IES EMEA IES EMEA

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BLOG IES BLOG IES

BLOG IES BLOG IES

BLOG IES BLOG IES

BLOG IES BLOG IES

BLOG IES BLOG IES

BLOG IES BLOG IES

BLOG IES BLOG IES

BLOG IES BLOG IES

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OUR VALUES

We have created our values through our experience. Our values reflect who we are and how we behave. They guide us in imbibing our culture and shape the future of IES EMEA.

nos-valeurs

OUR ROLE

square Integrating and Analyzing local context 

square Providing Environmental Technologies

square Mutualizing best innovation practices

square Valorizing Research and Innovation

square Managing to ensure teams autonomy

OUR ASSETS

square International experience in the field of sustainable development 

square Network of Experts and Partners in the Middle East and Europe

square Mastering the cultural dimension - North-South Multicultural Teams

square Sharing skills and networks (Industrial Group, Large key Accounts, SMBs, policy makers, donors, experts from North and South)

IES is supported by

OUR EXPERTISE

IES EMEA assist and support international operational projects in the following fields.

notre-expertise

IES NETWORK

Italy : Confindustria
Algeria : CGEA Tunisia : UTICA
Malta : MFOI
Lebanon : ALI
Cyprus : OEB Syria : FSCC
Morocco : CGEM
Israel : MAI
Jordan : JCI
Palestine : PFI
Egypt : FEI

IES TEAM

A team of international consultants 

Our team is composed of international consultants and engineers with at least 10 years experience in the field of environment and sustainable development issues (Pollution, water and Energy management…) with an economic, and human development dimension. IES EMEA have also the support of an international network of experts to manage specific needs.

A dedicated team with a multi-disciplinary approach 

For a given project, IES EMEA composed a dedicated team of consultants and experts ensuring best project management capacity. We constitute and adapt our team to the specific expertise, technical and training needs to help local representatives in the development of their autonomy. 

We provide adapted skills and experience at the service of the success of your projects through the implementation of specifically designed management tools subject to a continual improvement. Our solutions are integrated in a rigorous action, improvement and management plan. 

About the founder

The city of our dreams. It’s a passionate subject. Thinking about it, it’s a bit like imagining a Paradise. Logical thinking often leaves room for imagination; each of us has a vision of our own. The city of our dreams is an ideal, without an existent common project.

 An Ancient Debate

 

 

In the play “The Birds” (414 BC), Aristophanes and Hippos have a conflict over two opposing vision of the ideal city:

            That of a city built according to a mathematic and orderly approach

            And that of a city that puts humans first and foremost

 

The Dream of a Green City

 

What do we imagine, when we think of the concept of a Green City?

            a city free of the weight of industrial pollution?

            a city capable of regenerating its soil previously contaminated by source pollution?

            a city able to harness the sun and wind as an energy source?

Therefore, the “the smart city” would be an ideal founded upon clean technology.

Nevertheless, the cities of the future cannot be reduced to simply a technologic approach.

 

Innovation Isn’t Necessarily Entirely Rooted in Technology

 

My grandmother took care of her 14 children, all the while dealing with a war that has yet to cease. She has continued to innovate to adapt to a quotidian life marked by a lack of water and electricity.

My mother had to face war during her daily life, as well. She had to find original solutions  with sparse resources so that we could escape the situation.

 

In India, Africa, and various countries ravaged by war, people constantly innovate. But these “smart” solutions are often quite costly. We have much to learn from people of these countries. The future of our cities could also profit from their knowledge, and these “frugal” innovations.

 

Putting Man First and Foremost in the City of Tomorrow

 

Before 1975, Beirut had been a cosmopolitan city that breathed life. Today, Lebanon’s capital bears the scars of a civil war. It is an exhausted city, that desperately wishes to reclaim its colorful energy and life it once had. Beirut doesn’t want to be “smart” ; Beirut wants to find its soul, its joy. It isn’t looking for technology, but a guarantee that everyone can live and share in harmony. Above all, it is a human project. It’s a dream that is also shared by cities such as Damascus, Baghdad, or Tobruk.

 

The Tower of Babel

The city of tomorrow can be built around increasingly high towers, inhabited by people  who don’t necessarily understand each other, even if a common language has been found. The myth of Babel is a cautionary tale, warning us of the dangers of a purely technological project.

 

It is incredibly important to put people at the heart of our urban plans. The challenge is to create links, harmony, and joy amongst the inhabitants of our cities, so that they may become places of peace, joy, happiness, and well-being for all.

 

Chaden Diyab

The Dream City

 

Please don’t hesitate to click the “Follow” button if you wish to be informed of upcoming articles regarding similar subjects. You may also contact me if this subject is pertinent to your interests.

 

 The Dream City

 

The city of our dreams. It’s a passionate subject. Thinking about it, it’s a bit like imagining a Paradise. Logical thinking often leaves room for imagination; each of us has a vision of our own. The city of our dreams is an ideal, without an existent common project.

 

An Ancient Debate

 

In the play “The Birds” (414 BC), Aristophanes and Hippos have a conflict over two opposing vision of the ideal city:

            That of a city built according to a mathematic and orderly approach

            And that of a city that puts humans first and foremost

 

The Dream of a Green City

 

What do we imagine, when we think of the concept of a Green City?

            a city free of the weight of industrial pollution?

            a city capable of regenerating its soil previously contaminated by source pollution?

            a city able to harness the sun and wind as an energy source?

Therefore, the “the smart city” would be an ideal founded upon clean technology.

Nevertheless, the cities of the future cannot be reduced to simply a technologic approach.

 

Innovation Isn’t Necessarily Entirely Rooted in Technology

 

My grandmother took care of her 14 children, all the while dealing with a war that has yet to cease. She has continued to innovate to adapt to a quotidian life marked by a lack of water and electricity.

My mother had to face war during her daily life, as well. She had to find original solutions  with sparse resources so that we could escape the situation.

 

In India, Africa, and various countries ravaged by war, people constantly innovate. But these “smart” solutions are often quite costly. We have much to learn from people of these countries. The future of our cities could also profit from their knowledge, and these “frugal” innovations.

 

Putting Man First and Foremost in the City of Tomorrow

 

Before 1975, Beirut had been a cosmopolitan city that breathed life. Today, Lebanon’s capital bears the scars of a civil war. It is an exhausted city, that desperately wishes to reclaim its colorful energy and life it once had. Beirut doesn’t want to be “smart” ; Beirut wants to find its soul, its joy. It isn’t looking for technology, but a guarantee that everyone can live and share in harmony. Above all, it is a human project. It’s a dream that is also shared by cities such as Damascus, Baghdad, or Tobruk.

 

The Tower of Babel

The city of tomorrow can be built around increasingly high towers, inhabited by people  who don’t necessarily understand each other, even if a common language has been found. The myth of Babel is a cautionary tale, warning us of the dangers of a purely technological project.

 

It is incredibly important to put people at the heart of our urban plans. The challenge is to create links, harmony, and joy amongst the inhabitants of our cities, so that they may become places of peace, joy, happiness, and well-being for all.

 

 

 

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