Seaweed as a workhorse of the regenerative blue economy

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Seaweed as a workhorse of the regenerative blue economy

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As Saudi Arabia positions itself as a leader in the regenerative blue economy, combining sea-based activities with sustainable development, all eyes are turning to a long-overlooked resource: seaweed.

Seaweed represents a group of about 10,000 photosynthetic multicellular species that grow in the lighted zone of the ocean, mostly attached to the seafloor.

While it has provided economic and cultural benefits to Asia-Pacific nations for millennia, most people around the world, including in Saudi Arabia, are only aware of seaweed as an ingredient in sushi or miso soup.

As an indicator of this huge awareness gap, the first legal code governing the deployment of algal farms in Japan actually dates from the times of Prophet Muhammad.

In the 21st century, seaweed is emerging as a valuable commodity for sustainable development, yet there remains massive untapped potential.

Every hectare of ocean can support seaweed farming, with the area that can be farmed sustainably estimated at 48 million sq. km, matching the global land area appropriated for agriculture.

Seaweed farming is, within that ceiling, a regenerative crop, as it removes excess nutrients and carbon dioxide from seawater and provides habitat for marine life, contributing to water quality while mitigating climate change.

Seaweed products are healthy for consumers and are climate-positive, carrying a near-zero water footprint, and a zero-chemical footprint, as synthetic fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides are not used in this industry.

Seaweed is rising as the Swiss army knife of marine biotechnology. Crops can be processed to yield nutraceuticals, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, high-value molecules, polymers displacing synthetic ones, biochar and biofuels.

All these products can be produced concurrently using biorefinery approaches, with their combined value potentially multiplying by at least 50-fold the value per tonne compared to conventional single-product uses. As a result, we are witnessing an algal revolution.

Saudi Arabia’s aquaculture program under the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture includes seaweed farming, while Red Sea Global is exploring the potential of this regenerative marine crop.

Research led by the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology has identified a range of promising compounds for pharma, which we named Thuwalallenes, from the Red Sea algae Laurencia.

The Red Sea seaweed Asparagopsis is making headlines as a global climate solution.

Feeding one spoonful of dried Asparagopsis to cows and other ruminants every other day has been found to greatly reduce methane production — something which accounts for 18 percent of global greenhouse gas emission.

Hence, a Red Sea seaweed farming industry can also be a tool to fight climate change at scale. This can be supported by the more than 200 species identified in the Red Sea, of which about 10 percent are unique to the region.

The blue economy of the Red Sea is open for business with huge investment opportunities. This includes regenerative tourism, led globally by Red Sea Global, nutrition, cosmetics, technology and energy.

Seaweed farming can contribute to many of these pillars, as a superfood, a source of material for biotechnology, biofuels, and, although historically overlooked, an intrinsic part of the natural capital of Saudi Arabia.

• Carlos Duarte is executive director of the global coral reef research and development accelerator platform at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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

Gaza civil defense says 19 killed in Israeli strikes

Gaza civil defense says 19 killed in Israeli strikes
Updated 1 min 29 sec ago
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Gaza civil defense says 19 killed in Israeli strikes

Gaza civil defense says 19 killed in Israeli strikes
GAZA STRIP: Rescuers in Gaza said on Saturday that at least 19 people, including eight children, were killed in Israeli strikes across the Palestinian territory.
According to the civil defense agency, an air strike at dawn on the house of the Al-Ghoul family in Gaza City killed 11 people, seven of them children.
“The home, which housed several displaced people, was completely destroyed,” said civil defense spokesman Mahmud Bassal.
“It was a two-story building and several people are still under the rubble,” he added, saying Israeli drones had “also fired on ambulance staff.”
Contacted by AFP, the Israeli army did not immediately comment on the strike.
AFP images from the neighborhood of Shujaiya, in the east of Gaza City, showed residents combing through smoking rubble and bodies lined up on the ground, covered in white sheets.
“A huge explosion woke us up. Everything was shaking,” said witness Ahmed Mussa.
“I was surprised to see (the strike) was on the house of our neighbors, the Al-Ghoul family. It was home to children, women. There wasn’t anyone wanted or who posed a threat.”
Elsewhere, the civil defense agency said five security officers, tasked with accompanying aid convoys, were killed by an Israeli strike as they were driving in a car in the southern city of Khan Yunis.
Bassal accused Israel of having “deliberately targeted” them in order to “affect the humanitarian supply chain and increase the suffering” of the population.
The army has not yet responded to the accusations.
Local rescuers also said three members of the same family, including a child, were killed when their house was bombed in Khan Yunis.
The war in Gaza was sparked by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,208 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.
Israel’s retaliatory military campaign has killed at least 45,717 people in Gaza, the majority of them civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry which the United Nations considers reliable.

Kingdom arrests 19,541 illegals in one week

Kingdom arrests 19,541 illegals in one week
Updated 6 min 46 sec ago
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Kingdom arrests 19,541 illegals in one week

Kingdom arrests 19,541 illegals in one week

RIYADH: Saudi authorities arrested 19,541 people in one week for breaching residency, work and border security regulations, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Saturday.

According to an official report, a total of 11,402 people were arrested for violations of residency laws, while 4,775 were held over illegal border crossing attempts, and a further 3,364 for labor-related issues.

The report showed that among the 953 people arrested for trying to enter the Kingdom illegally, 58 percent were Ethiopian, 40 percent Yemeni, and 2 percent were of other nationalities.

A further 129 people were caught trying to cross into neighboring countries, and 27 were held for involvement in transporting and harboring violators.

The Ministry of Interior said that anyone found to be facilitating illegal entry to the Kingdom, including providing transportation and shelter, could face imprisonment for a maximum of 15 years, a fine of up to SR1 million ($260,000), as well as confiscation of vehicles and property.

Suspected violations can be reported on the toll-free number 911 in the Makkah and Riyadh regions, and 999 or 996 in other regions of the Kingdom.


Damascus Airport to resume international flights starting January 7

Damascus Airport to resume international flights starting January 7
Updated 2 min 5 sec ago
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Damascus Airport to resume international flights starting January 7

Damascus Airport to resume international flights starting January 7
  • International aid planes and foreign diplomatic delegations have already been landing in Syria

DAMASCUS: Syria said on Saturday the country’s main airport in Damascus would resume international flights starting next week after such commercial trips were halted following last month’s ouster of president Bashar Assad.

“We announce we will start receiving international flights to and from Damascus International Airport from” Tuesday, state news agency SANA said, quoting Ashhad Al-Salibi, who heads the General Authority of Civil Aviation and Air Transport.

“We reassure Arab and international airlines that we have begun the phase of rehabilitating the Aleppo and Damascus airports with our partners’ help, so that they can welcome flights from all over the world,” he said.

International aid planes and foreign diplomatic delegations have already been landing in Syria. Domestic flights have also resumed.

On Thursday, Qatar Airways announced it will resume flights to the Syrian capital after nearly 13 years, starting with three weekly flights on Tuesday.

A Qatari official told AFP last month that Doha had offered the new Syrian authorities help in resuming operations at Damascus airport.

On December 18, the first flight since Islamist-led rebels ousted Assad on December 8 took off from Damascus airport to Aleppo in the country’s north, AFP journalists saw.


Chinese dams to be discussed in India visit of US national security adviser

Chinese dams to be discussed in India visit of US national security adviser
Updated 04 January 2025
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Chinese dams to be discussed in India visit of US national security adviser

Chinese dams to be discussed in India visit of US national security adviser
  • Washington and its Western allies have long viewed India as a counter to China’s rising influence in Asia and beyond
  • New Delhi says it has conveyed concerns about China’s plan to build a hydropower dam in Tibet on Yarlung Zangbo River

WASHINGTON: US national security adviser Jake Sullivan’s visit to New Delhi from Jan. 5-6 is expected to include discussions with Indian counterparts about the impact of Chinese dams, a senior US official said late on Friday.
Washington and its Western allies have long viewed India as a counter to China’s rising influence in Asia and beyond.
“We’ve certainly seen in many places in the Indo-Pacific that upstream dams that the Chinese have created, including in the Mekong region, can have really potentially damaging environmental but also climate impacts on downstream countries,” a senior US official said ahead of Sullivan’s visit.
The official added that Washington will discuss New Delhi’s concerns in the visit.
The Indian government says it has conveyed its concerns to Beijing about China’s plan to build a hydropower dam in Tibet on the Yarlung Zangbo River which flows into India. Chinese officials say that hydropower projects in Tibet will not have a major impact on the environment or on downstream water supplies.
The construction of that dam, which will be the largest of its kind in the world with an estimated capacity of 300 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity annually, was approved last month.
Washington also expects that topics such as civilian nuclear cooperation, artificial intelligence, space, military licensing and Chinese economic overcapacity will be brought up in the visit, the US official said.
American officials will not be meeting the Dalai Lama during the visit, another US official said.
Washington and New Delhi have built close ties in recent years with occasional differences over issues like minority abuse in India, New Delhi’s ties with Russia amid Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine and alleged assassination plots against Sikh separatists on US and Canadian soil.


Five injured in shooting at aid convoy en route to violence-hit Pakistani district

Five injured in shooting at aid convoy en route to violence-hit Pakistani district
Updated 10 min 15 sec ago
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Five injured in shooting at aid convoy en route to violence-hit Pakistani district

Five injured in shooting at aid convoy en route to violence-hit Pakistani district
  • More than 130 people have died in the remote district since Nov. 21 in clashes over land, sectarian disputes
  • The clashes have disconnected Kurram from the provincial capital, causing medicine, food and fuel shortages

ISLAMABAD: Five people, including a top administration official, were injured after unidentified gunmen opened fire on an aid convoy en route to a restive Pakistani district that has been hit by sectarian clashes in recent weeks, officials said on Saturday.
Kurram, a northwestern district of around 600,000 people in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, has been rocked by tribal and sectarian clashes since Nov. 21 when gunmen attacked a convoy of Shia passengers, killing 52.
The attack sparked further violence and blockade of a main road connecting Kurram’s main town of Parachinar with the provincial capital of Peshawar, causing medicine, food and fuel shortages in the area, as casualties surged to 136.
Saturday’s gun attack occurred near Bagan, a tense locality in the district’s center, as Deputy Commissioner (DC) Javedullah Mehsud and other officials led an aid convoy to Kurram, leaving the top officials and four security men injured.
“The deputy commissioner has been shifted from Alizai Hospital to Tal CMH [Combined Military Hospital],” said Muhammad Ali Saif, a spokesman for the KP provincial government.
“The deputy commissioner’s surgery is ongoing, but his condition is out of danger.”
Kurram police spokesman Riaz Khan told Arab News the attack injured DC Mehsud, his police guard and three members of the Frontier Corps (FC) paramilitary force.
“The deputy commissioner suffered gunshot injuries to his legs and shoulder,” the police official said.
Mehsud was leading the convoy of 17 trucks, which were carrying tents, blankets, medical kits, tarpaulins, solar lamps and sleeping bags.
“The convoy has been temporarily stopped,” Saif said. “The clearance process is ongoing, and the convoy will be sent to Kurram soon.”
Provincial authorities have previously air-dropped relief goods and airlifted ailing and injured people from Kurram to Peshawar via helicopters.
Saturday’s gun attack comes days after a grand jirga, or council of political and tribal elders formed by the KP provincial government, brokered a peace agreement between the warring Shia and Sunni tribes, following weeks of efforts.
Under the peace agreement signed on Wednesday, both sides had agreed on the demolition of bunkers and the handover of heavy weapons to the authorities within two weeks, but the attack on the aid convoy has once again cast a cloud on peace in the restive district.
“The situation is under control and security is on high alert. The government will restore peace in the region at all costs,” Saif said, urging both Sunni and Shia sides to remain peaceful and not fall prey to the “conspiracy.”
According to the peace agreement, any party that launches an attack after the signing of the deal will be considered a “terrorist” and action will be taken against it. Another point of the agreement says that a fine of Rs10 million ($35,933) will be imposed on those who would violate the terms of the deal by using weapons against each other.
Land disputes in the volatile district will be settled on a priority basis with the cooperation of local tribes and the district administration, according to the peace agreement. Opening of banned outfits’ offices will be prohibited in the district, while social media accounts spreading hate will be discouraged via collective efforts backed by the government.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and KP Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur condemned the shooting incident near Bagan.
“The incident is a deliberate and nefarious but unsuccessful attempt to sabotage peace efforts,” CM Gandapur was quoted as saying by his office.
“The provincial government, with the cooperation of the area elders, will continue its efforts until complete peace is restored in the area.”