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Tamera is Semi-Finalist of the 2012 Buckminster Fuller Challenge

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Water Retention Landscapes as an Answer to Desertification and Globalization - Tamera is Semi-Finalist of the 2012 Buckminster Fuller Challenge

Tamera Ecovillage Tamera Ecovillage

Dear GEN Friends,

tomorrow, on 22nd of March, the world celebrates the International Day of Water.

Some facts:

In September 2010, the UN has made water to a human right.

Still more than 1 billion people have no access to sufficient clean drinking water.

1,8 million children die every year because of diseases caused by unsufficient drinking water.

For making space for the 45.000 large dams worldwide 40 to 60 million people have lost their homes.

However there are good news, there are alternatives and models for a natural and decentralized water management which show how to overcome the worldwide water crisis. Water itself shows us the way how to make a change.

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İmece Evi Doğal Yaşam ve Ekolojik Çözümler Çiftliği (Solidarity Home)

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İmece Evi Doğal Yaşam ve Ekolojik Çözümler Çiftliği (Solidarity Home)

İmece Evi - TürkiyeWelcome to İmece Evi! (Solidarity Home) İmece Evi started its “Ecologic Village” project on Kazdağı (İda Mountains) in 2007 based on the rules of ecology and intercultural peace and built on his claim of “Another World is Possible”. Until 2010 it gained a lot of experience in its rental premisses by the coast. Starting with 2011, İmece Evi has been moving to its own land on the mountain Dumanlı. (İzmir-Menemen,Turgutlar village) It is now a self-contained organisation which, by the help of its implementations and ecologic solutions, has already proved that “a life in harmony with nature” is possible, and its expenses on the things provided by the external resources gradually get less. All experiences gained through the time has been shared with the participants all over the world, and as of 2011 Natural Agriculture Method by Fukuoka-san has been given the priority to be used in its own lands while the philosophy and the results are debated with the volunteers. Permaculture, Biodynamic Applications and Traditional Culture have always been considered in all applications, and the experiences gained have always been shared with the participants.

Address: Kazdağı Güzelköy Ayvacık Çanakkale

Phone: (552) 414-2363

Web: http://www.imeceevi.org/

E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
 

GUNUNG MAS ECOVILLAGE - WEST ACEH

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GUNUNG MAS ECOVILLAGE - WEST ACEHGreetings! We are the Gunung Mas Community from West Aceh. We are a community formed after the great earthquake and tsunami that struck the coasts of Aceh and caused so much devastation at the end of 2004. Nearly all of us lost family and friends to the deadly wave. Some of us lost many members of our family. A few of us are left with just one or two distant family members. In many ways we are all children of the tsunami.

The great wave left countless people wandering around the country looking for family members who might have survived. We did not all always find our lost relatives but here in Gunung Mas we found a community. It is this spirit of community which gives us support and now we strive to make a new life. With the help of the Almighty we are trying to give life meaning again not only for us but for all Achenese people. Gunung Mas means mountain of gold in our language. Hope is gold.

So here we are in Gunung Mas with Abu Ibrahim and Abu Othman, who founded the community. Abu Ibrahim is now 106 years old. We are all his family. Many of us still live in tents but it doesn’t matter. Little by little we build houses so that we can all live more comfortably with a proper roof over our heads. Sometimes when we have petrol for the chainsaw, we bring trees from a nearby forest, drag them down the stream and then cut them for pillars, floors and walls as we have always done. The women make the roofing out of Sago leaves in the traditional style.

GUNUNG MAS ECOVILLAGE - WEST ACEHWe now have two schools. We call them Pesantren: one for girls and one for boys: Some two hundred in all, many of them orphans from war or the tsunami. We built everything with our own hands. The Aid agencies seemed to be interested only in building where there were formerly communities by the coast destroyed by the tsunami. Altogether we are about 300 people. Sometimes people hear of what we are doing and come from afar to join us and help us to realize our dream. They feel comfortable here and life is meaningful again.

Actually we could call our community an eco-village. It’s all about repairing the environment and repairing ourselves. We have plenty of land, more than a thousand hectares we can use and a big powerful river nearby. If we could get a micro turbine, the river would give us plenty of electricity with no carbon emissions. This would set a pattern for the rest of post-tsunami, post-war Aceh, which at present gets irregular supplies of electricity from outside Aceh. We want to start thinking locally and to become self sufficient and sustainable. Now the army has gone since the Peace Agreement of August 2005 and there is a new government of an autonomous Aceh. Let’s make a new Eco-Aceh! Our village is a really pioneering project on new land. 

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ECOVILLAGE RESOURCES

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Dancing Rabbit
Dancing Rabbit Ecovillage

Ecovillage Resources

  1. Websites
  2. Finding Ecovillages Online
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Ecovillage Projects in Vietnam

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Ecovillage Projects in Vietnam

By Diana Leafe Christian / (March, 2011)

Tan_Van_Chu_Ecovillage_Vietnam
At Tan Van Chu Ecovillage, Vietnam. Professor Toshio Ogata, Director of Global Environment Project in Asia (GEPA) from Chuo University in Tokyo, is at far left, in blue.
 

Since the early 1990s the government of Vietnam has set up small ecovillage projects in that country’s poorer, ecologically vulnerable rural areas — barren coastal sandy areas along the Central Coast, and three different habitats (coastal dunes, wetland areas, and mountainous areas) — in the floodplains of the North Delta. The projects are developed and managed by Vietnam’s Institute of Ecological Economy, and its Institute for Strategy and Policy on Natural Resources and Environment — both programs of the country’s Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE).

The Institutes developed and teach two permaculture-like strategies for ecological restoration and economic development in rural areas: an integrated garden/fishpond/livestock (VAC) plan for coastal dunes and floodplain areas, and an integrated garden/forest/fishpond/forest (VACR) plan for mountain areas. Government funding for these projects was sometimes supplemented by grants from other countries, including Sweden and France.

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