Green Prophet
Green Prophet is a website and blog featuring clean technology and eco news.[1][2] It focuses mainly on topics related to the Middle East.[3][4]
In 2012, the site was reaching almost 200,000 viewers per month.[2] By 2015, more than 20 journalists and analysts reported for Green Prophet, following social issues related to the environment, in the Middle East-North Africa region.
History
Green Prophet was founded in 2008 by Karin Kloosterman, an environmental activist from Canada, who moved to the Middle East.[5] At first the website focused on environmental news from Israel.[6] Shortly thereafter it began to publish news and feature articles about environmental topics throughout the Middle East, including eco-faith, solar and wind energy, organic living, sustainable housing,[7] oil independence, science and health. Over the years Karin reports being one of the "biggest friends to the enemy states",[8] because she works from Israel, a society with freedom of speech, she is able to write about the atrocities reported to her secretly from people in Iran, Iraq, Egypt, who might "disappear" for social, environmental action.
Green Prophet followed a social experiment in electricity use Masdar City in Abu Dhabi in 2010.[9]
References
- "Green Prophet's Top 7 Mideast Eco-Tourism Spots". Trehugger, Jennifer Hattam August 8, 2009
- "Eco-Muslims Greening the Earth", Aquila Style Magazine, By Laila Achmad, Friday, 31st August 2012
- Daniel E. Orenstein; Alon Tal; Char Miller (1 December 2012). Between Ruin and Restoration: An Environmental History of Israel. University of Pittsburgh Pre. pp. 348–. ISBN 978-0-8229-7811-4.
- "Roots of Justice, Green Shoots of Hope". Peace x Peace, March 2012 -By Mary Liepold
- "The Mideast’s Environmental “Prophet”", The Green Edge, The Cutting Edge News, Ruth Eglash, September 11th 2011
- "Green news harvest: 500-mile fuel cell car, Linux gets 'green flag'". CNET, Martin LaMonica, June 10, 2008
- "An Interview With Karin Kloosterman, Editor of greenprophet.com" Archived 2008-05-31 at the Wayback Machine. New Vilna Review, May 27, 2008
- http://jewishjournal.com/culture/lifestyle/humans-of-israel/235236/joined-tribe-thrived
- "Masdar City’s Hidden Brain". ARPA Journal. by Gökçe Günel May 15, 2014