TABLE
OF CONTENTS
Volume 4, No. 16 January - February 1999
| 5 |
Arab
Environmental Breakthroughs
Editorial, by
Najib Saab |
 |
|
6 |
The
Green Kitchen
Tips for
environmental friendly kitchen practices |
|
16 |
Cover
Story: Wars Ravaging the Environment
- Environmental Impacts of Military Activities
- Crimes Against the Environment in Kuwait |
|
32 |
Coral
Reefs
The magnificent world of the marine "rain forests"
|
|
37 |
Arabs
and the Oceans
by Abdelmuhsin Al
Sudeary |
|
38 |
Climate
Change: The Alarming Reality
Evidence from the
past and scenarios for the future |
|
44 |
Special
Profile: Environment in Kuwait
- Environment
Public Authority
A strategy to
protect Kuwait's environment
- Kuwait Oil
Company
The environmental
aaproach
- Environment
in Hell
Photos by Jassem
Bahbahani
- Kuwait
Environment Protection
Society Keeping
an eye on the environment |
|
| 58 |
Surface
Water Supplies Help Save Nature in the Netherlands
A major project
featuring surface water infiltration |
|
| 62 |
Biogas:
Energy from Wastes
An appropriate
technology for managing organic wastes |
|
| 66 |
Oceans
... Our Future
An interview with
Mario Soares, president of the Independent World Commission on the
Oceans |
|
| 68 |
Architecture
for the People
Hasan Fathy's
revival of traditional building techniques |
|
| 74 |
Arab
Scouts Gather in UAE
The first Arab
assembly of scout environmental activities in Abu Dhabi |
|
Arab
Environment News, 10 - Green Quotes, 15 - World Environment News, 26 -
Environment Market, 36 - Questions & Answers, 56 - NGO News, 61 -
Green Library, 76 - Calendar, 77 - Environment & Development Forum,
78
The Environment Club
Letter from the Sea (short story) 1
Environment Club (TV
Programme) 2
Environmental
Education 6
Fun With Nature 7
Green Bandar (comic
strip) 8
FROM THE EDITOR
Arab environmental successes in a year
by Najib Saab
Environmental debates in the Arab world often entail discussions of a
variety of problems, weaknesses and flaws such as: water scarcity,
desertification and land degradation, air pollution, coastal
deterioration, uncontrolled municipal and toxic waste, lack of policies
and generally poor environmental management. Compounded with global
issues such as climate change, nuclear pollution and ozone depletion,
the situation looks very gloomy.
AmoPeople tend to believe that we, environmental writers and analysts,
are messengers of bad news and heralds of pessimism. While most Arab
environmental news are actually bad, a fact which we cannot ignore, I
would like to share some pleasant news and stories of Arab successes in
certain environmental areas, at the outset of a new year.
The last herd
of wild Arabian oryxes disappeared in 1972, due to over hunting and
the use of powerful four-wheel drive cars which invaded their
settlements in the desert. These animals were abundantly inhabiting
the Arabian desert for centuries, before modern technology and bad
practices threatened the species with extinction.
In 1962, nine
oryxes were transferred to Phoenix Zoo in the United States,
Breeding in captivity increased the number to 105 in 1970.
Conservation efforts gained momentum when the president of the
United Arab Emirates, Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan, brought 20
oryxes to Abu Dhabi in early seventies. They were allowed to breed
under strict supervision in protected areas, with the personal care
of Sheikh Zayed himself. As a result, their number today has
exceeded one thousand. There is a plan to start soon releasing
oryxes in the UAE from captivity to the wild, putting them back in
their original habitat. Reintroducing the Arabian oryx to live and
breed in the wild of the sahara after the species was on the verge
of extinction, will certainly be an international breakthrough.
This has coincided
with another successful green plan, again sponsored by Sheikh Zayed,
which resulted in covering thousands of square kilometre of the
desert with millions of trees, creating pleasant forests in the
midst of the Empty Quarter, an otherwise dry and greenless area.
While Zayed was greening the desert, other countries were losing
their natural forests due to negligence and bad management.
In industries, we
have witnessed few other impressive stories of environmental
successes. The environmentally sound "cleaner production"
practices have been introduced to the huge industrial city-complexes
of Jubail and Yanbu in Saudi Arabia, which won the Sasakawa
Environmental Prize as a result. Cleaner production techniques were
also adopted by the Aluminum Company of Bahrain (Alumaco), which has
invested 270 million dollars to reduce fluoride emissions by 98
percent, suspended particulate matter emissions by 95 percent, and
save energy by 15 percent. Oil refineries in the United Arab
Emirates, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait are utilizing modern
technologies to reduce sulphur emissions and toxic gases in the
atmosphere.
|
Another
success story came from Syria. Between 1900 and 1995, Syrian forest land
has been reduced from 32 percent to 2.6 percent. A Higher Reforestation
Commission was established in 1977, aiming at replanting 15 percent of
the Syrian land. In cooperation with the Ministry if Agriculture, the
law of forests was amended, and a modern forest management plan was set
to develop the forests and protect them from fires. Nurseries were
established, forest seedlings were distributed at nominal prices,
university forest research programmes were initiated and training and
awareness campaigns covered the whole country. The information on the
reforestation programme in Syria which was relayed to me by the head of
the Higher Commission, Mr. Walid Hamdoun, was much less than the facts
which the visitor can witness on the ground all over the Syrian regions,
where barren lands are being again turned into green forests. At the
present pace, the reforestation programme in Syria will achieve its
stated goals within 10 years.
The summit of the Gulf
Co-operation Council (GCC) states recently held in Abu Dhabi provided
yet another boost to the environmental stride in the region. In a
resolution which passed unnoticed by most observers, who were waiting
for economic declarations affecting oil prices, GCC summit announced the
decision to move to unleaded fuel in its six countries in the coming 3
years. Last October, Kuwait had already converted to unleaded fuel, and
Saudi Arabia has also announced a detailed programme to shift to
unleaded fuel in 2 years. This trend will definitely be multiplied in
the whole region, decisively contributing to the improvement in air
quality in Arab cities, where lead is considered the major air pollutant
with major health hazards.
In Lebanon, there is
hope that environment might be placed on the political agenda, as
president Emile Lahoud condemned "environmental crimes" in his
inaugural speech, and the new cabinet detailed its environmental policy
in Crystal-clear words for the first time. In its statement to the
parliament, the government promised to "develop a national
environmental policy, address environmental priorities in the framework
of defined strategy and establish an institutional coordination system
among different government departments to assess the environmental
impact of projects." Again, it is gratifying to hear the key words
of environmental policy, priorities, institutions, coordination and
impact assessment, in a policy statement of an Arab government.
National environmental
policies and practical plans similar to those few mentioned, are the
basis for deep-rooted long term change, capable of transferring the Arab
world to the era of sound environmental management and wise resource
development. This can only be achieved through environmental
institutions and policy commitments, not casual groupings and selective
short-term agendas.
To Discuss This Topic, Write to nsaab@mectat.com.lb |