most popular:
2008 Holiday Gift Guides



most popular: Hot Home Wind Turbines


most popular:
$19k Electric Car in US


th comments
Yoav Binyamini said: ""The target price of 20 to 25 thousand euros (US $27 - 34 thousand) puts the Will in the class of affordable electric vehicles" Why not 'Ta..." [read]

Robert McGibbon said: "It's more accurate to say that it runs on lemmons AND zinc. The zinc anode gets depleted. A non renewable resource so to speak...." [read]

Rod Richardson said: "Yes but... the problem with many of the major proposal on the table or in the platform is that they are either expensive (at a time the budget is s..." [read]

Rod Richardson said: "Yes but... the problem with many of the major proposal on the table or in the platform is that they are either expensive (at a time the budget is s..." [read]

barry said: "Flying seattle to galapagos dumps 12,000 pounds of greenhouse gases into our future...per person. There is no way anyone can do that level of clima..." [read]

Noise Levels Driving Cairo Residents Crazy

by Jesse Fox, Tel Aviv, Israel on 03. 3.08
Cars & Transportation

cairo-traffic-no-horns.jpg
Traffic in Cairo (left) and "no beeping" signs (right).

Anyone who has ever visited Egypt has doubtless noticed that Egyptians have developed a particular national driving style: instead of putting their hands at the 10 and 2 position on the wheel, drivers generally put one hand on the wheel and the other on the horn - the optimal position for continuous beeping. Beeping and other noise pollution has gotten so out of control in Cairo that, according to a 2007 study, living in the center of the city is the same as living inside a factory in terms of noise levels. Says Dr. Mohammed el-Shazly of Cairo University:

The noise in Cairo is exceptional - it cannot be compared to any other Arab city.

This dubious achievement, however, could have severe health effects for residents of the growing mega-city. According to scientists, noise pollution can be just as deadly as chronic stress, leading to a slew of health problems including hypertension, hearing loss, heart attacks and general irritability. The noise pollution caused by car horns, loud music, elderly car engines and people shouting on the street is particularly harmful to pregnant women.

According to environmental health expert Nagat Amer of the Egyptian National Research Centre, the cost of noise pollution can be measured in reduced worker productivity and absenteeism, as well as accidents and handicaps.

With current noise laws going completely ignored and no end in sight to the sensory overload that is noise pollution in Cairo, people who can afford to leave the city are escaping to suburban residential compounds. One can only hope that those who are forced to stay know where to buy a good pair of earplugs.

Via:: MSN News
Images:: MSN News, travellingboard.net

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

th ads
th top picks
th ads