Food rescue is not welfare - it’s national infrastructure
Like any critical infrastructure, it should be sustained not by charity, but by governments and businesses that understand its value to national wellbeing.
Like any critical infrastructure, it should be sustained not by charity, but by governments and businesses that understand its value to national wellbeing.
MUNICIPAL AFFAIRS: After years of construction and billions in cost, the Tel Aviv Light Rail starts heading down the track.
The decision is a blow to activists who had been pushing for the opening, both of the light rail and of buses.
A quick look at the global oil market reveals supply disruptions, OPEC+ decisions, and shifting demand dynamics.
According to Union Motors, the Toyota importer in Israel, the aim is to promote environmental initiatives in Israel for a better world.
DIPLOMATIC AFFAIRS: When one’s client is in the midst of a crisis, redirect, divert, and distract the public’s attention to something bigger, preferably better, happening elsewhere.
Hagai Philipson discusses personnel recruitment, the new collective agreement, technological innovations, and the Mekorot employees’ sense of mission.
Environmental experts say Israel “out of sync” with global aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the face of global boiling.
Saudi Arabia will hit 1.5 gigawatts of renewable energy capacity this year, of which 1GW will be solar, an increase from 22.5 megawatts in 2013.
The sports and cultural center in the Franciscans’ St. Savior headquarters inside the New Gate is the first of its kind in the historic walled city.
The price of gas will remain at NIS 6.85 per liter.