Kingdom celebrates Saudi Green Initiative/node/2595076/saudi-arabia
Kingdom celebrates Saudi Green Initiative
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The Kingdom marked the annual celebration of the Saudi Green Initiative on March 27. (SGI)
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Updated 18 June 2025
Haifa Alshammari
Kingdom celebrates Saudi Green Initiative
Program launched in 2021 to raise environmental awareness, improve well-being
Scheme seeks to bind sustainable programs with broader green objectives
Updated 18 June 2025
Haifa Alshammari
RIYADH: Thursday marked the second anniversary of the Saudi Green Initiative, a Kingdom-wide program designed to increase environmental awareness and motivate people to play their part in securing a healthier future for generations to come.
Its goal to bring people together and bolster community engagement is key to raising the quality of life for all citizens and residents and aligns with the sustainable development goals of Saudi Vision 2030.
"The actions we take today will define the environmental legacy we leave behind,” Dr. Khaled Al-Abdulkader, CEO of the National Center for Vegetation Cover Development and Combating Desertification, told Arab News.
He went on to praise the “bold leadership, pioneering strategies, and … unwavering commitment to sustainability” of Ƶ.
The initiative, launched in March 27, 2021, seeks to bind sustainable programs with the nation’s broader green objectives, such as reducing toxic emissions, improving afforestation and land restoration, and preserving land and marine ecosystems.
It is also testimony to the leadership’s green vision and drive to position the Kingdom at the forefront of sustainable development on both a local and global scale.
Ƶ’s leading role in protecting the environment was highlighted in December when it hosted the 16th session of the Conference of the Parties of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification, or COP16.
The global gathering provided a platform for policymakers, business leaders and other experts to share ideas and insights on tackling environmental challenges and developing a collective path for green transformation.
At the local level, the Kingdom’s leaders have initiated a number of campaigns to raise awareness of the need for sustainable practices.
Among them is Ramadan of Goodness, which encourages people to minimize food waste and be more aware of their consumption of vital resources like electricity and water during the holy month.
It encompasses more than 85 environmental protection and green development programs, including the rehabilitation of 18,000 hectares of degraded land and the reintroduction of more than 7,500 endangered species through breeding programs.
How land-based moss could cool, decarbonize Saudi cities
Updated 12 September 2025
Ghadi Joudah
RIYADH: Saudi cities are exploring water-wise tools to cut heat, clean air, and capture carbon on hardscapes where trees cannot easily grow.
Land-based moss — able to dry out and revive with just a trace of moisture — offers a low-maintenance, climate-active layer for facades and roofs that aligns with Vision 2030’s Quality of Life goals and the Circular Carbon Economy approach.
“Moss can switch off and on with moisture — exactly what harsh climates demand,” Joshua Van Alstine, co-founder of the Ƶn Botanical Society, told Arab News.
He explained that when integrated into facades, rooftops, and green walls, moss can lower surface and ambient temperatures while passively trapping particulate matter and heavy metals, contributing to energy savings and cleaner air in dense districts.
Ahmed Al‑Jameel, an energy and climate policy expert, told Arab News: “Trees are the lungs; moss can be the skin — covering walls, bridges, and courtyards where trees can’t grow, adding a layer of cooling and carbon capture that complements tree-planting.”
Because it needs no soil and only micro-pulses of water, moss can transform heat-radiating concrete into climate-active skin without straining scarce water resources, said Al-Jameel.
“Earlier national checklists recorded around 119 moss species in Ƶ, but the most recent research in 2025 has confirmed 135 species,” Van Alstine noted.
He highlighted two natives as particularly suited for cities: Bryum argenteum, valued for its heat and pollution tolerance and reflective foliage, and Tortula atrovirens, which forms durable mats in exposed, arid habitats.
“A key opportunity in Saudi cities is air-conditioning condensate, a constant, free source of distilled water in summer,” said Al‑Jameel.
Redirecting that condensate to moss panels, pairing with shaded orientations and roughened substrates, and adding light night‑time misting can sustain growth with minimal additional water, he explained.
Van Alstine added: “Known as the ‘sidewalk moss,’ Bryum argenteum thrives in some of the harshest conditions — from rooftops to pavements — and is remarkably tolerant of heat, drought, and pollution.”
Joshua Van Alstine. Supplied.
Tortula atrovirens, with its wide distribution across the Kingdom and resilience, is also a reliable choice for shaded public areas where long service life is critical, he said.
Designers can improve moss establishment by prioritizing north- and east-facing walls, gentler in sunlight, while Al-Jameel noted: “Moss can also do well under shaded arcades, in courtyards, or on the undersides of bridges where direct solar exposure is limited.”
Spaces with moss mats act as natural cooling systems, reducing surface and ambient air temperatures and lowering energy demand for air conditioning, Van Alstine said.
Because mosses absorb moisture through their leaves, capillary wicking mats and water-retentive substrates such as felt or mineral wool with hydrogels can maintain thin moisture films without continuous irrigation, he explained.
“Moss is one of nature’s most resilient forms of greenery,” said Al‑Jameel.
Attachment improves on textured concrete or limestone; on smoother surfaces, roughening, applying mineral slurries, or installing pre-cultured mats can accelerate coverage, he added.
“Research has shown they are highly effective at capturing dust, particulate matter, and even heavy metals,” said Van Alstine.
In traffic corridors and construction zones, that dust-binding improves pedestrian-scale air quality and reduces resuspension, complementing thermal relief.
“This approach reflects the CCE principle of resource efficiency,” said Ahmed Al‑Jameel.
Using condensate and reclaimed water rather than new supplies aligns moss projects with Circular Carbon Economy and Saudi Green Initiative priorities, he said.
Land-based moss — capable of drying out and reviving with just a trace of moisture — provides a low-maintenance, climate-active layer for facades and roofs. Shutterstock
Among the options, Van Alstine said, Bryum argenteum stands out as the most promising for urban cooling thanks to its high reflectivity and rapid rehydration after dry spells, while Tortula atrovirens adds robustness across regions and building types.
“Moss is often described as a ‘carbon sponge,’ and while that’s true, it’s important to set realistic expectations,” said Al-Jameel.
He noted that sequestration per square meter is modest compared with trees, but the cumulative impact across walls, roofs, and underpasses can be meaningful — adding carbon capture where none exists today.
Native moss species, he added, can directly support Ƶ’s wider sustainability goals under Vision 2030.
Van Alstine said that micro carbon sinks such as moss mats capture measurable CO2 annually, and when combined with reduced building heat gain, they lower air-conditioning demand — one of the Kingdom’s largest electricity loads.
“The challenge is how to bring that success into Riyadh, Jeddah or Dammam, where summers are hotter,” said Al‑Jameel.
He suggested shaded orientations, light-colored backings, winter installation, quarterly rinsing with reclaimed water or condensate, and slightly angled panels to shed dust as ways to keep performance stable with simple maintenance.
Another innovation is pairing moss systems with treated greywater recycling, Van Alstine added. In regions like Asir and the Eastern Province, where fog and dew harvesting are being explored, passive collectors could feed moss panels with low-pressure trickles that mimic natural inputs.
All these solutions are low-tech and cost-effective, making moss especially attractive for municipalities and developers.
Ahmed Al-Jameel. Supplied
According to Al-Jameel, modular, lightweight panels are well suited for pilots on public buildings, transit corridors, campuses, and highway underpasses — with monitoring for temperature reduction, particulate capture, and energy savings.
“Another valuable species is Tortula atrovirens, which is the most widely distributed moss in Ƶ,” said Van Alstine.
Combined with Bryum argenteum, it broadens species choice for vertical greening while creating micro‑habitats that lift urban biodiversity on previously sterile surfaces.
Saudi cities present predictable but manageable hurdles for urban moss, the experts agreed.
Al-Jameel explained that moss can enter dormancy under heat stress, browning before reviving with moisture. Solutions include shaded orientations, reflective backings, and establishing during cooler months.
Another hurdle is dust deposition. “Dust storms can smother thin moss layers,” he said. “Quarterly rinsing with reclaimed or AC condensate water, slightly angled panels to shed dust, and selecting cushion-forming species improve resilience.”
On polished concrete, attachment is difficult. “Roughen surfaces or apply a thin mineral slurry; pre-cultured mats can accelerate establishment on facades and bridges,” Al-Jameel added.
These measures, he stressed, keep costs and complexity low, making moss suitable for municipal pilots and private retrofits.
“Under the Saudi Green Initiative, we don’t just need more trees; we also need smarter, water-efficient greenery. Moss can cool walls, bind dust, and improve street-level comfort with minimal irrigation,” Al-Jameel said.
He added that Saudi municipalities could accelerate adoption by piloting moss projects on shaded facades and public buildings. Embedding moss in green codes, awarding credits for condensate reuse and native species, offering expedited permits or fee reductions tied to SGI recognition, and partnering with universities to standardize substrates and plumbing details would all speed uptake.
For Ƶ, moss offers a dual climate solution — mitigating the urban heat island effect while cleaning the air — at low cost and with minimal water use.
Van Alstine concluded: “Starting in favorable microclimates and scaling with native species, capillary mats, and reclaimed moisture streams can deliver cooling, carbon capture, and biodiversity across the vast urban surfaces beyond the reach of trees.”
ISLAMABAD: Saudi oil marketing company Wafi Energy has donated 5,000 liters of petrol to Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) to support ongoing relief operations, its chief executive said on Thursday, as monsoon floods continue to devastate large parts of the country.
The contribution, made at a ceremony hosted at the Saudi Embassy in Islamabad, comes as part of wider Saudi efforts to assist Pakistan. Riyadh’s King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) has already provided food, shelter and other items for more than 200,000 victims across the Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces and the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region.
Since late June, heavy monsoon rains and flash floods have killed more than 929 people and affected over 4 million nationwide, according to NDMA figures.
“Today we are contributing 5,000 liters of petrol to NDMA, before that we have contributed two separate tranches of fuel,” Zubair Shaikh, CEO of Wafi Energy Pakistan, told Arab News after the ceremony. “We plan to do relief item support for the affected communities.”
Wafi Energy, which acquired an 87.78% stake in Shell Pakistan Limited last year, operates more than 600 fueling stations and nationwide oil terminals. The company, now rebranded from Shell Pakistan, markets petroleum products, CNG and lubricants across the country.
Fuel supplies are critical during disaster response, enabling the NDMA to run rescue boats, transport relief goods to cut-off communities, power generators at relief camps and keep emergency vehicles operating in flood-hit areas.
Shaikh said Wafi Energy was committed to sustaining its contribution beyond fuel deliveries also.
“This is part of our values. So, this is a small contribution as part of NDMA, which we are doing as part of fuel contribution,” he said.
“We will keep on supporting the community in the rain-affected area and make sure we give them the livelihood in the next few months so that this contribution doesn’t end here.”
Ƶ’s Ambassador to Pakistan Nawaf bin Said Al-Malki welcomed the Wafi initiative and urged other firms to follow suit.
“I think this initiative is very important for all the companies which are investing here in Pakistan,” he told Arab News, adding that many parts of Pakistan remained badly affected and people were in urgent need of food, shelter and other items.
The envoy also underlined Ƶ’s government-level support through KSrelief, pledging that the Kingdom would continue to stand by Pakistan.
“The kingdom is here to stand with Pakistan, to support Pakistan in the critical situations.”
KSrelief expands efforts in Yemen with eye surgeries in Aden and classrooms in Hadramout
KSrelief launched two new initiatives in Yemen aimed at strengthening health care and education as part of Ƶ’s ongoing humanitarian support,
Updated 12 September 2025
Arab News
DUBAI: The King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) has launched two new initiatives in Yemen aimed at strengthening health care and education as part of Ƶ’s ongoing humanitarian support, according to the Saudi Press Agency (SPA).
In Aden Governorate, KSrelief inaugurated the Saudi Noor Volunteer Project, which runs from September 7 to 14 and provides advanced eye surgeries for low-income patients.
According to SPA, a volunteer medical team of six specialists has already successfully performed 22 retinal surgeries, 10 strabismus (crossed-eye) corrections, five glaucoma operations, and four orbital procedures, along with 98 retinal injections, 80 laser treatments and 19 minor interventions.
Meanwhile, in the Hadramout governorate, KSrelief delivered 28 alternative classrooms across the districts of Thamud, Ramah and rural Mukalla. The initiative coincides with the start of the 2025–2026 academic year and aims to reduce overcrowding, keep children in school and ensure access to quality education.
KSrelief distributes food aid in Afghanistan, Somalia
Updated 12 September 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: The King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) handed out much-needed food supplies in Afghanistan and Somalia as part of Ƶ’s ongoing humanitarian efforts.
In Afghanistan, 797 boxes containing basic food needs were distributed to benefit 4,782 Afghans housed at the Omari camp at the Torkham border crossing in Nangarhar Province. They are temporarily being accommodated there upon their return from Pakistan.
In Somalia, 1,300 food boxes were given to vulnerable families in Baidoa as part of Ƶ’s Food Security Support Project for the country.
Meanwhile, Ahmed bin Ali Al-Baiz, KSrelief’s Assistant Supervisor-General, earlier met with Mauritanian Ambassador to Ƶ Mokhtar Ould Dahi where they discussed humanitarian and relief affairs, and ways to further enhance them.
A KSrelief team also participated in a donor delegation from the Lives and Livelihoods Fund on a field visit to a project supporting maternal, newborn, and child health services in Tajikistan’s Khatlon Province, SPA reported.
They inspected the new medical equipment and patient wards, where improvements have raised antenatal care coverage from 50 percent to 70 percent and supported more than 1,500 safe deliveries.
Saudi, Russian deputy foreign ministers meet in Sochi
Updated 12 September 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: Ƶ’s Deputy Minister Abdulrahman Al-Rassi met his Russian counterpart Vershinin Sergey Vasilievich on the sidelines of the ministerial meeting of the Russia-Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Strategic Dialogue in Sochi.
The two officials explored ways to enhance Saudi-Russian bilateral relations and also discussed the latest regional and international developments, and efforts made to address them, state news agency SPA reported
The Sochi dialogue is an important platform for strengthening relations between the two sides and exchanging views on regional and international issues of common interest, including threats to regional and global security, according to GCC Secretary General Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi.
The meeting comes amid circumstances marked by numerous crises facing the region and the world, including political and security challenges that affect security and stability, Albudaiwi said, in a report from SPA.
He emphasized that GCC nations’ belief that that the optimal way to resolve all conflicts and disputes is through negotiations and peaceful, diplomatic means, prioritizing dialogue and respecting the rule of law particularly those that align with international laws that ensure the preservation of security and stability and the achievement of greater prosperity and development.
The GCC foreign ministers and Russian foreign affairs minister Sergey Lavrov earlier issued a jointed statement strongly condemning the Israeli attack against Qatar.
In their statement, the ministers considered the “attack a flagrant violation of international laws and norms, a blatant assault on the sovereignty of the State of Qatar, and a deliberate undermining of diplomatic efforts aimed at achieving security and stability in the region.”
They also warned that the absence of a serious and decisive international stance will have serious repercussions for regional and international peace and security.