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Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Better Health Bonus

My own photo


I'd like to paint a picture for you. As I do, I think your own imagination may begin to fill in wonderful, inspiring details. 

In my RIBA Block Model each home has its own greenhouse in the backyard, and each block has a community area in its center.

First, imagine your greenhouse full of fresh, vibrant, vegetable and herb plants amidst trees and vines bearing luscious fruits. You'd have a garden and outdoor fruit trees as well, which everyone in your family would take part in tending. Maybe you've known a neighbor who gardened. If so, I'm sure you recall how much they enjoyed sharing and felt they could not possibly eat all those tomatoes themselves. Picture every house on the block harvesting and sharing their bounty so generously. Perhaps along trails, near playground equipment and beneath trees in the community area you would set up complimentary fruit and vegetable carts.


We naturally take pride in something requiring so much patience, love and care, as do our children. How good it would feel to place baskets of ripe, red, strawberries out for everyone to share. How fun it would be to exchange gardening tips with neighbors and friends when they ask how you grew such big leafy kale. How reassuring it would be to know healthy snacks were always easily found by your children even while out playing in the neighborhood. Perhaps you think I'm being a bit fanciful or idealistic, but am I? Something magical takes place in such a growth-focused environment...

My own photo

Detoxification is a natural by-product of gardening. No one likes to waste food. Can you really see yourself buying all those processed packaged snack foods full of GMOs, chemicals and preservatives when you'd have baskets of fresh fruits and vegetables you grew yourself getting riper by the hour? Of course not. As you eat more fresh fruit, greens and vegetables, you desire processed food less and less and crave more of nature's bounty. Along with your tastes, your body begins to change and run more efficiently. You have more energy, think more clearly, feel happier and more appreciative of the little things in life. People's true colors begin to shine through as their stressed and exhausted caffeine, chemical and sugar dependent alter-egos fall away. I'm not talking fairy tales, I'm talking fact. When you eat living foods in their natural form in abundance, you feel closer to your Creator, closer to nature and closer to each other. An undeniable transformation occurs and suddenly everyone is getting along better than ever. Yes, even the kids.

My own photo

Taking care of one another feels good and right. So does watching your food grow from a seed, and witnessing your children take pride in their work and the nurturing of their bodies as well as those of of the people around them. Watching your children share and become generous people is one of the most rewarding things in life. Their ever-growing love of living foods can also bring a tear to your eye. I know one little girl who barely gave carrots a thought until the day she tasted some she'd grown herself. "I love carrots! These are the best carrots I've ever tasted!" She couldn't share them fast enough. Everyone just had to experience her carrots.

My own photo

I strongly encourage you to share all the images, sights and sounds I've forgotten here. Perhaps your vision has honey bees in raspberry bushes and music lessons beneath a tree in the community area at dusk... do tell.

Photo courtesy of Fablefarm.org http://fablefarm.org/summer-vegetable-CSA-shares











Tuesday, December 17, 2013

The Famous Brundtland Report

In 1989, the United Nation's World Commission on Environment and Development published The Brundtland Report in Our Common Future. It has since become the most commonly accepted definition of sustainable development in the world today. This report has inspired millions of people, myself included, to help create a new sustainable world. It's simply the best place to begin. Below you may click on each heading as the report in its entirety is completely accessible. 


Universal Declaration of Human Rights @ 60+ logo
Gathering a body of global agreements
logo of World Commission on Environment and Development



Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development: Our Common FutureFull report: Bookmarked pdf
Transmitted to the General Assembly as an Annex to
document A/42/427 - Development and International Co-operation: Environment

Table of Contents


Acronyms and Note on Terminology


Chairman's Foreword


From One Earth to One World


Part I. Common Concerns


  1. A Threatened Future

    1. Symptoms and Causes

    2. New Approaches to Environment and Development

  2. Towards Sustainable Development

    1. The Concept of Sustainable Development

    2. Equity and the Common Interest

    3. Strategic Imperatives

    4. Conclusion

  3. The Role of the International Economy

    1. The International Economy, the Environment, and Development
    2. Decline in the 1980s

    3. Enabling Sustainable Development

    4. A Sustainable World Economy

Part II. Common Challenges


  1. Population and Human Resources

    1. The Links with Environment and Development

    2. The Population Perspective

    3. A Policy Framework

  2. Food Security: Sustaining the Potential

    1. Achievements

    2. Signs of Crisis

    3. The Challenge

    4. Strategies for Sustainable Food Security

    5. Food for the Future

  3. Species and Ecosystems: Resources for Development

    1. The Problem: Character and Extent

    2. Extinction Patterns and Trends

    3. Some Causes of Extinction

    4. Economic Values at Stake

    5. New Approach: Anticipate and Prevent

    6. International Action for National Species
    7. Scope for National Action
    8. The Need for Action

  4. Energy: Choices for Environment and Development

    1. Energy, Economy, and Environment

    2. Fossil Fuels: The Continuing Dilemma

    3. Nuclear Energy: Unsolved Problems

    4. Wood Fuels: The Vanishing Resource

    5. Renewable Energy: The Untapped Potential

    6. Energy Efficiency: Maintaining the Momentum

    7. Energy Conservation Measures

    8. Conclusion

  5. Industry: Producing More With Less

    1. Industrial Growth and its Impact

    2. Sustainable Industrial Development in a Global Context

    3. Strategies for Sustainable Industrial Development

  6. The Urban Challenge

    1. The Growth of Cities

    2. The Urban Challenge in Developing Countries

    3. International Cooperation

Part III. Common Endeavours


  1. Managing The Commons

    1. Oceans: The Balance of Life

    2. Space: A Key to Planetary Management

    3. Antarctica: Towards Global Cooperation

  2. Peace, Security, Development, and the Environment

    1. Environmental Stress as a Source of Conflict

    2. Conflict as a Cause of Unsustainable Development

    3. Towards Security and Sustainable Development

  3. Towards Common Action: Proposals For Institutional and Legal Change

    1. The Challenge for Institutional and Legal Change

    2. Proposals for Institutional and Legal Change

    3. A Call for Action

Annexes


Throughout this report, quotes from some of the many people who spoke at WCED public hearings appear in boxes to illustrate the range of opinions the Commission was exposed to during its three years of work. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the Commission.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Welcome to Dr. Riba's Green City!

Photo is my own

I've been interested in sustainable living for some time, but in 2011 war broke out in Syria. Amidst the heartbreaking daily reports of loss of life and devastating destruction, somehow green ideas began to sprout in my mind. These ideas multiplied by the day, and soon I simply could not shake the hope for a new, green, thriving Syria. In time, the opportunity to rebuild would present itself. We needed to be prepared. Instead of consumers, I sincerely believe each one of us possesses the ability to become a producer utilizing the best technology available and shedding our dependence on fossil fuels.

I'm delighted to report this book will soon be available on Amazon electronically as well as in paperback. I look forward to more green ideas and friendships emerging right here on this blog. Welcome friends and thank you for reading.



Dr. Hicham Riba



We look forward to seeing you again!