.

Our Responsibilities

According to Islam, human being is the caretaker or guardian of this environment. The Islamic perspective on sustainable development highlights that our stronger connection to faith can contribute to environmental sustainability. The Quran is a guiding source for Muslims. The Quran repeatedly stresses the significance of environmental conservation, and emphasizes the relationship of the Nature with human life.

Thus, as Muslims, it is our responsibility to utilize the earth responsibly. We should maintain and preserve it honestly. The Quran teaches us to use the precious natural resources judiciously, considerately and moderately. It is very important to pass the environment to future generations in its best form. We have to make use of our natural environment in such a way that it is not degraded and polluted for the coming generations.

Allah says in the Quran:

“It is He who has appointed you vicegerent on the earth…”  Quran 6:165

Every person can share earth’s resources. Allah has also set a scale on all the resources. Our negative actions will produce the side-effects and cause ecological imbalance on Earth.

The Quran tells us

“The servants of the Lord of Mercy are those who walk gently upon the earth…” Quran 25:63

Land Reclamation in Quran

According to the Holy Quran, Allah rewards a person who brings a dead land to life. Land reclamation is highly encouraged in Islam. Preserving the land and its sustainable use is very important because not only human beings but also animals, birds, and other creatures benefits from it. Allah regards this act as a charity in Islam. Infact, Allah says that He offers rewards for planting every sapling.

quran-environment-protection

Protection of Nature

Nature protection is emphasized in our religion. Allah says that all the things that He created on the earth have certain purposes. We should appreciate the wildlife and contribute to the protection of nature.

Water Rights

In the Holy Quran, Allah mentions the word ‘water’ 66 times. Water is very important for us because it has life-giving properties. There is a Quranic verse about water:

“And Allah sends down rain from the skies, and gives therewith life to the earth after its death: verily in this is a Sign for those who listen”…. Quran 16:65

Monopolization of water is not allowed in Islam. Sustainability of water utilization is of great importance. Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) teaches us to use the water properly without wasting it. Quran not only encourages the protection of water but also forbids polluting it.

quran and sustainable development

Environmental Protection

We can only benefit from the environment if we contribute to its conservation and protection. People are ignorant in this regard so this ignorance has resulted in the environmental degradation. There is a need to raise awareness among the people. Muslims should realize that it is their religious duty to protect the environment. Allah, the Almighty, does not allow anyone to cause damage to the earth.

Conclusion

The protection of the natural environment is a religious duty for all the Muslims. We, as Muslims, believe in the sustainable development of our communities, cities and countries. The Muslim community should take the lead in protecting the Nature. It is our duty to raise awareness about environmental conservation and sustainability among Muslims on the basis of Quranic teachings and Hadith.

The Key Features of Net-Zero Homes

It doesn’t matter where in the world you live, the time has come to realize the importance of building homes that use zero energy. You don’t even have to believe in catastrophic global warming to realize the financial, comfort, and environmental benefits of net-zero homes.

But first, you need to have an understanding of net-zero and zero-carbon buildings and their implications for us all, as well as the elements and features that need to be incorporated into a net-zero home.

Net-Zero Homes and Energy Efficiency

You could say that a net-zero or zero-energy home represents the best in energy efficiency. Essentially, the energy they consume each year is equivalent to the renewable energy they produce, resulting in a carbon-free environment with a net-zero bill. Additionally, zero-energy homes are sustainable, healthy, very comfortable, and, believe it or not, affordable. Often they are smaller in size which adds to affordability.

As the picture above illustrates, a net-zero home will be energy-efficient from top to bottom. It will have:

  • Insulation in the roof and walls that helps to create a thermal envelope that will keep the building airtight. Good insulation will reduce heating needs as well as cooling demands.
  • Good natural ventilation and air filtration that maintains air quality for those living in the house.
  • High-performance windows that filter light and minimize penetration of solar heat. Windows must also seal against drafts, adding to the performance of the thermal envelope. Windows should also be designed for cross-ventilation in summer to make use of natural ventilation and reduce the cooling load.
  • High-performance doors that also help to reduce heat loss.
  • A heat pump and/or solar photovoltaic (PV) panels for water and space heating. Heat pumps also offer an energy-efficient alternative option to air conditioners and furnaces and can reduce electricity used for heating by as much as 50%. A heat pump water heater provides very efficient electric water heating.
  • Low-flow water fixtures in bathrooms, kitchens, and laundries. These operate with high-pressure, producing a consistently strong flow of water that reduces water flow by more than 30% ultimately using less water and reducing the use of hot water specifically.
  • Energy-efficient lighting that uses about 75% less energy than old-fashioned incandescent lighting. The key is to use light-emitting diode (LED) or compact fluorescent lamp (or light) CFL light bulbs.
  • Energy-efficient appliances, including induction stovetops, that use renewable sources of energy and are designed to function with minimum energy.
  • Excellent energy management that optimizes energy use throughout the house.

While net-zero homes are generally new buildings, some upgrades can be done to make older homes more energy efficient, particularly by:

  • Improving wall framing if the house is timber frame
  • Adding insulation
  • Installing solar PV energy systems

In the U.S. and some other parts of the world, it is possible to get energy-efficient mortgages and even loans to cover upgrades to make your home net-zero or at very least more energy efficient.

In terms of cost, a specialist (MEP) engineering firm in Chicago, New York, or whichever city you live in or near to will be able to advise.

International Differences

Different countries, and even different states and areas within countries are moving at a very varied rate towards the World Green Building Council’s goal to have all new buildings net-zero carbon by 2030 and all buildings by 2050. Some will make it, clearly, others won’t. Similarly, some want to and others don’t seem to care.

In the U.S. for instance, California initially took the lead in terms of net-zero buildings although Massachusetts was recently ranked the most energy-efficient state in the U.S. by advocacy group the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy (ACEEE). According to their 2018 State Energy Efficiency Scorecard, Massachusetts scored 44/50 while California sored 43.5. At the other end of the scale, Wyoming had an abysmal score of only 4.5/50.

On the other side of the world, the UAE has pledged to be a global leader in sustainability, aiming for new “nearly zero energy buildings” by the end of next year. This means that all new buildings, including homes, will have low energy consumption and they will use renewable energy for most needs. It is also part of a plan to develop a low energy, low carbon economy that will set an example for all the other countries in the Middle East region.

DEWA Headquarters in Dubai is the world’s largest LEED-certified building

Having said that it doesn’t matter where in the world you live when it comes to net-zero, climatic, economic, and other differences do impact on viability. Even traditional design practices and building methods in some regions have a significant influence. For instance, in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region as a whole, energy prices and the costs of trying to implement energy efficiency measures are very real factors.

Researcher Moncef Krarti did a relatively recent study that evaluated net-zero energy residential buildings in the MENA region focusing specifically on the cost-effectiveness of designing residential buildings that would minimize lifecycle energy costs. He concluded that it was vital to reduce energy subsidies in the MENA region, and ultimately eliminate them.

The ACEEE suggests other strategies including more stringent building energy codes and an improvement in code compliance in some states, and to find innovative financing mechanisms to lower up-front costs in others.

International Agreement

While the challenges and success rates vary, it is generally agreed that net-zero homes cost about 10% more to build than those that don’t comply with energy-efficiency requirements.

But with an acknowledgment that buildings are responsible for a very big percentage of the total energy used (40% in the U.S.), it is a fact that zero-energy homes are one of the cornerstones of a globally reduced carbon future that isn’t going to rely on harmful fossil fuels.

Certainly, net-zero is the way to go.

Agriculture, Women and Youth – The Jordanian Perspective

The theme “agriculture, women and youth” deals with three main axes in the development of different societies and key pillars in sustainable development, especially in developing and rural countries. In general, it is known that Jordan is an agricultural country with excellence and that its water resources are limited because it is one of the most water-stressed countries in the world, which affects agricultural production, and often depends on the import of foodstuffs in a large proportion and in greater defiance of global price fluctuations. However, agriculture provides important employment opportunities, especially in rural and desert areas, and remains a vital sector for achieving sustainable food security.

An Arab woman driving a tractor for farming

Women represent a significant proportion of the agricultural workforce in many countries, ranging from 40-50% of which are employed in agriculture. Women’s contribution to agriculture is not counted economically, despite its great importance in agricultural and food production. Jordanian women have a vital role in agriculture, as they are heavily involved in agricultural activities such as harvesting crops, raising livestock and poultry, and stages of post-harvest transactions such as packaging.

Rural Jordanian women face many challenges in the agricultural sector, including lack of economic and social empowerment with limited access to finance, loans, agricultural training, technology, except about the limited ownership of agricultural land, poor representation in agricultural decision-making, seasonal and domestic work that is not officially recognized. There are still opportunities to improve the status of rural Jordanian women by building capacities and empowering them through training and funding and enhancing their role in decision-making at the farm, community and state levels.

The reality of youth employment in agriculture is limited and the majority of them are averse to working in it because of its traditional image and difficulty and prefer to work in cities or government jobs, which has led to high unemployment rates among young people sometimes exceeding 40%. There is also still an opportunity for young people to modernize the agricultural sector using modern technology, provide financial incentives and support agricultural entrepreneurs, as well as integrate modern agriculture into educational curricula and give a greater role to youth agricultural vocational training.

At present, it is necessary to work on integrating the role of women and youth in the agricultural sector through entrepreneurship by leading innovative and sustainable collective projects, including organic farming, hydroponics, rural agricultural manufacturing, direct sale via the internet, vertical farming. The process of empowering women and youth means supporting the food supply chain and improving nutrition, which is one of the pillars of food security.

women working in an agricultural field

Agricultural technology (AgriTech) has opened the way for young people to apply innovation and entrepreneurship, such as the use of drones, remote sensing and various local and global applications. As for enhancing the role of women and youth in agriculture in Jordan, it consists in providing concessional financing for agricultural projects, designing, implementing and evaluating vocational training programs specialized in modern agriculture, innovation and agricultural entrepreneurship, working on legal and social empowerment to facilitate land ownership, supporting linking small producers to local and international markets, and at the core of all this cooperation between government agencies, the private sector and non-profit organizations to achieve the desired goals, such as the program of the economic and social productivity enhancement project, the agricultural innovation incubators project, and others.

digital tech in agriculture

Bottom Line

Agriculture is a strategic area for empowering women and youth and achieving sustainable development, and the challenge lies in removing barriers and providing opportunities for them to play an effective and influential role in this vital sector. Despite all the challenges, women and youth in Jordan have great potential to lead a new agricultural renaissance. By empowering them, the agricultural sector can be transformed into an effective tool to address unemployment, poverty, achieve food security and sustainable rural development and achieve the vision of economic modernization and the Sustainable Development Goals 2030 .

الزراعة والمرأة والشباب

يتناول موضوع “الزراعة والمرأة والشباب” ثلاث محاور أساسية في تنمية المجتمعات المختلفة  وركائز أساسية في التنمية المستدامة، خاصة في الدول النامية والريفية .وفي لمحة عامة من المعروف أن الاردن بلد زراعي بإمتياز وأن الموارد المائية فيه محدودة كونه يعد من أكثر الدول فقراً بالمياه في العالم، مما يؤثر على الإنتاج الزراعي ، وغالباً يتم الإعتماد على الإستيراد من المواد الغذائية بنسبة كبيرة وبتحدي أكبر لتقلبات الأسعار العالمية. ومع ذلك فإن الزراعة توفر فرص عمل مهمة خاصة في المناطق الريفية والبادية، وتظل  قطاع حيوي لتحقيق الأمن الغذائي المستدام.

women working in an agricultural field

وتمثل المرأة نسبة كبيرة من القوى العاملة الزراعية  في العديد من البلدان تتراوح بين  40-50% منها القوى العاملة في الزراعة.وتحمل اعباء أعمال غير مدفوعة الأجر  و لا تحسب مساهمة المرأة في الزراعة اقتصادياً، رغم أهميتها الكبيرة في الإنتاج الزراعي والغذائي.وللمرأة  الأردنية  دورها الحيوي في الزراعة فهي تشارك بشكل كبير في الأنشطة الزراعية مثل قطف المحاصيل وتربية الماشية والدواجن ومراحل معاملات ما بعد الحصاد مثل التعبئة والتغليف.تواجه المرأة الأردنية الريفية كثير من التحديات في القطاع الزرعي منها قلة التمكين الإقتصادي والإجتماعي بمحدودية الحصول على التمويل، القروض، والتدريب الزراعي، التكنولوجيا عدا عن محدودية تملك الأراضي الزراعية، وضعف التمثيل في صنع القرار الزراعي،والعمل الموسمي والمنزلي غير المعترف به رسمياً.وما زالت الفرص سانحة لتحسين وضع المرأة الأردنية الريفية بالعمل على بناء القدرات وتمكينها من خلال التدريب والتمويل وتعزيز دورها في اتخاذ القرار على مستوى المزارع والمجتمع والدولة

أما  واقع عمل الشباب في الزراعة تعتبر محدودة وغالبيتهم ينفرون من العمل فيها بسبب صورتها التقليدية وصعوبتها ويفضلون العمل في المدن أو الوظائف الحكومية مما دعا الى إرتفاع معدلات البطالة بين الشباب تتجاوز أحياناً 40% . وأيضاً ما زالت الفرصة سانحة أمام الشباب بتحديث القطاع الزراعي بإستخدام التكنولوجيا الحديثة وتوفير حوافز مالية ودعم رواد الأعمال الزراعيين بالإضافة إلى إدماج الزراعة الحديثة في المناهج التعليمية ومنح دور أكبر للتدريب المهني الزراعي الشبابي.

sustainable agriculture in jordan valley

من الضرورة في الوقت الحالي العمل على  تكامل دور المرأة والشباب في القطاع الزراعي من خلال ريادة الأعمال بقيادة مشاريع مبتكرة ومستدامة جماعية منها الزراعة العضوية، الزراعة المائية، التصنيع الزراعي الريفي، البيع المباشر عبر الانترنت ، الزراعة الرأسية، كما أن عملية تمكين المرأة والشباب يعني دعم سلسلة الإمداد الغذائي وتحسين التغذية وهي احد ركائز الامن الغذائي وقد فتحت التكنولوجيا الزراعية (Agri-Tech)  المجال أمام الشباب لتطبيق الإبتكار وريادة الأعمال، مثل استخدام الدرونز والإستشعار عن بعد والتطبيقات المختلفة المحلية والعالمية.

أما تعزيز دور المرأة والشباب في الزراعة بالأردن فيتمثل في توفير تمويل ميسر للمشاريع الزراعية، تصميم وتنفيذ وتقييم  برامج تدريب مهني متخصصة بالزراعة الحديثة والابتكار والريادة الزراعية ، والعمل على التمكين القانوني والإجتماعي لتسهيل تملك الأراضي، ودعم ربط المنتجين الصغار بالأسواق المحلية والدولية، وفي جوهر كل ذلك التعاون بين الجهات الحكومية والقطاع الخاص والمنظمات غير الربحية لتحقيق الأهداف المرجوة مثل برنامج  مشروع تعزيز الإنتاجية الإقتصادية والإجتماعية ومشروع حاضنات الإبتكار الزراعي وغيرها

في الخلاصة تعد الزراعة مجالاً إستراتيجياً لتمكين المرأة والشباب، وتحقيق التنمية المستدامة،ويكمن التحدي في إزالة الحواجز وتوفير الفرص ليكون لهم دور فعال ومؤثر في هذا القطاع الحيوي .ورغم كل التحديات، فإن المرأة والشباب في الأردن يمتلكون إمكانات كبيرة لقيادة نهضة زراعية جديدة .ومن خلال تمكينهم، يمكن تحويل القطاع الزراعي إلى أداة فعالة لمواجهة البطالة، الفقر، وتحقيق الأمن الغذائي والتنمية الريفية المستدامة وتحقيق  رؤية التحديث الإقتصادي وأهداف التنمية المستدامة 2030 .

How a Vegan Diet Can Drive Sustainability in the MENA Region

The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) faces a stark paradox that becomes clearer every dry season: its population is young and expanding, yet its freshwater supply is disappearing faster than in any other region on Earth. Climate models warn that average summer temperatures could rise by another 4 °C by mid‑century, and renewable freshwater resources have already fallen to one‑tenth of the global average. Meanwhile, supermarket shelves in Cairo, Dubai, and Casablanca still overflow with imported beef, chicken, and dairy—foods that consume thousands of litres of water and depend on millions of tonnes of soy and maize shipped from abroad.

vegetarian food items in the middle east

This article examines how a shift toward vegan nutrition could reduce environmental damage and promote sustainability across the MENA region.

1. The Hidden Thirst of Livestock

Water scarcity is already a critical issue, and the animal‑agriculture sector is a major driver of excessive use—especially in arid zones. Producing a single kilogram of beef requires roughly 15,000 litres of water when irrigation for feed crops is included. Broiler chicken is somewhat less demanding at about 4,300 litres per kilogram, but that figure is still staggering in countries where per‑capita freshwater availability has fallen below the “absolute scarcity” threshold of 500 m³ per year.

Saudi Arabia’s vast pivot‑irrigation wheat fields have largely been abandoned because deep aquifers ran dry; importing soy to feed livestock has only shifted the water burden to Brazil’s Cerrado and the Mississippi Basin. By contrast, plant foods—especially pulses native to the region such as lentils, chickpeas, and fava beans—require roughly one‑third of that water, thrive on marginal soils, and fix nitrogen that neighbouring crops can use.

Replacing a significant share of beef and poultry with these hardy legumes could save millions of cubic metres of water annually—enough to sustain date groves, recharge wetlands, or supply households directly.

2. Factory Farming: Antibiotics, Disease, and Environmental Fallout

Step inside a modern poultry shed near Cairo or Riyadh and you may find up to 50,000 birds in a single hall, with lights rarely dimmed and ventilation fans humming around the clock. Selective breeding pushes chicks to slaughter weight in just five or six weeks, but their immune systems cannot keep pace. Respiratory infections, enteric diseases, and skin lesions spread rapidly in damp litter saturated with ammonia.

Producers respond with daily—or even prophylactic—doses of antibiotics: macrolides, fluoroquinolones, and, in some cases, last‑line polymyxins. Residues of these drugs remain in meat and leach into soil and groundwater via manure, creating environmental reservoirs of antibiotic‑resistant E. coli, Salmonella, and Klebsiella. Hospitals already struggle to treat infections that shrug off first‑line therapies, and the World Health Organization warns that antimicrobial resistance could claim more lives in MENA than traffic accidents within a decade if current trends continue.

Small but measurable quantities of these chemicals are often detected in the meat itself. Regular consumption can contribute to antimicrobial resistance and may pose additional health risks over time. Eliminating—or at least drastically reducing—industrial animal farming would remove one of the region’s largest and least regulated sources of antibiotic pollution, ensuring that life‑saving drugs such as penicillin and ciprofloxacin remain effective for human patients.

3. Fish Farming and the By‑Catch Burden

Aquaculture is often promoted as a sustainable solution, yet floating pens along the Mediterranean and Red Sea can hold tens of thousands of fish in cramped conditions. Unconsumed feed and fish waste create anoxic “dead zones” beneath cages, while antibiotic and pesticide residues drift onto coral reefs already weakened by heat stress.

Wild‑capture methods are little better: purse‑seine nets aimed at sardines and tuna often entangle dolphins and turtles; longlines draw up sharks and rays critical to ecosystem balance. For every kilo of marketable fish landed, three to five kilos of non‑target marine life may be discarded—a hidden ecological toll that rarely reaches the consumer’s mind.

4. Climate and Land‑Use Arithmetic

Livestock contributes about 14 percent of global greenhouse‑gas emissions—more than every plane, truck, train, and ship on the planet combined. Methane from ruminants heats the atmosphere up to 28 times faster than CO₂ over a century. Shaving that methane spike is particularly valuable in hot, energy‑hungry cities where air‑conditioning already swallows half the summer power load.

Land use is equally stark. With local feed production curtailed by water scarcity, Gulf states now import soy and maize grown on land once blanketed by rainforest. A metric tonne of Brazilian soy effectively “carries” 200 m² of former forest with it. A diet rooted in pulses, grains, and regional produce would dramatically shrink the MENA region’s outsourced deforestation footprint and help keep remaining tropical forests—key carbon sinks—standing.

5. Human Health and Food Safety

Industrial animal farming concentrates contaminants further up the food chain. Cattle grazing near industrial complexes accumulate heavy metals such as cadmium and lead in their tissues and milk. Broiler chickens fed arsenic‑based growth promoters pass residues into meat. Fish high on the food chain often carry methylmercury that exceeds World Health Organization limits. Plants absorb pollutants too, but at far lower concentrations because they occupy the food web’s first rung.

Chronic diseases tell a similar story. MENA now records some of the world’s fastest‑rising rates of type‑2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, driven in part by diets heavy in saturated animal fat and low in fibre. Whole‑food vegan patterns supply viscous fibre that lowers LDL cholesterol, antioxidants that damp inflammation, and a mineral mix—magnesium, potassium, folate—that supports blood‑pressure control.

A plant‑based diet can lower the risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease because it emphasizes minimally processed foods and contains little to no cholesterol.

6. Cultural Fit: Ancestral Foods, Modern Nutrition

A common misconception is that veganism arrived from the West. In reality, the flavours of the Fertile Crescent and Maghreb have always leaned heavily on plants:

  • Ful medames – slow‑stewed fava beans brightened with cumin and lemon.
  • Mujaddara – lentils and rice simmered with caramelised onions.
  • Bamia – okra braised in tomato sauce, traditionally meatless on fasting days.
  • Tabbouleh – parsley, mint, tomatoes, and bulgur soaked in citrus‑rich olive oil.

veganism in mena

Paired with whole‑grain breads, these dishes supply complete protein as well as iron, zinc, and calcium in bio‑available forms. The main nutrients to watch are vitamin B 12 and long‑chain omega‑3s; both are easily met with fortified plant milks, nutritional yeast, or algal‑oil capsules—products that now line supermarket shelves from Muscat to Marrakesh.

7. Economic Upside Without Borders

Replacing some animal products with pulses and grains grown locally could stimulate rural economies and trim import bills. Morocco already cans chickpeas and fava beans for European markets. Egypt’s lentil farmers could expand into school‑meal programmes, reducing costly soybean imports. Agri‑tech hubs in Dubai are funding research into drought‑tolerant millet, camelina‑based cooking oils, and hummus‑derived protein concentrates for sports nutrition. Skilled jobs in pulse‑processing, cold‑chain logistics, and plant‑based product development would follow.

Conclusion

A vegan diet is no silver bullet, but in the water‑stressed, heat‑exposed MENA region it ranks among the fastest, most cost‑effective levers for sustainability. Replacing or reducing meat‑centric meals with dishes powered by lentils, chickpeas, dates, figs, and olive oil can:

  • Save water without building new dams or desalination plants.
  • Reduce antibiotic pollution and slow the rise of drug‑resistant infections.
  • Lower land‑use pressure both at home and in distant rainforests.
  • Cut greenhouse‑gas emissions that exacerbate regional heat and energy demand.

Crucially, it realigns modern eating with culinary traditions that have nourished desert travellers and coastal traders for centuries.

References

  1. Mekonnen, M. , & Hoekstra, A. Y. (2012). A global assessment of the water footprint of farm animal products. Ecosystems, 15(3), 401‑415.
    Quantifies average blue‑ and green‑water requirements of beef (~15 m³ kg‑¹) and poultry (~4.3 m³ kg‑¹), underpinning the discussion of livestock water demand.
  2. Van Boeckel, T. , Brower, C., Gilbert, M., et al. (2015). Global trends in antimicrobial use in food animals. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 112(18), 5649‑5654.
    Documents escalating prophylactic antibiotic use in intensive poultry and cattle systems, including data from several MENA countries.
  3. Holmer, M. (2010). Environmental issues of fish farming in offshore waters. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 60(12), 1818‑1826.
    Reviews nutrient loading, antibiotic residues, and benthic dead‑zone formation beneath sea‑cage aquaculture sites—evidence cited in the aquaculture section.
  4. Gerber, P. , Steinfeld, H., Henderson, B., et al. (2013). Tackling climate change through livestock: A global assessment of emissions and mitigation opportunities. Rome: FAO.
    Calculates livestock’s 14–15 % share of anthropogenic greenhouse‑gas emissions and details methane’s high warming potential.
  5. Schwingshackl, L., Hoffmann, G., Lampousi, A.‑M., et  (2019). Food groups and risk of all‑cause mortality: a systematic review and meta‑analysis of prospective studies. International Journal of Epidemiology, 48(1), 31‑53.
    Shows inverse associations between high legume/whole‑grain intake and cardiovascular mortality, supporting health claims for plant‑based diets.
  6. Satija, A., Bhupathiraju, S. , Spiegelman, D., et al. (2016). Plant‑based dietary patterns and risk of type 2 diabetes in three prospective cohort studies. PLoS Medicine, 13(6), e1002039.
    Provides evidence that diets emphasising plant foods while minimising animal products cut type 2 diabetes risk—relevant to regional public‑health projections. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). (2022). AR6 Working Group II Report: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability.

Strategic Ways to Improve Water Security in the GCC

Water security has become an increasingly hot topic in the GCC as regional governments struggle to meet the water needs of a rapidly increasing population. If population and development levels maintain their fast-paced upward trajectory, so too will the demand for water, food, and energy increase at the same rate. The Gulf region as a whole remains geographically handicapped in the sense no major rivers flow through it, and it possesses few renewable aquifer endowments. Therefore, there is an urgent need for these states to manage their scarce water resources efficiently.

seawater in gulf nations

Currently, the states rely heavily on groundwater sources, followed by desalination, as the primary means of obtaining potable water in the region. However, as groundwater depletion continues and technological advancements in desalination maintain a relatively slow pace, these countries will have to take drastic steps to improve their water security.

Areas for Improvement

Unplanned rapid urbanization is a huge water usage culprit, as it requires large amounts of water, placing undue stress on resources. For many GCC nations, unprecedented development and urbanization has occurred during the past few decades, leaving no time for aquifers to replenish themselves. This poses challenges to satisfying water needs for domestic, agriculture and industrial sectors.

Given that much of the region is made up of desert, a plausible solution is to increase the number of drought-resistant crops grown that require only minimal amounts of water to produce. As such, investing in GMO technology to design crops better adapted to the desert climate should be a top regional priority.

In addition, the states can improve upon existing agriculture policies so as to more effectively allocate water supplies and promote laws expanding the use of modernized irrigation systems while reducing the area of crops high in water consumption. Strides have also been made in the direction of promoting the farming of crops tolerant of brackish water as a form of irrigation.

Another related area of untapped potential is that of increasing the use of recycled water, which currently only makes up around 2% of the region’s water consumption. This reused water is taken from either agricultural or industrial sources, and treated to a different degree depending upon its intended usage. To reach potable levels, it must be treated to a high degree, but lesser levels of treatment are needed for other purposes, such as landscape irrigation or toilet flushing.

drip-irrigation-gcc

Unfortunately, there remains a low demand for recycled wastewater in the region, as potential consumers perceive a high difference in quality between conventional and recycled water. Proposed attempts to counter this include the implementation of a targeted reuse plan, through which wastewater effluents would be combined with conventional water, and a differentiated water-delivery policy will be adopted.

Virtual Water

Agricultural sector is responsible for around 70% of water consumption in the GCC, following a trend to increase food security, as GCC nations realize they would economically benefit from cultivating their own crops, as opposed to importing. However, this is not necessarily the case, as states could benefit greatly from ‘virtual water’ trade.

Virtual water refers to the hidden embedded cost, in terms of water volume, used to produce a product. By importing water-intensive products while exporting products that are not as water-intensive, GCC countries can then ‘save’ this water for other uses. For Oman, the country’s virtual water imports accounted for triple the total annual replenishment of the country’s water resources. The case of Oman proves the potential of virtual water trade in helping the Gulf countries protect their water resources.

Steps Forward

Several GCC states have taken steps to implement new and innovative educational campaigns educating their populations on water conservation, in attempts to limit consumption. The UAE in particular, being the most water distressed country in the region, has designed and implemented several campaigns. One of these is ‘Peak Load,’ which attempts to limit the amount of unnecessary water and energy appliances during ‘peak-load’ hours, 12-6pm over the summer.

Qatar has also made achieving sustainable development goals a national priority as part of the Qatar National Vision 2030. Such initiatives as these are important since states will likely need to use both bottom-up and top-down approaches to adequately deal with water scarcity issues, and cooperation from the public is vital.

Traditionally, water security in the GCC has been directly tied to fossil fuel exports. A sizable portion of revenue collected through these exports goes towards improving water sustainability measures and investing in technologies to help them do so. However, as oil resources continue to be depleted, the states grow increasingly vulnerable in terms of energy, water, and food security. By focusing on disentangling water security from fossil fuel exports, the region will be better equipped to address water scarcity as a stand-alone issue.

دليل المبتدئين للطاقة المتجددة

إن الطاقة المتجددة متوفرة في كل مكان حولنا، لكن علينا أن ندرك كيف نستخدمها ونتعامل معها في حياتنا اليومية. جميعنا سمعنا عنها وعن الفوائد المتعددة لاستخدامها من الوقود الاحفوري كالفحم والنفط والغاز الطبيعي إلى طاقة الرياح، والشمس والوقود الحيوي والطاقة الكهرومائية وايضاُ خلايا وقود الهيدروجين. لكن، ماهي الطاقة المتجددة؟ ومن أين تأتي؟ حسناً، نحن نستطيع تسخير واستغلال هذه الطاقة من خلال توربينات الرياح والالواح الشمسية في المنزل او العمل، وأيضاً نستطيع الاستفادة من حقيقة أن الشركات مطالبة بتوليد وتوفير جزء من الكهرباء بإستخدام مصادر الطاقة النظيفة.

حتى إن كانت بعض الشركات – إن لم يكن معظمها – لا تقدم برامج صديقة للبيئة، فلتعلم انه بامكانك وبسهولة أن تقلل من انبعاثات الكربون عن طريق تبديل نوعية المصابيح او الاجهزة التي تستخدمها، الخطوة الاولى تتمثل في فهم الطاقة المتجددة والتعرف على كيفية عملها، لذا هذا هو دليلنا حول الطاقة المتجددة للمبتدئين.

Must Have Solar Light Models

ما هي الطاقة المتجددة؟

الطاقة المتجددة هي نوع من انواع الطاقة التي يمكن تجديدها بسهولة، على عكس الوقود الاحفوري، وتشمل الطاقة المتجددة مصادراً عدة منها الشمس والرياح والحرارة الجوفية والمياه، وتشمل الطاقة غير المتجددة الفحم والنفط والغاز الطبيعي.

مصادر الطاقة المتجددة

  • الطاقة الشمسية: تحويل ضوء الشمس إلى كهرباء بواسطة الخلايا الكهروضوئية أو الإشعاع الحراري (الألواح الشمسية) المستخدمة في أنظمة التدفئة الشمسية
  • طاقة الرياح: توليد الكهرباء عن طريق تسخير طاقة الرياح من خلال توربينات الرياح
  • الطاقة الكهرومائية: إنتاج الكهرباء من المياه المتساقطة أو نقل المياه المستخدمة كمصدر للطاقة
  • طاقة الكتلة الحيوية: تشمل الكتلة الحيوية المواد النباتية مثل المحاصيل الزراعية والأشجار المستخدمة لتوليد الطاقة عن طريق حرقها لمكوناتها الكيميائية مثل الإيثانول

كيفية استخدام الطاقة المتجددة في المنزل أو العمل

الألواح الشمسية

إذا قمت بتركيب الالواح الشمسية الكهروضوئية على سطح منزلك فإنك ستستفيد منها لتوليد الكهرباء لمنزلك أو مكتبك، حيث تعمل هذه الالواح على تسخير أشعة الشمس وتحويلها إلى كهرباء، وبعد ذلك تستخدمها للتدفئة أو تشغيل الاجهزة والمصابيح.

تولد الالواح الشمسية الكهرباء خلال فترة النهار حتى لو كانت السماء غائمة، وتولد المزيد من الطاقة في الايام المشمسة، بعد ذلك فإنه بإمكانك تخزين الكهرباء المتولدة في بطاريات، لذا ستبقى قادراً على استخدام الطاقة المولدة أثناء النهار في الليل. وبذلك يمكن أن توفر ما مقداره 700 جنيه استرليني سنوياً عن طريق استخدام الالواح الشمسية، وسيقل اعتمادك على شبكة الكهرباء المحلية.

التسخين بالطاقة الشمسية

يستخدم التسخين الشمسي الألواح الشمسية التي تم تركيبها لتوليد الحرارة في الماء المخزن في أسطوانة الماء الساخن فوق الألواح الشمسية.  هذه الاسطوانات تحتاج إلى بضع ساعات من ضوء الشمس المباشر للحصول على ماء دافئ، والذي يمكن استخدامه بعد ذلك للحصول  على الماء الساخن في الحنفيات.

المضخات الحرارية

تستخدم مضخات الحرارة  الهواء الخارجي الحار لتزويد المنازل والشركات بالتدفئة والماء الساخن. تعمل المضخات الحرارية في جميع درجات الحرارة – مثل الثلاجة العكسية.

تعد المضخات الحرارية أكثر استدامة من أنظمة التدفئة التقليدية ويمكن أن تقلل بشكل كبير من انبعاثات الكربون وتجعل منزلك أكثر كفاءة في استخدام  الطاقة. وبالرغم من التكاليف المرتفعه لتركيب مثل هذا النظام إلا أن المضخات الحرارية توفر أكثر من 1000 جنيهاً استرلينياً على التدفئة.

توربينات الرياح

تتوفر توربينات الرياح الصغيرة للمنازل والمكاتب ويمكن تركيبها إما على عمود قائم أو على سطح المبنى. عندما تدور الشفرات ، يتم تنشيط التوربين الداخلي الذي يولد الكهرباء.

الكتلة الحيوية

تحرق أنظمة الوقود الحيوي المواد العضوية لتوليد الحرارة وتوفير الماء الساخن، إنحرق الكتلة الحيوية مثل (قطع وكرياتالخشب) له بصمة كربونية أقل بكثير من حرق الوقود الأحفوري، حيث تشير التقديرات إلى أن حرق الأخشاب بهذه الطريقة لا ينتج الا كمية الكربون التي تمتصها الشجرة خلال حياتها، مما يجعلها محلول تسخين كربوني متعادل.

wind-energy

الطاقة الكهرومائية

إذا كان منزلك أو مكتبك يقع بالقرب من مجرى متدفق، فيمكنك استخدام محطة طاقة كهرومائية صغيرة الحجم لتوليد الطاقة للمبنى الخاص بك.

مزايا وعيوب الطاقة المتجددة

المزايا

  • مصدر نظيف للطاقة
  • من حلول الطاقة المستدامة
  • أسعار معقولة مقارنة بالوقود الأحفوري

العيوب

  • ليست فعالة من حيث التكلفة في إنتاج الكهرباء مثل الوقود الأحفوري
  • يمكن أن تكون غير ثابتة أو موثوقة فإنهاعلى سبيل المثال، في الأيام الممطرة أو الأيام بدون رياح، فإن الالواح الشمسية أو توربينات الرياح لن تكون ذات فعالية عالية.

افكار اخيرة

نأمل أن تكون هذه  المقتطفات  قد زودتك بمعلومات كافية وجيدة عن الطاقة المتجددة، حيث يعد استخدامك لهذا النوع من الطاقة خطوة رائعة لتقليل بصمتك الكربونية وتسخير مصادر الطاقة التي توفرها الطبيعة لك.

ترجمه – ماجدة هلسة

أردنية متعددة الاهتمامات، لديها من الخبرة ما يناهز العشرون عاماً في مجالي المالية والإدارة في المؤسسات المحلية والدولية وتعمل ماجدة حالياً مع الوكالة الألمانية للتعاون الدولي كموظفةٍ ماليةٍ. ومع ذلك كله وعلى الصعيد التطوعي، فإن لديها شغفاً كبيراً بالترجمة في كافة المواضيع والمجالات، وقد بُني هذا الشغف بالخبرة الشخصية والعملية على

7 Unique Ways the World is Adapting to Limited Resources

Globally speaking, we use 30 percent more of the earth’s non-renewable resources than is sustainable. Unsustainability means using resources at a quicker rate than they can regenerate, therefore limiting their availability for future generations. Resource limitations include deforestation, degraded soil, polluted air and water sources, water table depletion, acidic oceans, and declines in biodiversity.

sustainable-development-jordan

One of the most impactful ways for the consumer goods industry to help the planet is to play a part in adapting to the decreased availability of resources and sustainability. This means redesigning consumer products and production systems to use fewer environmentally harmful or resource-depleting raw materials. As a response, many product designers have worked to create goods that use sustainable and renewable resources, and the results are some unique and elegant solutions.

Read on to know how the world is adapting to limited resources:

1. Stone Paper

Stone paper is a renewable form of paper made from natural stone which can be used to replace paper that has been made from wood pulp. Unlike other paper substitutes, such as hemp paper, stone paper has a decreased water footprint, making it an extremely sustainable and paper-like substitute fit for many uses from notebooks to art. It’s also more durable than traditional paper, and many forms offer the advantage of being waterproof.

2. Renewable Wooden Goods

Renewable wood is sourced from certified forests and tree farms, such as those with the sustainability marker of the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and similar organizations. In many cases, this wood is harvested from tree farms. Tree farms, while often constituted of monocultures, offer consumer goods manufacturing the opportunity to use natural wood without cutting down the precious ecosystems of natural growth forests across the world.

This process allows wooden consumer goods to be renewable, in addition to biodegradable. Additionally, they require less energy and the decreased use of fossil fuels in the manufacturing process. Representative items include sustainable wooden watches or consumer electronics, such as headphones. Similarly, renewable bamboo is arising as a useful substitute for short-term and single-use plastics, such as drinking straws and toothbrushes.

As an added bonus, it’s common for companies that specialize in sustainable natural wood materials to participate in tree-planting programs. This means that for each sale, they participate in a planting organization that allows them to plant trees for future use and sustainability.

3. Zero-Paper Technologies and Forms

Digital technologies have opened up amazing possibilities for cutting paper out of the workflow entirely. Digital technologies have adapted into new and unique avenues of work, practicality, creativity, and expression. Digital technologies are now capable of imitating most forms and uses of paper, from contracts and paperwork, books and reference materials, to note-taking and many forms of art. It is now possible for not only people, but also businesses to live and work completely paper-free without compromising any of their hobbies, productivity, or functionality.

recycled paper

4. Household and Office Efficiency

Reducing energy use in the home is one of the most often-used methods of reducing individual carbon footprint and resource consumption. This is because it directly affects individual and business expenses while also allowing individuals to take part in preserving the environment. Consumer goods have developed household items, technologies, and appliances that use less energy while also utilizing solar panels.

Decreasing energy consumption in the home often means switching to lighting and appliance options that require less energy during their active time. Additionally, many houses and workplaces are switching to the use of solar panels wherever possible. While not all homes can afford their own solar panels, smaller solutions often include solar lighting for the lawn and other outdoor areas.

5. Repurposing Recycled Materials

Recycled materials are being used to produce new and unique articles of furniture. Furniture made from recycled materials is not only environmentally friendly but more durable. This makes it better for the consumer in the long run, since recycled furniture can last longer before breaking down. Furniture isn’t the only industry using high quality recycled materials to great advantage, though.

Sustainable technological items, for example, often use materials that bypass harmful plastics, such as FSC-certified wood, stainless steel, recycled metals, such as aluminum, and natural fabrics and fibers. Additionally, many of these renewable materials allow for greater long-run durability. More durable goods means fewer consumer gadgets and electronics clogging landfills.

green-living-seniors

6. Biodegradable or Compostable Material

While clutter and consumer culture is one kind of problem for the environment, the packaging that these items come in is an additional problem that has even less purpose than the goods that they envelop. Even worse, the majority of compostable packaging for consumer goods is made of plastic, which uses fossil fuels to create, is often non-recyclable, and in most cases does not biodegrade for many years.

Many ecologically concerned consumer goods companies are addressing this problem head-on by searching for alternative packaging solutions. Often these solutions do not include plastics, or, when they do, the plastic has been treated to be biodegradable. In other cases, companies will opt to use recycled and recyclable materials, such as recycled paper or cardboard, or glass.

In the end, adaptable resources are most often a response to consumer demands. These demands then spur on unique designs and environmentally friendly manufacturing. The more eco-friendly alternatives that we are aware of, which do not require the use of non-renewable resources, the better positioned we are to change manufacturing and product creation practices for greater sustainability.

Solid Waste Management in Iraq

Iraq is one of the most populous Arab countries with population exceeding 32 million. Rapid economic growth, high population growth, increasing individual income and sectarian conflicts have led to worsening solid waste management problem in the country. Iraq is estimated to produce 31,000 tons of solid waste every day with per capita waste generation exceeding 1.4 kg per day. Baghdad alone produces more than 1.5 million tons of solid wastes each year.

Rapid increase in waste generation production is putting tremendous strain on Iraqi waste handling infrastructure which have heavily damaged after decades of conflict and mismanagement. In the absence of modern and efficient waste handling and disposal infrastructure most of the wastes are disposed in unregulated landfills across Iraq, with little or no concern for both human health and environment. Spontaneous fires, groundwater contamination, surface water pollution and large-scale greenhouse gas emissions have been the hallmarks of Iraqi landfills.

National Waste Management Plan

The National Solid Waste Management Plan (NSWMP) for Iraq was developed in 2007 by collaboration of international waste management specialist. The plan contains the recommendations for development and which explains the background for decisions. The key principles of waste strategy development in Iraq can be summarized as:

  • Sustainable development;
  • Proximately principles and self-sufficiency;
  • Precautionary principles;
  • Polluter pays principle;
  • Producer responsibility;
  • Waste hierarchy;
  • Best practicable environmental option.

The plan generally states that Iraq will build 33 environmentally engineered landfills with the capacity of 600 million m3 in all of the 18 governorates in Iraq by 2027. In addition to constructing landfills the plan also focuses on the collection and transportation, disposable, recycling and reuses systems. Social education was also taken into consideration to ensure provision of educational system which supports the participation of both communities and individuals in waste management in Iraq.

Besides Iraqi national waste management plan, the Iraqi ministry of environment started in 2008 its own comprehensive development program which is part of the ministry of environment efforts to improve environmental situation in Iraq. Ministry of Municipalities and Public Work, in collaboration with international agencies like UN Habitat, USAID, UNICEF and EU, are developing and implementing solid waste management master plans in several Iraqi governorates including Kirkuk, Anbar, Basra, Dohuk, Erbil, Sulaimaniya and Thi Qar.

Promising Developments

Kirkuk was the first city in Iraq to benefit from solid waste management program when foreign forces initiated a solid-waste management program for the city in 2005 to find an environmentally safe solution to the city’s garbage collection and disposal dilemma. As a result the first environmentally engineered and constructed landfill in Iraq was introduced in Kirkuk In February 2007. The 48-acre site is located 10 miles south of Kirkuk, with an expected lifespan of 10–12 years and meets both the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and European Union Landfill Directive standards.

The Iraqi city of Basra also benefited from international aid with the completion of the first landfill that is compliant with international environmental standards has been completed. Basra solid waste management program developed by UNICEF will not only restore efficient waste collection systems in the citybut will also create informal “recycling schools” that will help in spreading environmental awareness in in the city’s society by launching a campaign to educate the public about effective waste disposal practices, in addition to that In the long term, the Basra city program plans to establish a regional treatment and disposal facility and initiate street sweeping crews. Basra city waste management program is part of the UNICEF program supported by the European Union to develop Iraq’s water and sanitation sector.

Erbil’s solid waste management master plan has also been developed by UNICEF with funding from the European Union. Recently a contract was signed by the Kurdistan Region's Ministry of Municipalities and Tourism and a Canadian company to recycle the city's garbage which will involve the construction of two recycling plants in the eastern and western outskirts of Erbil.

UNICEF has also developed a master plan to improve the management of solid waste in Dohuk Governorate which has been finalized in June 2011. Solid waste management master plans for Anbar, Sulaimaniya and Thi Qar governorates are also a part of UNICEF and EU efforts to attaining Iraq’s Millennium Development Goal targets of ensuring environmental sustainability by 2015.

Even though all of the effort by the international organizations are at local level and still not enough to solve solid waste management problem in Iraq, however these initiatives have been able to provide a much needed information regarding the size of the issue and valuable lessened learned used later by the Iraqi government to develop the Iraqi national waste management plan with the support of organizations such as UN Habitat, UNDG Iraq Trust Fund and USAID. The Iraqi national waste management plan is expected to ease the solid waste management problem in Iraq in the near future.

Trigeneration Systems: Working Principle and Benefits

Trigeneration refers to the simultaneous generation of electricity and useful heating and cooling from the combustion of a biomass fuel or a solar heat collector. Conventional coal or nuclear-powered power stations convert only about 33% of their input heat to electricity. The remaining 67% emerges from the turbines as low-grade waste heat with no significant local uses so it is usually rejected to the environment.

an industrial trigeneration plant in Italy

What is Trigeneration

In a trigeneration system, the supply of high-temperature heat first drives a gas or steam turbine powered generator and the resulting low-temperature waste heat is then used for water or space heating. Such systems can attain higher overall efficiencies than cogeneration or traditional power plants, and provide significant financial and environmental benefits.

Trigeneration is one step ahead of cogeneration that is the residual heat available from a cogeneration system is further utilized to operate a vapor absorption refrigeration system to produce cooling; the resulting device thus facilitates combined heat power and cooling from a single fuel input. The heat produced by cogeneration can be delivered through various mediums, including warm water (e.g., for space heating and hot water systems), steam or hot air (e.g., for commercial and industrial uses).

trigeneration schematic

The Benefits of Trigeneration

Trigeneration is an attractive option in situations where all three needs exist, such as in production processes with cooling requirements. Trigeneration has its greatest benefits when scaled to fit buildings or complexes of buildings where electricity, heating and cooling are perpetually needed. Such installations include but are not limited to data centers, manufacturing facilities, universities, hospitals, military complexes and colleges.

Localized trigeneration has additional benefits is the form of redundancy of power in mission critical applications, lower power usage costs and the ability to sell electrical power back to the local utility are a few of the major benefits.

Most industrialized countries generate a significant chunk of their electrical power requirements in large centralized facilities with capacity for large electrical power output. These plants have excellent economies of scale, but usually transmit electricity over long distances resulting in sizeable losses, negatively affecting the environment and the economy.

Large power plants can use cogeneration or trigeneration systems only when sufficient need exists in immediate geographic vicinity for an industrial complex, additional power plant or a city. An example of cogeneration with trigeneration applications in a major city is the New York City steam system.

One of the technologies that have the best performance for being integrated into a trigeneration system is the fuel cell. Systems working on fuel cell technology can transform the energy of a chemical reaction into electrical energy, heat and water. Its main practical applications range from bulk production of electricity and heat to its use in sectors such as aerospace, maritime or surface transport and portable devices.

district cooling plant in middle east

Trigeneration Prospects in the Middle East

There is very good potential for deployment of trigeneration systems in the Middle East. The constant year-round heat coupled with expensive glass exteriors for hotel, airports, offices, apartments etc result in very high indoor temperatures. The combination of distributed generation of power and utilization of waste heat can provide a sustainable solution to meet the high demand for refrigeration in the region. District cooling has the potential to provide a viable solution to meet air conditioning requirements in commercial buildings, hotels, apartment blocks, shopping malls etc.

Trigeneration systems can play a vital role in reducing energy requirements in Middle East nations. Apart from providing cooling needs, such systems can reduce the need for new power plants, slash fossil fuel requirements and substantially reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the region.