Here's light from the
It's about electricity from the sun to help
reverse our oil and non-renewable energy dependencies (and greed) that fan the
flames of war, waste our dear Earth, and betray our youth.
In our home we've had a dream --
a whole city block of families with solar electric panels on their rooftops.
Then people would throng to see it, as to the
blocks of elegantly lighted houses during December holidays.
It would be a tourist attraction, a visitor's
"must see," a model of what sustainable living would look like.
We began with our own home a few years ago -- http://traubman.igc.org/solar.htm
-- but the neighborhood isn't exactly on fire with the idea yet.
But the Congregation Shir
Hadash synagogue is, big-time -- http://www.shirhadash.org/solar/solar-020919.html
-- being also the birthplace of the 4-year-old Arab-Jewish Dialogue in
By "coincidence," at
tonight's 165th meeting of the 13-year-old Jewish-Palestinian Living Room
Dialogue we will host participants from the Arava
Institute for Environmental Studies.
At Arava in the
Now
read today's leading-edge news, stunning in its honesty about past Middle East
injustices and at least one fast-moving example of Jewish-Palestinian
cooperation to make corrections -- make up for lost time.
See an obscure Palestinian village become the
exemplary neighborhood of our dreams.
Nothing less than a light to the
world.
Change is within our reach now.
And it doesn't have to take as long as we had
imagined.
Published in Israel21c -- Sunday 12 February 2006
http://www.israel21c.org/bin/en.jsp?enZone=Technology&enDisplay=view&enPage=BlankPage&enDispWhat=object&enDispWho=Articles^l1227
Solar energy lights up a Negev village
By Patricia Golan
There is no sign on the main highway to the Israeli
town of Arad in the northern Negev telling you where
the village of Drijat is. Only when you have driven
down an off-road for four kilometers do you finally see the homemade sign.
But behind the anonymity of the village is an
achievement that makes it unique. It recently became the first community in the
country - and in the world - to be outfitted with a multipurpose solar
electricity system for providing power to the entire village.
The project, initiated by The Ministry of National
Infrastructure, The Negev Development Authority and MK Shimon Peres' office for
developing the Negev and
Situated at the foothills of the Hebron Hills, Drijat is the only Palestinian Arab village in the
After the establishment of the State of Israel they
built permanent stone houses.
Until recently Drijat, like
many other Arab communities in the
To accomplish this, they hired Interdan,
a private Israeli natural-electricity company, to carry out the actual
installation and management of the project. The energy is collected by eight
solar photovoltaic panels fitted on the roof-tops, then stored in a DC battery
system which converts it to AC. It provides a stable current of the same quality
as the electric company provides (or would provide were it hooked up to the
village!) according to Interdan, the batteries will
supply electricity at night and on cloudy days - for four days without direct
sunlight, a rare occurrence in the Negev desert.
"What is unique is that we are trying to convert
the entire village to a modern solar village, not just installing individual
systems to run telephones, like they do in Africa," Gil Nezer, Interdan's marketing
director, told ISRAEL21c.
What this system can't support are air conditioners
and heaters which would quickly consume all the stored up energy. Generators
are still used at night.
"The hope is to reduce the use of generators once
the whole village is connected to solar panels," says Nezer.
"The main thing is that we can use electricity during the day."
That fact has already stared changing the lives of the
residents. Housewife Tagrid Abu Hamad
shows us around her spacious home which has been outfitted with one of the
solar systems. "Now the kids have something to do during the day - they
can watch TV or use the computer. I don't have to worry about them," she
told ISRAEL21c. "We used to light candles, and this is dangerous."
Tagrid's neighbor, Nasser
Abu Hamad, agrees. "This is particularly
important for the children. Instead of roaming around outside, and the parents
not knowing where they are, they can watch TV or use the computer. And it helps
them study."
Now with the installation of solar electricity systems,
after relying on noisy, unstable and polluting private generators for years,
the residents will be able to use household appliances powered by natural
"green" electricity, even at night or on cloudy days.
So far, the system - manufactured by the Canadian
company Xantrex - has been installed in 20 of the 100
households, the science and computer rooms of the local school, the mosque and
the streetlights in the village.
The village is also now illuminated with street lights
powered by solar panels atop poles fixed along the streets. Abu Hamad says that in the past it was uncomfortable coming
home late at night. "Everything was shut down and dark. now
the village is lit up and you can see everything. There's a feeling of more
security."
Also visible at night for the first time is the
village mosque - its green dome dramatically lit up. Abu Hamad
is convinced this is the first mosque in the world that is powered by solar
panels.
The long process by which the Drijat families decided who would get the initial units had
its own social dynamics. The key was how many family members were living
in a house, but those with seriously ill family members were pushed to the top
of the list.
The requirements for solar energy - sun, wind and high
levels of radiation - are readily available in the region, but have been left
largely untapped for energy production.
Interdan's Nezer says the company hopes Drijat
will serve as a model for spreading solar electricity throughout