The invisible hands powering Red Sea Global’s regenerative promise

The invisible hands powering Red Sea Global’s regenerative promise

The invisible hands powering Red Sea Global’s regenerative promise
Seagrass captures and stores carbon dioxide from the water, helping to buffer local acidification and slow climate change. (SPA)
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Along the Red Sea coast, something remarkable is happening. Resorts appear to rise naturally from the landscape, architecture blending with the desert and sea as though it had always belonged there. Native plants trace a gentle path from dunes to shore, and each morning, the beach lies pristine. To a visitor, it all looks effortless, human creativity living in harmony with nature.

But beneath this beauty lies a web of hidden connections that makes such harmony possible. Take the seagrass meadow, for example. To most people, it’s simply beautiful, long green blades swaying underwater. But scientifically, it’s an ecological powerhouse. Its roots hold the seabed in place, preventing sand from drifting and smothering nearby coral reefs. The meadow shelters juvenile fish and small creatures that will later move to reefs and help keep them clean and healthy.

And silently, seagrass captures and stores carbon dioxide from the water, helping to buffer local acidification and slow climate change.

Each element, seagrass, coral, fish, microalgae, plankton, and mangrove, depends on the others. Remove one, and the balance begins to fail. This simple truth shapes how Red Sea Global approaches development: regeneration must work like an ecosystem, interconnected, balanced, and continuous.

Our promise of achieving a 30 percent net conservation benefit by 2040 is not just about numbers; it’s about understanding and working within these relationships.

Learning to see what was always there

This journey began with observation, the foundation of all science. Between 2018 and 2019, RSG conducted one of the most comprehensive marine mapping programs in the region. Scientists charted thousands of square kilometers, recording coral reefs, seagrass meadows, mangroves, and wildlife corridors. The work continues inland today, with terrestrial surveys documenting more than 120 locations and identifying 11 areas of exceptional ecological importance.

These studies were never just for compliance. They were a way to learn how the system truly works: Which species thrive where and why. How nutrients, energy, and water flow between land and sea. What makes certain ecosystems more resilient than others.

Through a growing team of environmental specialists and research partnerships with universities such as King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, these invisible patterns are becoming visible. The Red Sea landscape now reveals not only its beauty, but its logic.

Building through collaboration

In nature, nothing survives alone. Coral polyps live in partnership with algae that provide energy through photosynthesis. Mangrove roots trap sediment and protect coastlines, while that same sediment nourishes the trees. Fish rely on reefs for food and shelter, and reefs rely on fish to stay clean and healthy.

RSG’s regenerative work mirrors this cooperation.

Public institutions like the National Center for Vegetation Cover bring scientific knowledge and decades of experience in native species management. Together with RSG, they are restoring mangroves millions already planted with very high success rates. These mangroves stabilize shorelines, filter nutrients before they reach reefs, and store large amounts of carbon, helping both biodiversity and climate goals.

Further inland, the Botanica nursery, covering 1.8 million sq. meters, acts as the beating heart of RSG’s terrestrial restoration. It functions like nature’s seed bank propagating over 3 million native plants so far, with a target of 20 million by 2030. Many of these plants are grown and cared for by local community members, who are becoming experts in sustainable propagation and desert landscaping. These plants strengthen ecosystems and reduce long-term maintenance needs in this challenging climate.

Universities such as KAUST and the University of Tabuk, together with global initiatives like CORDAP and WAVE, serve as RSG’s scientific partners, testing new ideas, studying local resilience, and connecting Saudi research to global best practice. This network continuously learns, adapts, and improves just as nature does.

The environmental services arm, REEF, turns science into action. Its teams monitor coral reefs, study seagrass and mangrove health, and ensure that coastal systems remain connected. Data collected in the field feeds back to scientists, who use it to refine future work — a living cycle of knowledge and practice.

The economics of regeneration

Every ecosystem runs on energy. In our world, that energy often comes from capital.
Financial partners like the Public Investment Fund and national banks have fueled RSG’s progress, proving that sustainable development can attract strong investment. Regeneration is not an added cost, it’s an intelligent, future-proof economic model.

This principle aligns with what scientists call the Blue Economy, where economic activity supports, rather than harms, natural systems. In nature, nothing goes to waste; every process has purpose. Similarly, in regenerative development, every action should create environmental, social, and economic value together.

No single institution could achieve this alone. Like a coral reef, our progress is built through cooperation, each partner strengthening the others.

Engaging communities

Healthy ecosystems depend on diversity, and so do conservation efforts.

Across our destinations, local communities and volunteers join hands with RSG through programs like “Together for a Greener Coast,” planting mangroves and desert shrubs adapted to local conditions. These aren’t ceremonial acts, they are science-based restoration events that connect people directly to the ecosystems around them.

Even guests are invited to take part. At RSG’s resorts, guided environmental tours offer visitors a rare behind-the-scenes look at restoration projects, from coral propagation to mangrove planting. Awareness turns to appreciation, and appreciation to advocacy.

The invisible 70%

When visitors admire our colorful reefs, they see life in motion, but not the effort behind it. They don’t see the scientists studying heat-tolerant coral strains, the nursery workers tending young plants, the divers monitoring water quality, or the engineers designing electric beach-cleaning robots that remove microplastics to protect turtle nests and fish habitats.

The visible beauty the coral, the seagrass, the clean beach, is supported by layers of unseen science, engineering, and dedication.

Participation, not management

Nature has had millions of years to refine its systems. Our role is not to control them, but to learn from them.

At RSG, we don’t see ourselves as managers of nature, but as participants within it. The visible 30 percent, the resorts, the beaches, the reefs, depends entirely on the invisible 70 percent: the research, partnerships, community work, and daily environmental care that sustain it.

Every day, beneath the calm surface, seagrass meadows keep filtering the water, mangrove roots hold the shoreline, and coral reefs shelter marine life. Quietly, patiently, perfectly, nature continues its work.

At Red Sea Global, regeneration isn’t just a promise. It’s a practice alive, evolving, and visible in every wave.

Rashid Al-Hatila is group head of environment at Red Sea Global.
 

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

Al-Ittihad and Al-Ahli drop points as Saudi League returns following national team’s World Cup qualification

Al-Ittihad and Al-Ahli drop points as Saudi League returns following national team’s World Cup qualification
Updated 20 min 25 sec ago

Al-Ittihad and Al-Ahli drop points as Saudi League returns following national team’s World Cup qualification

Al-Ittihad and Al-Ahli drop points as Saudi League returns following national team’s World Cup qualification
  • Champions Al-Ittihad drew 1-1 at Al-Fayha to stay in second place behind Al-Nassr, while the same result at home against Al-Shabab kept AFC Champions League holders in fifth

RIYADH: League football returned to the Kingdom following an international break that saw the Saudi national team confirm World Cup qualification, with reigning champions Al-Ittihad and AFC Champions League holders Al-Ahli both dropping vital points against A-Fayha and Al-Shabab respectively.

The start of the fifth round of the Saudi Pro League saw Al-Fayha take the lead at Al-Majma’ah Sports City Stadium with a goal from Fashion Sakala on the stroke of half-time. They were, however, pegged back by Ahmed Al-Ghamdi’s 64th face-saving equalizer for the champions.

The result left Al-Ittihad in second place, two points behind, with Al-Nassr having played one more match.

Meanwhile Al-Ahli also failed to claim three points, drawing 1-1 against visiting Al-Shabab at King Abdullah Sports City in Jeddah. The home team took the lead through Ivan Toney after 15 minutes and looked to be holding on to a nervy win when Josh Brownhill levelled for Al-Shabab with just three minutes left.

Al-Ahli are now in fifth place with nine points from five matches, while Al-Shabab are 12th with five points from the same number of fixtures.

Also on Friday, Al-Kholood thrashed visitors Al-Najma 5-1 to lift themselves to an impressive fourth in the standing.


We Design Beirut highlights Lebanon’s historic locations, creative talent

We Design Beirut highlights Lebanon’s historic locations, creative talent
Updated 41 min 53 sec ago

We Design Beirut highlights Lebanon’s historic locations, creative talent

We Design Beirut highlights Lebanon’s historic locations, creative talent
  • Showcases city’s stories, say Mariana Wehbe, Samer Alameen
  • Key themes at event are love, identity, memory and belonging

DUBAI: Set to run from Oct. 22 to 26, We Design Beirut is a products, interiors and furniture fair that bucks convention due to its staging in several of the capital’s key historical buildings.

While design fairs around the world usually stage showcases in one location, often a convention hall devoid of any real character, founder and CEO Mariana Wehbe and partner and creative director Samer Alameen were keen to highlight historic buildings in Beirut.

“There were spaces and places that have been forgotten ... whether the history, the archaeology, the stories they hold,” Wehbe said recently.

We Design Beirut is set to run from Oct. 22 to 26. (Supplied)

“So it’s more a story about Beirut and it’s more cultural than commercial,” Alameen added.

Exhibition locations include Villa Audi, Beirut’s Roman Baths, Burj El-Murr, an unfinished skyscraper turned war relic, and Abroyan Factory, an abandoned textile facility.

“This isn’t just a design week … this has become a way of talking about our country, protesting in our own (way),” Wehbe said, reflecting the desire to unite Lebanese communities after years of divisive politics.

We Design Beirut is a products, interiors and furniture fair. (Supplied)

“And you know, some people fight with weapons and some people fight with politics and some people fight with creativity and with bringing communities together in the hardest and most difficult times,” she added.

Comprised of exhibitions, excursions and workshops, the event seeks to shed light on both established and emerging designers, artisans and students from nine universities in Lebanon.

“We’re losing the artisans because it’s impossible to find an artisan under the age of 50,” Alameen explained.

“Because they’re no longer teaching their kids. They’re not making money, And this is the massive problem … That’s why we created the platform,” Alameen said.

The diverse exhibitions include “Totems of the Present & the Absent,” that features work by emerging and established designers from Lebanon and beyond, exploring presence, memory, and legacy.

Meanwhile, hosted in the Roman Baths, a marble design exhibition “Of Water and Stone” reinterprets the ancient site’s rituals of cleansing.

The student-led “Design in Conflict” exhibition sees young creatives explore how strife shapes spaces, while “Rising with Purpose” calls on Lebanese talents under 30 to create thoughtful, relevant objects that address societal, cultural, and environmental needs.

“There is an intensity in this country that drives you … so this grace, this buzz, this energy, and there’s a love for our country that is really, I think, is almost unique to Lebanon,” Alameen said.


Thailand ex-PM Abhisit reinstated as conservative party leader

Thailand ex-PM Abhisit reinstated as conservative party leader
Updated 18 October 2025

Thailand ex-PM Abhisit reinstated as conservative party leader

Thailand ex-PM Abhisit reinstated as conservative party leader
  • Abhisit Vejjajiva led Thailand from 2008 to 2011 during the global financial crisis
  • His leadership was marred by the military crackdown on ‘Red Shirts’ protesters in 2010

BANGKOK: Thailand’s oldest political party voted Saturday to reinstate as its leader a conservative ex-premier who led the country during a bloody military crackdown on “Red Shirts” protesters.
Abhisit Vejjajiva, who led Thailand from 2008 to 2011 during the global financial crisis, gained early popularity for his eloquent debating style.
But his leadership of the Democrat Party was marred by the military crackdown on “Red Shirts” protesters in 2010 that killed more than 90 people and left over 2,000 wounded.
Abhisit was branded by rivals as “the PM with blood on his hands” and his political career faltered in the following years amid internal party divisions, leading him to resign as its leader and then withdraw his membership in 2023.
On Saturday, party members voted with 96 percent support to reinstate him as leader in a vote broadcast on local media.
“I thank everyone for trusting my ability once again,” the 61-year-old – wearing the party’s blue color – told members after the vote.
“My heart never left here.”
Thailand is currently governed by a minority government, with Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul pledging to dissolve parliament and hold a new election within four months.
Analysts say Abhisit’s comeback could position the Democrat Party as a key player in the next polls where he will likely be its leading candidate.
“People already have long-standing connections with him and the Democrat Party,” Ekkarin Tuansiri, a political scientist at Prince of Songkla University, told public broadcaster ThaiPBS, adding “but it won’t be easy.”
Founded in 1946, the Democrat Party was once a political powerhouse and a long-time rival to former premier Thaksin Shinawatra’s Red Shirts movement, but it has struggled in recent years with declining support and internal discord.
Born in England and educated at Oxford, Abhisit – a dual Thai-British national – has often been accused by rivals of being out of touch with Thais and evading the kingdom’s compulsory military service for men.


John Achkar to perform first Arabic-language stand-up at Paris’ ’O⳾辱

John Achkar to perform first Arabic-language stand-up at Paris’ ’O⳾辱
Updated 18 October 2025

John Achkar to perform first Arabic-language stand-up at Paris’ ’O⳾辱

John Achkar to perform first Arabic-language stand-up at Paris’ ’O⳾辱
  • Lebanon star’s show is titled ‘TRYIN’ (AAM JARRIB)
  • Arab stories ‘belong on the biggest stages,’ he says

DUBAI: Lebanese comedian John Achkar will make history on Oct. 23 with the first-ever Arabic-language stand-up comedy performance at the ’O⳾辱 theater in Paris.

The special, titled “TRYIN’ (AAM JARRIB),” is produced by Front Row Filmed Entertainment.

Often described as the cathedral of French live entertainment, ’O⳾辱 has hosted top international comedy figures including Chris Rock, Gad Elmaleh and Eddie Izzard.

The special follows Achkar’s 75-city global tour, which included stops in Beirut, Riyadh, Dubai, Cairo, San Francisco, Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Toronto, London, Geneva, Berlin and Sydney.

His performance will reportedly touch on themes of identity, family, and belonging across the Arab world and its diaspora, using humor to highlight everyday experiences and connect audiences from different backgrounds.

“Contrary to Western belief, the Middle East isn’t one audience. It’s a mosaic of countries, cultures, and dialects that rarely laugh at the same thing,” said Gianluca Chakra, CEO of Front Row Filmed Entertainment.

“John managed to crack that space without ever diluting his voice. He’s toured more than 75 cities, filled every room, and found the universal pulse that unites Arabs everywhere through pure, honest comedy.”

Achkar said: “For me, stepping on the stage at ’O⳾辱 is about proving that Arab comedy deserves to stand shoulder to shoulder with the world’s best.

“Our stories, our struggles, and our laughter belong on the biggest stages, because humor is a language that everyone understands.”


Pakistan defense minister, intelligence chief due in Doha for talks with Afghan Taliban

Pakistan defense minister, intelligence chief due in Doha for talks with Afghan Taliban
Updated 18 October 2025

Pakistan defense minister, intelligence chief due in Doha for talks with Afghan Taliban

Pakistan defense minister, intelligence chief due in Doha for talks with Afghan Taliban

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif and intelligence chief will be traveling to Doha today, Saturday, to hold talks with representatives of the Afghan Taliban, Pakistani state media reported, hours after another Pakistani airstrike in Afghanistan.

The fierce battles between the two neighbors along their long, porous border broke out last Saturday and have led to the deaths of dozens of people on both sides, with Pakistan carrying out airstrikes in Kandahar and Kabul before a two-day truce that expired Friday evening.

Pakistan “conducted precision aerial strikes” in Afghan border areas on Friday, a security official said, adding that it targeted the Hafiz Gul Bahadur Group of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). Friday’s strikes killed three Afghan cricketers among 10 people, authorities said.

The latest strikes ended 48 hours of calm between the two countries which was earlier reportedly extended for talks between Pakistani and Afghan officials in the Qatari capital of Doha.

“Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif and Intelligence Chief Lt General Asim Malik are scheduled to depart for Doha on Saturday,” the state-run Pakistan TV reported. “Taliban delegation is expected to be of equivalent seniority.”

Islamabad said the Hafiz Gul Bahadur group had been involved in a suicide bombing and gun attack at a military camp in the North Waziristan district that borders Afghanistan, which left seven Pakistani paramilitary troops dead on Friday.

The Afghanistan Cricket Board said that three players who were in the region for a tournament were killed by Friday’s airstrikes, revising down an earlier toll of eight.

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump offered to help end hostilities between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

“I do understand that Pakistan attacked or there is an attack going on with Afghanistan,” he said in a meeting with the Ukranian president Volodymyr Zelensky at the White House.

“That’s an easy one for me to solve if I have to solve it. In the meantime, I have to run the USA. But I love solving wars.”

The clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan broke out amid Islamabad’s claims that the Afghan Taliban had been sheltering banned militant groups like the TTP and the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), which carry out cross-border attacks against Pakistan. Kabul denies the allegations.