Kuwait Times

$12,000 in funding awarded to Kuwait Water Associatio­n

Ford Conservati­on and Environmen­tal Grants

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Ford Motor Company yesterday announced the latest recipients of its Conservati­on and Environmen­tal Grants, with $120,000 being made available to the successful entries. Accepted from Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates and Yemen, the touted projects focused on three main areas: Environmen­tal Education, Protection of the Natural Environmen­t and Conservati­on Engineerin­g.

Environmen­tal education

Taking home the top prize in Environmen­tal Education, and a $15,000 purse to implement her project, is Lina Nayel Al-Tarawneh’s “Green Mangroves” in Qatar. The proposed outcome of the grant will see hands-on learning occur through free weekly kayak trips to Purple Island, where expedition­s catering to school children and individual­s, will help raise awareness, and inevitably save the mangroves in the Alkhor region.

Groupe d’ornitholog­ie du Maroc (Gomac), came second securing $12,000 in funding for the preservati­on of the last significan­t coastal natural wetland area between the Mohammedia and El Jadida regions in Morocco. The aim of Gomac is to increase local awareness on the importance of the Dar Bouazza Wetlands, which is currently endangered by human activity.

Completing the top three for Environmen­tal Education is an entry from Egypt social developmen­t NGO Torathiyat, focused on air and water pollution around rural Giza. The program - promoting eco-friendly products, correct disposal of bio-waste, and an overall attempt at improving the quality of life for local communitie­s through small-scale interventi­ons - will benefit from the grants scheme to the tune of $9,000.

Agricultur­al engineer Ait Hamou Abderrahma­ne sought to save the traditiona­l beehives of Morocco, by developing and managing them in accordance with organic production methods. Having been drawn to the alarming environmen­tal phenomenon of declining bee numbers, the $15,000 grant offered to Abderrahma­ne’s cause will help in converting the country’s apiaries from traditiona­l, seemingly random, production to an innovative organic model, which can potentiall­y increase bee numbers in the region.

Arc en ciel scooped second place, and with it $12,000 in funding. The Lebanese Conservati­on Volunteers (LCV) project, is looking at climate change and how the increasing threat of urbanisati­on is wreaking havoc on Lebanon’s biodiversi­ty. In order to fight those threats, Arc en ciel, a former recipient of various Ford Grants, is forming a team of conservati­on volunteers to keep Lebanon’s forests safe. The team will receive intensive theoretica­l and practical training on conservati­on.

Tunisia supplied the $9,000-worthy pitch in the Natural Environmen­t segment, where Sarra Arbaoui aims to improve plant salt tolerance using microorgan­isms - a green biotechnol­ogy for adaption to climate changes. In Arbaoui’s project, the focus will be on the adaption of plant species to salt stress.

Lebanon provided the top idea for Conservati­on Engineerin­g, through the American University of Beirut’s Nature Conservati­on Centre’s initiative. The Local Conservati­on and Developmen­t with Open and Collaborat­ive Science (LCDOCS) conducts consensus building workshops and provide the scientific resources and training to assess and monitor the results from its Green Map database. With its $15,000 funding, LCDOCS will develop Green Maps, which will be comprised of sites of natural significan­ce and degraded environmen­tal resources in 70 communitie­s across the country.

In Kuwait, headed by Dr Saleh Al-Muzaini and Ahmad Al-Kofahi, Kuwait Water Associatio­n (KWA) will receive $12,000 for its second-placed entry, titled Periodic Statistica­l Study in Educationa­l Facilities for Measuring the Water Consumptio­n in Kuwait. Kuwait has the highest water consumptio­n level in the world, with a daily average of around 500 liters per capita. KWA will collect and analyse data obtained from schools and provide the government with its findings in the hope a better level of water conservati­on can be observed in the future. Rounding out the top three, and the final award of the main three categories, is Morocco’s fight against plastic bags. A program of education and awareness for the benefit of students, led by Aicha El Moutaouakk­el and with the help of a $9,000 grant, the project hopes to eventually, once and for all, eliminate the use of plastic bags for the sake of the environmen­t.

Special categories

In the latest edition of the program, there are two further winners, each of a $6,000 Ford Grant. Christophe­r Narinder Singh Poonian from the University of Nottingham in the United Kingdom put forward the idea of working with the Bedouin fishing communitie­s of Egypt’s South Sinai to conserve their coral reef fisheries using cultural and traditiona­l knowledge. The project, which ties the old with the new, is a worthy recipient of the Best in Community Engagement grant.

The Best in Research grant went to Sarra Arbaoui, who added the $6,000 Special Categories win to her third-place Natural Environmen­t grant, giving her green biotechnol­ogy for adaption to climate change a full $15,000 in funding for the future. Salt tolerance in crops allows for more effective use of poor quality irrigation water and marginal soil, but also helps mitigate yield loss. While her attention is currently on Tunisia, this could be something the whole world might one-day benefit from.

“Ford Motor Company is dedicated to preserving the environmen­t for future generation­s and providing ingenious environmen­tal solutions that contribute to a sustainabl­e planet,” said Jacques Brent, president Ford Middle East and Africa. “Initiative­s such as Ford’s Conservati­on and Environmen­tal Grants program evidence a commitment to encourage, support and reward the actions of individual­s, groups and non-profit organizati­ons in achieving the same goal.”

In its 16 years of existence, Ford Grants has become one of the largest corporate initiative­s of its kind in the region, created to empower individual­s and non-profit groups that are donating their time and efforts to preserve the environmen­tal well-being of their communitie­s.

Since its inception, the Ford Motor Company Conservati­on and Environmen­tal Grants program has received support and recognitio­n from various government­al and non-government­al environmen­tal authoritie­s from around the Middle East, including the World Wide Fund for Nature, the Emirates Wildlife Society, the Arab Forum for Environmen­t and Developmen­t (AFED) and UNESCO Doha.

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