Foto Friday – Inspecting the Pipeline with Chaim Daon
Filed under: Environment, Foto Friday, General, Profiles, coexistence
Chaim Daon is a welding inspector working on one of the country’s most important energy infrastructure projects: the natural gas pipeline. When complete, the gas pipeline – an extension of the El-Arish-Ashkelon gas pipeline from Egypt to Israel, which became operational in 2008 – will be able to transport up to 7 billion cubic meters per year, relieve some of our industries’ dependence on oil, help clean the atmosphere and give additional economic weight to our cold peace with Egypt.
The project, under construction for several years now, comprises hundreds of kilometers of pipeline with joins all along the way, so the work done by welding inspectors like Daon and his colleagues is crucial for keeping pipes intact and leaks at bay.
Daon – or Captain Caveman as he’s known by the Holyland Hash House Harriers, an international drinking and running disorganization (to which I also belong) – allows us a peek at what’s going on just a few meters below the surface…
The tender to build the pipeline was won by a foreign multinational and the teams working on the project come from all over the globe. They work by day…
The pipeline is intended to serve Israel’s major industries, chiefly Israel Electric Corporation (IEC), which is in the process of converting its oil-driven power stations to natural gas. IEC noted in its most recent Environmental Report that since the introduction of natural gas in 2004, a carbon dioxide emissions have decreased by 11%. More information about the Gas Market Law and gas reform in Israel is available at the Ministry of National Infrastructures website.
GE, ITT punished for helping Israeli occupation

Caterpillar bulldozers used in the territories
According to a Boston Globe report, the board of trustees at Hampshire College, the New England bastion of liberal ideals, has voted to divest from six companies because of human rights concerns in the Palestinian territories.
A campus group, Students for Justice in Palestine, said it had pressured the board over the past year to sell off holdings in a mutual fund run by State Street Global Advisors that invests in companies that “provide the Israeli military with equipment and services in the Occupied West Bank and Gaza.” The six companies that formed the basis of the student group’s complaints were: Caterpillar, United Technologies, General Electric, ITT Corporation, Motorola, and Terex.
But at the same time the anti-occupation group was touting its victory, university officials said the decision to divest from the fund was made “without reference to any country or political movement.” They said that the fund held stocks in more than 200 companies engaged in business practices that violated the college’s policy on “socially responsible investments.” These violations included unfair labor practices, environmental abuse, military weapons manufacturing, and unsafe workplace settings.
They acknowledged that they reviewed the fund at pro-Palestinian group’s request, but said the divestment decision “expressly did not pertain to a political movement or single out businesses active in a specific region or country.” Sigmund Roos, chairman of the board of trustees, said in a phone interview that while the board reviewed the fund’s investments it never reviewed the group’s petition, which accuses Israel of implementing “apartheid policies” against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. “We never took it up,” he said. “Students know that.”
So, which is the right story? Is Hampshire College punishing Israel for trying to protect itself against suicide bombing terrorists, or is the Palestinian lobby group simply taking credit for something it has nothing to do with? Either way, I sure miss those idealistic days of college.












