Archive for September, 2009

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Extremadura será la primera región del mundo en desarrollar tecnologías del agua junto a Israel

September 23, 2009

La Junta pretende promover, en colaboración con empresas israelíes, un sector empresarial que exporte sus conocimientos al resto de España, Portugal e Iberoamérica

MÉRIDA, 14 Sep. (EUROPA PRESS) -

Extremadura será el primer territorio del mundo en desarrollar tecnologías para el mejor aprovechamiento del agua junto a Israel, país que se encuentra a la cabeza en las investigaciones más avanzadas en esta materia.

Hasta la fecha la tecnología israelí para el agua ha sido exportada a países diversos, pero los científicos de este país no han llevado a cabo investigaciones conjuntas con los de otros estados o regiones, lo cual sí sucederá con Extremadura, según explicó en rueda de prensa en Mérida Yuval Chomsky, representante de la empresa Integra Enviromental, filial en España de Clean Technologias Group, con la que la Junta acaba de firmar un convenio marco de colaboración.

Para dar cuenta del contenido del convenio comparecieron hoy ante los medios de comunicación en la capital extremeña el citado Chomsky, la vicepresidenta económica de la Junta, María Dolores Aguilar, y el director general Clean Technologies Group, Elroy Amitzur.

Dolores Aguilar explicó que la intención del Ejecutivo autonómico es, a partir de este acuerdo, promover en la región la aparición de empresas dedicadas al aprovechamiento del agua para ir conformando un “sector potente” que más adelante se haga con un “nicho de mercado” y pueda exportar sus conocimientos al resto de España, Portugal e Iberoamérica.

EFICIENCIA

A través del acuerdo suscrito hoy la Junta de Extremadura busca potenciar el conocimiento de la investigación en tecnologías de plantas depuradoras; desarrollo de tecnologías para la descontaminación de aguas y paliación de ecosistemas contaminados para su recuperación, así como el desarrollo en la eficiencia de la utilización agrícola del agua y el desarrollo de la tecnología en ese ámbito.

También se podrán conocer las últimas tecnologías de tratamiento y reutilización del agua; optimización de los procesos tecnológicos convencionales de tratamiento; optimización de tratamiento de agua potable; desarrollo de nuevos procesos tecnológicos para el tratamiento y gestión de aguas residuales, agrarias y agroindustriales, y tecnologías de valorización energética de residuos.

Clean Technologies Group e Integra Enviromental iniciarán, asimismo, una línea de colaboración directa que incluye dos líneas paralelas y complementarias de actuación. Por un lado, la transferencia de conocimientos y tecnologías propias para su utilización y fabricación en Extremadura. Por otro lado, el inicio de varios proyectos de investigación relacionados con el mundo del agua, de amplia proyección nacional e internacional, en colaboración directa con instituciones, centros tecnológicos y la Universidad de Extremadura.

SEDE ESPAÑOLA, EN BADAJOZ

Para ello, Integra Enviromental ubicará su sede española en el Parque Científico Tecnológico de Extremadura en Badajoz y abrirá líneas de trabajo directas con todas aquellas compañías e instituciones involucradas en el ciclo del agua dentro de la región.

Asimismo, Clean Technologies Group y su filial colaborarán con la Junta de Extremadura en el desarrollo del proyecto de creación del Centro de Investigación del Agua en Extremadura.

La Vicepresidencia Segunda y Consejería de Economía, Comercio e Innovación iniciará durante 2010 la creación de este Centro propio de investigación, orientado al desarrollo de la I+D+i en un marco integral del ciclo del agua, desde la gestión y aprovechamiento de los recursos hídricos de la comunidad, que permitan la sostenibilidad de los ricos ecosistemas acuáticos, hasta el desarrollo de tecnologías para la gestión y tratamiento de aguas potables, residuales y agroindustriales.

La vicepresidenta segunda y consejera de Economía, Comercio e Innovación, Dolores Aguilar, manifestó que las empresas israelíes, que se encargan de producir conocimiento, serán “socios estratégicos” para Extremadura.

Fuente: http://www.europapress.es/extremadura/noticia-extremadura-sera-primera-region-mundo-desarrollar-tecnologias-agua-junto-israel-20090914170130.html

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Trobada empresarial – Catalunya i Israel un Pont per al Món

September 16, 2009

La Cambra de Comerç Catalunya – Israel esta organitzant un seminari entre empreses / empresaris israelians que es troben instal·lats a Catalunya i empresaris / emprenedors Catalans per conèixer les seves experiències en l’activitat comercial, d’investigació i negocis a la cultura entre Catalunya i Israel

Durant l’esdeveniment pretenem presentar casos d’èxit, assenyalar les oportunitats de negoci que hi ha entre els dos països en sectors punters, emfatitzar la importància de la cooperació comercial i informar sobre les subvencions i suports que existeixen per a la recerca i desenvolupament entre Catalunya i Israel

El seminari es divideix en dues parts :

1 – Al matí les ponències i la presentació de casos d’èxit.

2 – A la tarda reunions amb els agregats comercials d’Espanya a Israel i d’Israel a Espanya i amb els representants de la Cambra de Comerç Espanya-Israel, Casa Sefarad i ARCCI.

La realització d’aquest esdeveniment serà durant la setmana del 23 d’ Novembre 2009

Detall d’Activitats

Ponències:

Israel, un model High-Tech

Oportunitats de Negoci entre Catalunya i Israel en sectors punters

Finançament i subvencions per a les activitats de recerca i desenvolupament entre Catalunya i Israel

Incubadores Tecnologies a Israel – casos d’èxit

Israel – Un pont per al món

Trobades Privades

Organitzarem a la tarda trobades privades entre empresaris, emprenedors i particulars que busquen conèixer més en detall informació i les oportunitats que es presenten entre Israel i Catalunya en temes relacionats amb la investigació, comerç, subvencions, alta tecnologia, cooperació, etc

Buscarem tenir presents:

Representant del govern d’Israel a Espanya

Representant del govern espanyol a Tel-Aviv, Israel
Representants de la Cambra de Comerç Espanya-Israel, Delegació Catalunya
Representant de la Casa Sefarad
Representant de ARCCI

Si està interessat a participar com a ponent o assistir agrairem que ens enviï un email a info@camaracatalanoisraeli.com

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Inauguración nuevas oficinas EL AL en Barcelona

September 10, 2009
EL AL Terminal 1

EL AL Terminal 1

El día 9 de septiembre de 2009, se inauguraron  las nuevas oficinas de EL AL en la nueva Terminal 1 del aeropuerto de Barcelona.

En la ceremonia, el Sr. Rabino de la Comidad Israrelita de Barcelona, colocó la Mezuza , en el marco de la puerta, como es tradición en cada hogar y lugar de trabajo judío.

En el acto, estuvieron presentes, El director de EL AL en España, Sr. Walter Waisrsier,  el Jefe de  la Base de EL AL en Barcelona, Sr. Raul   Álvarez  ,  el presidente en funciones de la Comidad Israelita de Barcelona, Sr. Prosper Pinto, la Sra. Assumpció Hosta i Rebés, Secretaria General de la Red de Juederías de España, y el Sr. Miguel Szpiniak, Presidente de la Delegación Catalunya de la Camara de Comercio España Israel.

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Terrorist detection co SDS in seven-figure deal

September 2, 2009

Suspect Detection Systems’ technology can identify threats in real-time.

Ron Steinblatt

Suspect Detection Systems Inc. (Bulletin Board: SDSS), a developer of proprietary counter-terror and crime prevention technology designed to identify threats in real-time, has signed a seven-digit contract with a federal agency of a major country to deploy the company’s Cogito rapid interrogation system at a border crossing.sds

Cogito is an automated system for identifying hostile intent by suspects within 5-7 minutes during an interrogation. The proprietary system can be set up at checkpoints, border crossings, crime scenes, and other locations, with the goal of identifying terrorists and criminals.

The technology detects the hidden ‘hostile intent’ of assailants – before they commit their intended acts – with a remarkable degree of accuracy. The system can also be used after a crime has been committed to quickly identify criminals from among a pool of suspects.

Suspect Detection Systems CEO Shabtai Shoval said, “Our system was designed specifically to aid in the apprehension of terrorists and criminals at border crossings. We have worked tirelessly to develop a comprehensive system that can accurately identify suspects at any time of day or night, without the aid of experienced interrogators. We are confident that Cogito will contribute to a safer, less porous border.”

Suspect Detection Systems is 51% owned by SDSS, with the rest owned by its founders and managers.The share closed at $0.20 yesterday, giving a market cap of $14.5 million.

Published by Globes [online], Israel business news – www.globes-online.com – on September 2, 2009

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2009

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Azerbaijan: Israeli delegation helps dozens regain hearing

September 2, 2009

Two Israeli organizations travel to Muslim country to bring hope to locals suffering from hearing impairment or deafness. Investment will pay off hugely over time, says Israeli ambassador

Merav Yudilovitch Published:  08.27.09, 07:25  Ynetnews.com

AZERBAIJAN – The life of sixteen-year-old Ahmadli Nijad, who has been deaf since childbirth, underwent a dramatic transformation this week. Born with severe hearing problems that exacerbated with age, Nijad and his family have always been told by local doctors in Azerbaijan that he would never be able to hear.

Kids treated by the delegation

Kids treated by the delegation

But last Tuesday, thanks to a group of highly motivated Israelis Nijad received a gift that would change his life: A hearing aid that enables him to hear.

An Israeli delegation made up of volunteers from two organizations, Hedim and Eye from Zion, arrived in Azerbaijan last week with 70 hearing aids in a bid to assist and train local health personnel to treat people suffering from hearing impairment or deafness.

The initiative is the brainchild of Eye from Zion founder Nati Marcus. In the last three years the foundation has been operating in remote places around the globe bringing humanitarian aid and equipment to populations in need.

The decision to go to Azerbaijan, a wealthy country, came following President Shimon Peres’ recent visit to the Muslim state and in light of the desire to improve the relations with the country that shares a border with Iran.

“It’s true that we normally go to remote places such as Vietnam or Tibet, and we will soon travel to the area in Burma where the cyclone hit and to where the tsunami hit in Sri Lanka,” said Marcus. “But children like Ahmadli Nijad make such a delegation worth it. Additionally, we found out that there is enormous need for information here. The idea is to teach local doctors how to continue working with the equipment we have brought through training there, and if needed also in Israel.

“Essentially, we serve as goodwill ambassadors for the State of Israel here,” he added.

Marcus, who led the delegation, was joined in the initiative by the Hedim Institute chain of hearing and speech rehabilitation clinics in Israel and Canadian company Unitron, which specializes in manufacturing hearing instruments. Equipment worth NIS 200,000 (approximately $52,500) was flown to Azerbaijan and for two days the Israeli team had treated over 40 men, women and children.

‘Lost case’?

Anat Kochva, a qualified audiologist and speech/language pathologist who founded the Hedim Institute recounted her encounter with Nijad, who came to meet the delegation all the way from the city of Gabala, which is located far away from the capital of Baku.

“He simply insisted on coming. This is a child who hasn’t developed language skills, but from the moment I saw him, with his clever, shining eyes I liked him. The local doctors didn’t want to treat him; they thought he was a lost case. His look caught me. It wasn’t a blank stare. When I called him he replied by humming. I realized he can’t speak, just utter voices.

People travelled from afar

People travelled from afar

People travelled from afar

“I started examining him and at first I saw that the damage to one ear was beyond repair. I’d almost given up, but then I saw that there’s hope for the other ear. He responded to the hearing aid immediately. This is a boy who’s grown up wild, has never been to any educational framework and has never been able to hear. Now he would have to learn how to hear,” she said.

Interfaith cooperation

After two particularly intense days the delegation, along with Magen David Adom paramedics and the Israeli ambassador to Azerbaijan travelled to the city of Guba to open a first-of-its-kind center for emergency medicine in the Muslim side of the city and in cooperation with the Red Crescent.

Rabbi Yosef, a representative of one of the donors to the project, asked: “In how many places in the world can you see the Red Crescent and Magen David Adom side by side?”

He added that the connection between MDA and the Red Crescent, and cooperation between the two religions, is what the donors saw in mind when they decided to support the project. “We brought first aid kits, basic equipment, computers and of course staff.

“The goal is to build an infrastructure and train and certify local paramedics.”

Worthy investment

For the Israeli Ambassador to Azerbaijan Michael Lavon-Lotem, who took office only two weeks ago, this was a first trip to Guba. After visiting the center, he said: “When we Israelis open the window in the morning we see Jihad. This is why it’s hard for us to understand that there is a different, wonderful, multifaceted world out there that we need to try harder to connect to.”

Israeli Ambassador Lavon-Lotem and local Red Crescent representative

Israeli Ambassador Lavon-Lotem and local Red Crescent representative

Lavon-Lotem called for increased Israeli efforts to create cooperation in the region. “After all,” he explained, “not many leaders of Muslim countries would have stood up to Iranian pressure and decided to host the Israeli president. I can wholeheartedly say that Azerbaijan wants ties with Israel.”

Commenting on the new center, the envoy added that “the effect and influence of such an investment over time is huge.”

Last weekend a group of the people who have been treated by the Israeli delegation arrived in Gabala to listen to the Raanana Symphonette Orchestra in concert. This was the first time an Israeli orchestra played in the country, and was surely an unforgettable experience for several dozens Azeris

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Gold nanotech breath test may show lung cancer early

September 1, 2009

By Kate Kelland

LONDON (Reuters) – A sensor made with gold nanoparticles can detect lung cancer in a patient’s breath and may offer a diagnosis before tumors show up on an x-ray, Israeli scientists said on Sunday.

The device, which the developers say would be cheap enough for everyday use by family doctors, detected lung cancer with 86 percent accuracy and may offer a way to screen for a disease not usually diagnosed until it has spread and is no longer curable.

Dr. Hossam Haick, senior lecturer in the Faculty of Chemical Engineering and the Russell Berrie Nanotechnology Institute

Dr. Hossam Haick, senior lecturer in the Faculty of Chemical Engineering and the Russell Berrie Nanotechnology Institute

It uses sensors based on gold nanoparticles to detect specific compounds — volatile organic compounds (VOC) — that lung cancer patients have in high levels in exhaled breath.

Breath testing is already recognized as a way of linking specific VOCs in exhaled breath to a certain medical conditions. In 2006, researchers found dogs could be trained to smell cancer on the breath of patients with 99 percent accuracy.

Hossam Haick, one of the scientists working on the sensor, said he hoped it could soon allow doctors to have a simple test at hand to screen people during routine appointments.

“Conventional diagnostic methods for lung cancer are unsuitable for widespread screening because they are expensive and occasionally miss tumors,” Haick and colleagues wrote in Nature Nanotechnology.

“This device is not at all expensive. The whole idea in this development was to devise something very sensitive, and very cheap and very portable,” Haick, of the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, told Reuters.

Lung cancer kills 1.3 million people a year and is the leading cause of cancer death across the world. Only 15 percent of patients live more than 5 years, in part because the disease is usually diagnosed so late.

The device developed by Haick and his colleagues is a nine-sensor array consisting of gold nanoparticles combined with different organic groups that respond to various VOCs released by lung tumors.

They tested 56 healthy people and 40 patients who had been diagnosed with lung cancer using conventional methods.

They found the sensor could distinguish the breath of lung cancer patients from the of the control group with more than 86 percent accuracy.

Haick said the patented device needed to be more rigorously tested and obtain approval from drug licensing authorities before it could go into production.

“I would say that could take three to five years,” he said.

Various other methods exist to measure VOCs, including a breath test using color spots, but existing techniques are often expensive, slow and sometimes require the breath to be concentrated or dehumidified first.

(Editing by Louise Ireland)

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Drivers and doctors on the road to peace

September 1, 2009

By Karin Kloosterman August 26, 2009

The hospital in Israel has become a second home to Aya from Jenin, who receives life-saving dialysis there four times a week.

The hospital in Israel has become a second home to Aya from Jenin, who receives life-saving dialysis there four times a week.

A growing number of Palestinians are being personally chauffeured to life-saving medical appointments in Israel by volunteer Israeli drivers.

It took more than half of her young life for doctors to diagnose two-year-old Aya Aiid Abo-Mois’s chronic kidney disease. Today, it’s the dialysis she receives four times a week at an Israeli hospital that keeps her alive.

In the Palestinian Authority city of Jenin in the West Bank where she lives there are no adequate facilities to treat her rare condition. Aya has been receiving treatment at an Israeli hospital ever since she was rushed to Jerusalem suffering from kidney failure earlier this year.

“She comes like clockwork with her mother, very happy and cheerful,” attending physician Dr. Daniella Magen tells ISRAEL21c. Dr. Magen is a pediatric nephrologist at the Rambam Hospital in Haifa where Aya now receives her treatment, closer to home.

Counteracting foreign media reports that the Israeli government routinely denies Palestinians access to quality healthcare: “It’s never happened that the authorities didn’t let her though,” says Magen.

Magen says that Aya receives the same medical treatment as any Israeli citizen, adding that the Israeli hospital will help to arrange a transplant when Aya is old enough. The only way to prolong Aya’s future indefinitely, Magen tells ISRAEL21c, is to ensure that she undergoes both a liver and a kidney transplant to overcome the genetic disease Oxalosis that is causing her kidneys to fail.

Driving the road to recovery

This is just one story about how Israelis and Palestinians are working together to ensure that children in the PA have access to healthcare in Israel when necessary. The Palestinian Authority and private donors foot the bill and Magen confirms that doctors treat all patients equally, regardless of nationality.

It takes a network of volunteers from the PA and Israel to make sure that Aya and her mom Sahir have the necessary permits to travel from Jenin. Their morning starts early, at about 5 a.m., when they wait for a driver from among the volunteer coordinators at “Way to Recovery” to transport them from their home to the hospital.

Way to Recovery numbers about 50 volunteers. Founded in 2006 by the Israeli-Palestinian Forum of Bereaved Families, requests for transport from the PA to Israel increase slightly each month.

It all began when a Palestinian member of the forum asked one of the Israeli members, Yuval Roth, to help him travel to Rambam Hospital. Roth had lost his brother 15 years before – he was murdered by Hamas terrorists while hitchhiking. Now, Roth’s efforts to help Palestinians reflect how much some Israelis yearn for peace.

He told a local newspaper: “When I drive a Palestinian patient to a hospital in Israel, I am paving the way to a close relationship between the peoples. I am fed up with talk of peace. We have to take action on the ground, and this is what I am doing, together with all the volunteers who lend a hand to this matter.”

The hospital is her second home

Aya’s connection to Israel started early this year when she was taken to the Jenin Governmental Hospital with kidney failure. When her condition worsened, she was transported to the Shaare Zedek Medical Center in Jerusalem where she received dialysis treatment three times a week for more than a month. As Jerusalem is far from Jenin, her parents – who have three other young children at home – requested that Aya undergo dialysis at the Rambam Medical Center in Haifa.

According to hospital staff, Rambam has become like a second home to Aya and her mom. The hospital is a unique meeting point for the different cultures in Israel. In its wards and waiting rooms, Israeli Arabs, Palestinians and Jews meet eye-to-eye and learn about each other’s personal lives.

The Rambam staff will help Aya to obtain a transplant abroad when the time comes. In the past they have sent patients to Jordan, where western physicians perform operations. According to Israeli law, only Israeli citizens are entitled to transplants in the country. Waiting lists are extremely long.

Magen works with Yavid on the Palestinian side to take care of logistics for the Aya: “I write a letter in English asking for what I need for [Aya] and this goes to the authorities and to the army. She now has a constant permit – a certificate to come to Israel on a daily basis for dialysis.”

Working under a senior physician in the ward, Magen says that the hospital takes care of children from all over, “including children from the Gaza Strip, Schem (Nablus) and Hebron and we are asked to do our best. I also know there are many Palestinian children with cancer coming to Israeli hospitals,” she adds.

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How much will Better Place’s car cost in Israel?

September 1, 2009

The car is based on the next-generation Renault Megane.

Dubi Ben-Gedalyahu

The price of the electric car that will be sold in Israel is still shrouded in fog. The car is based on the next-generation Renault Megane sedan, and Renault SA (Euronext: RNO) declines to put a price tag on it because of the complexity of the components. Better Place also will not set a price for the car in Israel, but recently, Better Place Denmark CEO Jens Moberg gave a hint in an interview with UK daily “The Guardian”.

Jens Moberg

Better Place Denmark CEO Jens Moberg

“The Guardian” says that the electric Megane will cost up to 200,000 kroner, or £23,080 (NIS 141,000). Denmark will fully exempt electric cars from taxes.

Israel will impose a 15% purchase tax on electric cars, so even if Renault offers the usual commercial discount to importers, the final price, including the battery, will be about the same.

Better Price’s business model for the electric car separates the car from the batteries. The company will retain ownership of the batteries, which it will lease to the car owners, who will pay a monthly subscription for them. As such, the battery price can be subtracted from the car cost.

Moberg declined to tell “The Guardian” how much a subscription would cost but said the battery would cost €8,000 (NIS 43,000) to manufacture in 2011-12.

It can therefore be assumed that the price of the electric car in Israel, not including the battery, will be NIS 95,000-100,000, slightly less than a family car in the group 2 value use classification. Better Place’s business model includes subsidizing the price of the car for customers who commit to the recharging package or battery replacement for a period of several years.

Published by Globes [online], Israel business news – www.globes-online.com – on August 30, 2009

© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2009