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Checkmate to barriers: Alkhobar hosts chess training for visually impaired 

Special Checkmate to barriers: Alkhobar hosts chess training for visually impaired 
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From left to right: Ahmed Al-Masri, executive director of Gambit Chess Club; Mohammed Al-Zahrani, executive director of Turning Point; Ali Bouadla, chairman of the board of Turning Point; Abdulrazzaq Al-Turki; Hassan Al-Issa, president of Gambit Chess Club; and Sultan Al-Jumaan. (Supplied)
Special Checkmate to barriers: Alkhobar hosts chess training for visually impaired 
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Chairman of the board of Turning Point, Ali Bouadla (right), honors Ali Al-Ayash, vice president of Gambit Chess Club (center). (Supplied)
Special Checkmate to barriers: Alkhobar hosts chess training for visually impaired 
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A first-of-its-kind initiative in the Kingdom has helped to introduce visually impaired players to the game of chess. (Supplied)
Special Checkmate to barriers: Alkhobar hosts chess training for visually impaired 
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A first-of-its-kind initiative in the Kingdom has helped to introduce visually impaired players to the game of chess. (Supplied)
Special Checkmate to barriers: Alkhobar hosts chess training for visually impaired 
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A first-of-its-kind initiative in the Kingdom has helped to introduce visually impaired players to the game of chess. (Supplied)
Special Checkmate to barriers: Alkhobar hosts chess training for visually impaired 
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A first-of-its-kind initiative in the Kingdom has helped to introduce visually impaired players to the game of chess. (Supplied)
Special Checkmate to barriers: Alkhobar hosts chess training for visually impaired 
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A first-of-its-kind initiative in the Kingdom has helped to introduce visually impaired players to the game of chess. (Supplied)
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Updated 21 August 2025

Checkmate to barriers: Alkhobar hosts chess training for visually impaired 

Checkmate to barriers: Alkhobar hosts chess training for visually impaired 
  • ‘Chess is a universal language, and with the right support it’s a language that anyone can learn to speak,’ says club’s vice president
  • Trainees learned the fundamentals of chess, the rules of the game, and the movement of the pieces before taking part in practice matches against one another

DHAHRAN: A first-of-its-kind initiative in the Kingdom has helped to introduce visually impaired players to the game of chess. 

The Turning Point Association for the Rehabilitation and Empowerment of the Visually Impaired partnered with Gambit Chess Club to deliver a month-long training program in Alkhobar, which concluded on Aug. 19. 

Held at the association’s headquarters, the program brought together six enthusiasts who completed 46 hours of training. 

The trainees learned the fundamentals of chess, the rules of the game, and the movement of the pieces before taking part in practice matches against one another.

The closing ceremony celebrated their achievements, with certificates and medals given in the presence of representatives from the association and the club.

The popularity of chess has been steadily growing in the country, with the Saudi Chess Federation taking charge of local tournaments and training programs to encourage participation across different age groups.

The Kingdom has also hosted international chess events to bring together players from all over the world.

These efforts support cultural and recreational initiatives under Vision 2030, which aims to create opportunities and activities for people in the Kingdom. 

Ali Al-Ayash, a founding member and vice president of Gambit Chess Club, said the project marked an important step for Saudi inclusivity.

“We believe that chess is not just a game, but a powerful educational and developmental tool,” he told Arab News.

He added that dedicating the program to the visually impaired was about opening doors.

Al-Ayash said: “This is a pioneering step toward integrating everyone into intellectual and cultural activities, and reflects our commitment to providing equal opportunities for all members of Saudi society.

“We’ve seen stories of individuals who have challenged disability and proved that intelligence is not measured by sight.”

He added that chess can be a platform for self-expression and empowerment, and said: “It gives participants the chance to showcase their abilities, strengthen their confidence, and compete in a fair environment. At its core this program was about breaking (down) barriers and redefining inclusivity in mind sports.”

Al-Ayash believes that chess fits naturally into the Kingdom’s goals to evolve and transform. He said: “Training in chess supports Vision 2030 by empowering individuals, especially youth, women, and people with disabilities.

“It enhances quality of life through cultural and recreational activities; strengthens education by improving logical thinking and patience; and fosters social innovation with technology and online tournaments.”

Following the achievements of the first group of trainees, Gambit Chess Club is now looking to further enhance its impact.

Al-Ayash said: “The next step is expanding the program in cooperation with local associations and schools.

“We have previously collaborated with the hearing impaired, and now we plan to involve other groups, alongside those (people) with hearing and visual disabilities.

“We want to train specialized coaches so that the program remains sustainable, and our goal is simple: to make chess accessible to everyone.”

The initiative is part of the association’s broader efforts to empower and develop skills for its beneficiaries while promoting new models of community engagement in the Kingdom.

The program represents more than just an achievement for Gambit Chess Club: The initiative is a symbol of how sports can evolve to embrace everyone, while proving that disability is no barrier to achievement.

“Chess is a universal language, and with the right support it’s a language that anyone can learn to speak,” Al-Ayash said. 


Ƶ condemns attack on aid convoy in Sudan

Ƶ condemns attack on aid convoy in Sudan
Updated 6 sec ago

Ƶ condemns attack on aid convoy in Sudan

Ƶ condemns attack on aid convoy in Sudan
  • Kingdom’s Foreign Ministry ‘categorically rejects’ any actions that threaten security and safety of civilians and humanitarian workers
  • World Food Program convoy hit on Wednesday as it attempted to deliver aid to famine-hit area in North Darfur

RIYADH: Ƶ on Thursday condemned an attack the previous day on a World Food Program aid convoy in the North Darfur region of Sudan.

Three trucks caught fire when the 16-vehicle convoy was targeted on Wednesday as it attempted to deliver aid to a famine-hit area north of El-Fasher.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry said the Kingdom categorically rejected “anything that threatens the security and safety of civilians and relief and humanitarian workers.”

It added: “The Kingdom calls on all Sudanese parties to adhere to what was signed in the Jeddah Declaration on May 11, 2023, including the commitment to protect civilians and ensure the security of relief and humanitarian aid corridors.”

The declaration, brokered by the Kingdom and the US, was agreed by the two main sides in the civil war, the Sudanese Armed Forces and rival militia the Rapid Support Forces, in May 2023, shortly after the conflict began.

The declaration included assurances by both sides that they would allow the unimpeded movement and delivery of humanitarian assistance throughout Sudan.

The conflict, which began in April 2023 and continues to rage, sparked one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world. North Darfur has been the scene of some of the worst fighting, and as a result more than a million people there are on the brink of starvation. Across the country, 25 million people face acute hunger.


Gas station blaze hero awarded bravery medal and SR1 million by King Salman

Gas station blaze hero awarded bravery medal and SR1 million by King Salman
Updated 22 August 2025

Gas station blaze hero awarded bravery medal and SR1 million by King Salman

Gas station blaze hero awarded bravery medal and SR1 million by King Salman
  • Maher Fahad Al-Dalbahi recovering in hospital after climbing into burning truck and moving it clear of fuel tanks
  • It is a ‘profound honor’ for his act of bravery to be recognized by the Kingdom’s leadership, family says

RIYADH: Ƶ’s King Salman has rewarded a passer-by who risked his life to move a burning truck clear of a gas station for his selfless act of bravery.

In response to a proposal by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the king issued a directive that Saudi citizen Maher Fahad Al-Dalbahi be awarded the King Abdulaziz Medal (First Class) and a SR1 million ($267,000) reward.

Al-Dalbahi, who is in his 40s, spotted a truck loaded with animal feed engulfed in flames last Friday as he drove to his village of Al-Salihiya, about 300 kilometers from Riyadh. Unable to control the fire, the driver of the truck had abandoned the vehicle dangerously close to gas pumps. Al-Dalbahi climbed inside and moved it to an open area, away from people in the area and the gas station’s fuel tanks.

He “demonstrated exceptional bravery” in responding to the significant danger and potentially saving lives, and the royal recognition “reflects the leadership’s deep appreciation for the sacrifices of Saudi citizens who embody the values of courage, dedication and selflessness, values inherited from the foundational principles upon which the Kingdom was built,” the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Al-Dalbahi’s family said it was a “profound honor” for his bravery to be recognized by the king. He suffered serious burns to his hands, legs and face during the incident and was taken to hospital in Riyadh, where his recovery continues.
 

 


How Gulf states can develop data centers without straining scarce water resources

How Gulf states can develop data centers without straining scarce water resources
Updated 22 August 2025

How Gulf states can develop data centers without straining scarce water resources

How Gulf states can develop data centers without straining scarce water resources
  • Governments and companies are exploring renewable energy and smart cooling to balance AI growth with environmental sustainability
  • Experts say innovation and infrastructure choices can either exacerbate or alleviate pressures on the region’s limited water resources

DUBAI: In a region long defined by oil wealth, a new resource rush is unfolding, not for petroleum, but for digital power. Across the Gulf, an explosion in artificial intelligence development and cloud infrastructure is placing a strain on another resource in even shorter supply — water.

“Data centres in the GCC strain scarce water resources, consuming 15 billion liters in Ƶ alone in 2024,” Javier Alvarez, senior managing director of technology, media, and telecom at FTI Consulting, told Arab News.

“In a region reliant on desalination, this intensifies energy costs and marine ecosystem damage and without action, water competition could spark social tensions.”

Over the next five years, data center capacity in the Gulf Cooperation Council area is expected to triple — from just over 1 gigawatt today to 3.3 GW by 2030 — a pace that outstrips the global average, according to FTI.

These sprawling digital warehouses, often likened to the “brains” of AI and the internet, are energy-intensive. But less widely known is their voracious appetite for water, a resource already stretched thin across the arid Gulf.

In a region where summer temperatures regularly exceed 45 degrees centigrade, the job of cooling thousands of heat-belching servers requires vast amounts of water — often drawn from expensive, energy-intensive desalination plants.

Preliminary research indicates that in Ƶ alone, data centers could account for 87.52 billion liters — roughly 35,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools, or four percent of the country’s current water output.

Industry leaders and regional policymakers are racing to balance digital ambitions with sustainability concerns. But the question looms large over whether the Gulf’s pursuit of AI supremacy could squeeze the peninsula dry.

“If unchecked, environmental harm risks undermining the GCC’s sustainability goals, but proactive innovation can balance digital growth with social equity,” said Alvarez.

There is hope, however, as some in the industry argue that the very tools driving the data boom  — AI and smart systems — could also help solve the problems they have created.

“We don’t have to choose between AI and sustainability,” Walid Sheta, president of the Middle East and Africa region at Schneider Electric, one of the companies at the forefront of developing more efficient data centers across the globe, told Arab News.

Sheta said one of the most promising solutions is delivering a special coolant, similar to that used in car engines — usually a mix of water and glycerol or other hydrocarbon liquids — directly to the chips rather than relying on vast air-conditioning systems.

The result, Sheta says, is dramatically higher thermal efficiency and significantly lower energy and water consumption.

This sentiment was echoed by Alvarez, who said the technology was already proving its worth, pointing to projects by Khazna, Datavolt and Alfanar as regional examples where it was being put to work.

“Liquid cooling, championed by companies like Schneider Electric or Vertiv, slashes data center water use by up to 92 percent, vital for the GCC’s arid climate,” he said.

Nevertheless, Sheta admitted that cost, complexity, and speed of implementation remained major barriers. Liquid-cooling solutions require high initial capital expenditures for piping, advanced chips, and various other components.

Still, Schneider says that over time, the savings in energy, which can be anywhere between 20 and 40 percent, primarily from the removal of chillers and server fans, make the solution cost-effective, especially for larger data centers.

The firm’s own analysis found that both air and liquid solutions were roughly the same in terms of capital expenditure, with air-cooled data centers costing $7.02 per watt and the liquid-cooled solution $6.98 per watt.

“Many operators are still focused on short-term returns,” said Sheta. “But the long-term savings in water, energy, and operational resilience are substantial.”

Alvarez also cautioned against assuming liquid cooling is a silver bullet, especially considering the unsustainable nature of procuring the coolants, which still usually come from oil derivatives.

“High upfront costs and specialized maintenance challenge smaller firms, risking economic disparity. And environmental concerns over cooling fluids also loom,” he said.

For some, concerns over water scarcity are overstated, at least in Ƶ, where large-scale desalination has become a core part of the national infrastructure.

“Water in Ƶ is really just a cost factor,” Alexander Serac, a partner at global law firm Addleshaw Goddard based in Riyadh, who has consulted on major desalination projects in the region, told Arab News.

Desalination, the process of converting seawater into potable water, provides up to 90 percent of the region’s freshwater in some areas. Ƶ leads the world in desalination capacity and has ambitious plans to expand further.

However, the process is energy-intensive and produces saline waste, also known as brine, which can raise sea temperatures and increase water salinity when discharged.

One study led by researchers at Khalifa University in Abu Dhabi estimated that a 50-fold increase in desalination by 2050 could raise temperatures in the Arabian Gulf by 0.6 C, which could damage marine ecosystems.

Nevertheless, Serac believes Ƶ is managing the risks through strong environmental protections and believes issues with brine waste could be resolved down the line with technology that would see the brine reused for mineral extraction and other uses.

“We take substantial effort to prepare ecological assessment reports for all of the projects we work on,” he said. “These are governed by strong environmental regulations.”

Serac added that the Kingdom’s renewable energy investments are helping offset the environmental footprint of desalination, with some projects like the proposed 1.5 GW Datacom data center in Ƶ’s NEOM touted to run fully on renewables.

“The regulatory framework is very conducive,” he said. “Talking to friends in Europe, they’re jealous. There’s land, there’s capital, and there isn’t too much red tape.

“I would say what makes this region special is really its potential access to huge amounts of renewable energy at the lowest global prices. It really makes it a perfect place for energy-intensive industries.”

Opinion

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Google, which has announced plans to launch an AI and cloud hub in Dammam, eastern Ƶ, told Arab News that it might consider using seawater, emphasizing that it takes local water scarcity into account before deciding whether to proceed with building its plants.

OpenAI, one of the central players in the global AI boom, is still finalizing details for its 1 GW Stargate project in Abu Dhabi. But the company insists it is taking sustainability seriously.

In a statement to Arab News, the firm pointed to an essay by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who argued that as data center production becomes more automated, the cost of intelligence — including its environmental cost — should decrease over time.

“People are often curious about how much energy a ChatGPT query uses; the average query uses about 0.34 watt-hours,” Altman wrote. “It also uses about 0.000085 gallons of water; roughly 1/15th of a teaspoon.”

Despite the exponential growth of AI queries and the mounting energy and water needs behind them, Schneider Electric’s Sheta remains cautiously optimistic.

“Many facilities continue to rely on conventional cooling methods, and water efficiency is not yet a universal priority,” he said. “That needs to change. The environmental cost of inaction is too high, and the opportunity to lead is too great.

“The technologies to reduce water use in data centers are not futuristic. They’re here, they’re proven, and they’re ready to scale. What’s holding us back is not innovation, but adoption.”
 

 


Saudi crown prince donates blood as annual campaign

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman donates blood on Thursday. (SPA)
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman donates blood on Thursday. (SPA)
Updated 3 min 30 sec ago

Saudi crown prince donates blood as annual campaign

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman donates blood on Thursday. (SPA)
  • Aim of campaign is to raise awareness of the importance of voluntary donations so that the Kingdom can become self sufficient in supplies of blood

RIYADH: Ƶ’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman donated blood on Thursday as part of an annual national campaign to encourage more donors.

The initiative reflects his patronage of humanitarian projects, and a desire to encourage all parts of Saudi society to participate in their communities, in this particular case by supporting national efforts in the health sector by cultivating a culture of voluntary donation, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The aim of the campaign is to raise awareness of the importance of voluntary donations so that the Kingdom can become self sufficient in supplies of blood and related products, thereby ensuring the availability of safe and sustainable stocks that meet the needs of the population. More than 800,000 donors gave blood in 2024, officials said.

The crown prince and King Salman have actively encouraged several health related initiatives in recent years, including setting examples by receiving the COVID-19 vaccine, and enrolling in the national organ-donation program.


Riyadh deputy governor reviews latest development projects

Riyadh deputy governor reviews latest development projects
Updated 21 August 2025

Riyadh deputy governor reviews latest development projects

Riyadh deputy governor reviews latest development projects

RIYADH: Riyadh Deputy Gov. Prince Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Abdulaziz, accompanied by Saudi Minister of Transport and Logistics Services Saleh Al-Jasser, toured the streets of Riyadh in a self-driving vehicle on his way to King Khalid International Airport. Last month, the Transport General Authority launched the first phase of self-driving vehicle services in several locations in Riyadh, aiming to advance smart and sustainable mobility.

The deputy governor, along with Al-Jasser, toured the airport operations control center. He received a detailed explanation about the center’s pivotal role in making real-time decisions in cooperation with all bodies operating at the airport, with the objective of enhancing operational flow (to and from the airport) and improving the passenger experience by leveraging the latest artificial intelligence systems.