
The top 12 ways Israel is feeding the world
From drip irrigation to hardier seeds, Israeli innovations help fill hungry bellies everywhere, particularly in the developing world.

From drip irrigation to hardier seeds, Israeli innovations help fill hungry bellies everywhere, particularly in the developing world.

With studies on anything from storm intensity to drought and fog, ISRAEL21c introduces the leading climate-change investigators from Israel.

An Israeli graduate student devises anti-slime coating for boxes used to transport fruits and vegetables to market.

As the planet heats up, weather is becoming more extreme. Israeli professor, Colin Price, thinks his work tracking weather patterns could save lives.

Astonishing nano-crystals from Israel’s Qlight will enhance the quality and colors of LCD screens and LED lights while reducing energy consumption.

Order a skyTran two-person transport pod, punch in your destination and soar above traffic on a magnetized guideway. A demo system is going up at Israel Aircraft Industries, and soon in Tel Aviv and beyond.

Israeli researchers were part of a Harvard study showing that crops of the future will contain fewer nutrients as a result of more CO2 in the air.

Israeli-engineered lilies associated with the Annunciation encounter between Mary and the angel Gabriel, are now blooming just in time for Easter.

Israel’s Sol Chip and Tadiran companies are collaborating on an advanced solar battery to power the wireless devices of today and tomorrow.

The Jewish National Fund isn’t only about planting forests. Some of its newest water-tech projects were recently showcased in Israel.

Israel’s Enzootic makes prawn farmers an appetizing offer: a treatment method to control and rear the crustaceans by gender.

The goal isn’t to fight desertification, it’s to arrest it, says award-winning director of Israel’s Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Prof. Pedro Berliner.

Israeli researchers uncover link between drought and the rapid decline of ancient civilizations, using pollen samples from under water.

ISRAEL21c visits the bi-annual Water Technology and Environment Control Exhibition and Conference to see what’s flowing onto the market.

Sounds impossible, but Israel’s desert is considered one of the best places in the world to harvest tropical fish and marine plants for export.