Amazing Israel benefits to humanity
Israeli Technology Advances Key Agricultural Techniques
Because
Israel is 60 percent desert, its farmers and agricultural scientists
have long focused on expanding both the yield and quality of crops, as
well as making agriculture more efficient overall.
Drip irrigation has become popular with fruit and vegetable growers in dry weather areas, from Southern California
to the Middle East. The world’s first surface drip irrigation system
was developed in the 1960s at Kibbutz Hatzerim near Beersheba.
Similarly, Israeli scientists have developed genetically modified,
disease-resistant bananas, peppers and other crops that are expanding
the world’s food supply and helping to keep prices down at grocery
stores around the globe.
Israeli Doctors Have Developed Life-Saving Treatments and Drugs
Throughout
Israel’s history, Israeli doctors, scientists and researchers have
produced countless medical advances. Whether achieved through
independent research or joint projects with the United States, the
medical discoveries made by the Jewish state are improving the lives of
millions of Americans and others around the globe.
Israeli High-Tech Developments Are Used Around the World
Israel’s high-tech civil innovations have left an important mark on homes, offices and businesses around the world.
Many
offices now have computerized phones that plug into the Internet,
taking advantage of Voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP. VocalTec
Communications of Herzliya, Israel, developed the first practical
Internet phone software. Similarly, those who enjoy chatting with
friends over the Internet might be interested to know that this online
phenomenon originated in Israel. Although the technology now belongs to
AOL, Israel’s Mirabilis developed the first popular Internet chat
program, ICQ.
Every day, millions of Americans watch online
streaming video for entertainment or educational purposes. Metacafe, the
world’s third-most-popular video sharing website, was founded in
Israel. Likewise, tech-savvy Americans over age 30 remember the original
IBM Personal Computer of the early 1980s. What they may not know is
that its brain, the Intel 8088 processor, was developed by Intel’s
Israel division. More recently, the Pentium M series of processors for
laptop computers using the Intel Centrino platform, as well as some of
Intel’s latest processors (Yonah, Merom, Woodcrest), were also designed
by Intel Israel. In addition, Amazon.com’s Kindle e-reader owes much of
its success to technology developed in Israel.
Israel Contributes to a Cleaner World
In
an era of booming populations, shrinking resources and environmental
degradation, Israel leads the world in such critical fields as solar
power generation and seawater desalination. As nations struggle to make
the best use of their resources, Israel’s cutting edge technologies
promise to improve the health and living standards of hundreds of
millions across the globe, while making industry more efficient and
minimizing the environmental impact of human activities.
Israel’s
plan to break from gasoline dependence is providing structure and
predictability to the marketplace, combining long-term public sector
commitment with regulatory stability to send a clear message that
innovation will have a home in Israel. Through investments in basic
science and industrial R&D, and the launching of pilot programs
and full scale-ups for promising technology, Israel is taking the lead
in confronting one of the most pressing security issues of our time. A
country of under 8 million people, Israel alone cannot end gasoline’s
global monopoly nor end the West’s dependence on hostile petro-regimes.
But together with international partners, Israel can serve as a
generator of intellectual property and a test-bed for innovative
solutions, challenging the economic and security vulnerability that the
United States and Israel both face through gasoline dependence.
Israel
has also set a national goal consistent with the Copenhagen Accord to
increase its share of renewable energy in electricity generation to 10
percent by 2020. In the same period of time, Israel plans to reduce its
electricity consumption by 20 percent.
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