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President orders honouring of UAE football team
President orders honouring of UAE football team (Wam) / 24 September 2013 The President, His Highness Shaikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, has instructed honouring of the UAE national football team for winning the 10th GCC U-17 Championship, which Qatari capital, Doha, hosted from September 3-12, 2013. The President’s gesture recognises the sports achievements of the UAE innovators who raise the UAE’s flag high at international sports events. The UAE Football Association (UAEFA) paid gratitude to the President for his generous grant to the sportsmen and for his incessant support for the sports sector. Chairman of the UAEFA Yousuf Al Serkal affirmed that his organisation would do what in its power to make more achievements for the betterment of the UAE. The UAE team won the championship for the fourth time. Its previous triumphs were in 2006, 2009 and 2010. Continue reading
Electric bus debuts in Abu Dhabi
Electric bus debuts in Abu Dhabi (Wam) / 24 September 2013 As part of its efforts to promote sustainable transport, the Abu Dhabi Department of Transport has commenced trial operations of its first fully electric bus, which will run on various routes in the metropolis and its suburbs over a six-month trial period. The bus is a first in the region. The Ankai-branded vehicle is a standard city bus that is fully electric, not hybrid, using a plug-in charging technology, which is the most cost-effective. The battery can reach 80 per cent of capacity within three hours and 99 per cent in four hours. Each full charge has an estimated range of 200km. Saeed Mohammed Fadel Al Hameli, Acting Director, Organisational Development Division at the department (DoT), said, “The trial operation of the electric bus is in line with the DoT’s sustainable transport strategy and aims to ascertain the total cost of ownership, gain a firsthand insight of benefits offered to service users, whilst studying and assessing the best and most efficient buses and technologies that fit with Abu Dhabi’s operating conditions and atmosphere. The bus will be subject to internal performance assessment via different routes and trip scenarios, such as city-based urban frequent start-stop profiles, and suburb profiles, before selecting the most feasible specifications. “This electric bus functions and operates like any normal bus except that it is noiseless and accelerates faster. To prepare well, four selected drivers will be trained by the manufacturer and the distributor, thereby giving us hands-on experience of its features and how the air-conditioning and other supporting systems will drain its battery.” The DoT recently concluded a feasibility five-phase study on alternative fuels. It aims to develop strategies and methods promoting a clean transportation culture, look into allocations of resources for sustainable development of transportation needs and identify strategies related to alternative fuel use. Continue reading
Education: Adopting a holistic approach
Education: Adopting a holistic approach Ajita Nayar (Guest Column) / 24 September 2013 Since the United Nations declared 2005 – 2014 as the decade for Education for Sustainable Development, the subject has been a hot topic in schools. Converse to the traditional way of teaching, Education for Sustainable Development means adopting a more holistic approach to education with the aim of ‘creating a better world for this generation and future generations of all living things on planet Earth.’ This allows every child to acquire the knowledge, skills, attitudes and values necessary to shape a sustainable future. Humans tend to look at development as a needed and normal process, but when this process becomes increasingly dependent on over-exploitation of our natural resources, the replenishment of these reserves and supplies is affected; and managing this imbalance demands assuming a slightly different school of thought. One way to cultivate this mindset in our youngsters is by encouraging sustainable lifestyles through Education for Sustainable Development. Living sustainably is about changing our attitudes in a way that helps transform our lives into something that doesn’t impact too heavily on our current routines, while using the planet’s resources in moderation. Education for Sustainable Development incorporates key environmental challenges like climate change into core subjects like math, science and art, and involves modifying the teaching-learning process to a more all-encompassing approach. Students are thus able to relate what they learn in the classroom to their real life actions, and will increasingly be in a better position to take the lead in changing behaviours and adopting sustainable lifestyles, the more this type of education is adopted. As schools no longer function in isolation, their integration with the world outside has exposed students to different people and cultures, giving them the opportunity to appreciate what the planet offers, while respecting the need to use resources efficiently and responsibly. The decade of Education for Sustainable Development is already proving popular with thousands of students across the UAE taking part in environmental education programmes; among them are Be’ati Watani and Eco-Schools UAE, both implemented by EWS-WWF. These two programmes are serving as vital tools for schools to produce environmentally-responsible citizens. One evident example of how environmental education is helping shape a sustainable future is from an Eco-School in the UAE recently awarded the Green Flag, a symbol of excellence in environmental performance. These students identified the need for more wall space to spread environmental awareness messages in their school, so they created a huge mobile wall of used cartons piled one above the other! Besides reducing the amount of waste produced in their school and saving school funds, these students put forward the important message within their school community and beyond, of innovative thinking to make maximum use of available and reusable resources. Education for Sustainable Development is not only about being environmentally-friendly; it also involves developing life-skills including leadership, communication and management, all of which are extremely important for personal development. By equipping young people with these relevant capabilities in addition to their environmental knowledge, they can excel at living lives which not only further humanity, but that care for and respect our planet’s resources too. There are numerous examples that only serve to reiterate the benefits of implementing Education for Sustainable Development in schools in the UAE. Students from an Eco-School in Ras Al Khaimah encouraged their head teacher to install water dispensers in the corridors and fellow students to bring a reusable bottle to school; saving both money and plastic. The reason these youngsters did this was simple: because of their belief in the need to lower water usage and waste in their school. This type of learning goes beyond the school. What a child learns during this process shouldn’t stop there — it must be practiced by the family, too. Wise use of water and energy both at home and in the work place must be part of our natural behaviour as parents and care-givers. Greater efforts must be put in by families and communities to reduce waste, recycle regularly and opt for public transport to demonstrate the importance to our children of living more sustainably. Our homes and communities can be the ideal platform for children to exercise and experience what they learn in the classroom. – news@khaleejtimes.com Ajita Nayar is the Education Manager for Emirates Wildlife Society – in association with WWF (EWS-WWF). She is responsible for managing Be’ati Watani programme, an online environmental education programme aimed at educating children by evoking their interest in local biodiversity and environmental issues. She also leads the implementation of Eco-Schools UAE, an international initiative designed to encourage whole-school action for the environment. Continue reading