Etty Sweet Ankona

and 5 more

Earth kilns are still used for charcoal production in the Eastern Mediterranean and worldwide. Until 2016, around 1,600 tons of charcoal were produced in Israel and the Palestinian territories in about 400 traditional earth kilns that were operated in about the same manner for the last 400 years. The intense air pollution caused by this indigenous practice resulted in higher mortality rates among the workers and the population living close to the charcoal production sites. The air pollution was found to migrate beyond 50 km, causing cross-boundary pollution in Jordan. Since the charcoal production industry processes surplus wood into solid fuel, which is used for heating and cooking, it was imperative to shift this industry to a new type of non-polluting charcoal production system. To upgrade this industry to 21st century standards development and implementation of a new ecological retort system (ERS), became possible through a combined effort by Israeli researchers and Palestinian manufacturers. Comparing the ERS to the old earth kilns suggests that the wood-to-charcoal transformation efficiency is about 10% higher in the ERS and the process duration is half a day vs. about three weeks in a traditional kiln. Generally, ERS is about two orders of magnitude more productive than the traditional earth kilns. The ERS combines a simple operational scheme and higher charcoal yield than a traditional kiln, leading to an increase in the revenue to the charcoal makers, also through byproducts bearing economic value such as electric energy and wood vinegar.

Yaakov Anker

and 2 more

Urbanization tends to increase runoff volumes, which might cause flooding and reduce groundwater recharge. Since the design of impermeable urban elements is based on the water flow volume before their construction, once they are erected the induced change to the local drainage pattern might generate flooding of the newly developed and previously developed areas. As such, precise modeling is essential to allow municipal watershed-sensitive hydrological design, which may prevent impervious urban surface expansion negative impacts. The digital elevation model that represents the watershed relief at any given location is the hydrological modeling base layer, which is necessary for describing urban landscapes and watersheds. The common notion is that the finer the elevation model resolution is, the more precise the hydrological model will be. Nevertheless, it is suggested that over-accuracy might be redundant. In the same manner, the land use classification resolution should be aligned with the modeling requirements. Such careful evaluation of the modeling resolution will reduce the computing resources needed for the modeling procedure and may be utilized as a sensitivity filter for insignificant tributaries of the hydrological network. This paper demonstrates a nominal procedure for urban watershed sub-basin analysis, which is the initial stage for detailed urban runoff modeling. It was found that the scale-optimized model performed very well and was found suitable for the prediction of runoff volume and discharge from a mainly urban, mountainous karstic watershed.