‘Day for giving’: Saudi king sets stage for $3bn projects in Tabuk

1 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman met the Amaala project team, led by Nicholas Naples in Tabuk. (Supplied)
2 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman met the Amaala project team, led by Nicholas Naples in Tabuk. (Supplied)
3 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman met the Amaala project team, led by Nicholas Naples in Tabuk. (Supplied)
4 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman met the Amaala project team, led by Nicholas Naples in Tabuk. (Supplied)
5 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman met the Amaala project team, led by Nicholas Naples in Tabuk. (Supplied)
6 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman met the Amaala project team, led by Nicholas Naples in Tabuk. (Supplied)
7 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman met the Amaala project team, led by Nicholas Naples in Tabuk. (Supplied)
8 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman met the Amaala project team, led by Nicholas Naples in Tabuk. (Supplied)
9 / 9
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman met the Amaala project team, led by Nicholas Naples in Tabuk. (Supplied)
Updated 20 November 2018
Follow

‘Day for giving’: Saudi king sets stage for $3bn projects in Tabuk

  • Luxury Amaala mega-resort paves way for revival of Red Sea region

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia’s King Salman met the Amaala project team, led by Nicholas Naples, in Tabuk on Tuesday and watched a visual presentation on plans for the luxury tourist development.
The Amaala project is one of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s initiatives to achieve his economic and development objectives. The tourist destination on the Kingdom’s Red Sea coast aims to create a new concept in luxury tourism focusing on recovery, health and treatment.
King Salman praised the project’s objectives to contribute to promoting economic diversification, creating investment opportunities for the private sector, and developing the tourism sector in Saudi Arabia while preserving the cultural and environmental heritage.
On Tuesday, the king also received the people of Tabuk province and inaugurated and laid the foundation stone for a number of development projects in the region in a ceremony attended by the crown prince.
Tabuk Gov. Prince Fahd bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz said: “This is a day for giving, in the land of giving, and from the king of giving. On this day, Tabuk is honored to inaugurate and lay the foundation stone, under King Salman’s patronage, for several development projects that are in line with the growth and expansion experienced in the region, cities and provinces.”

------------------------------------

HIGHLIGHTS

  • Amaala will generate an expected 22,000 jobs in hospitality and tourism, leisure and retail, in addition to the opportunities created in construction and ancillary industries.
  • The development will provide facilities and services for guests to shape their own luxury experience. It will celebrate arts, culture, fashion, wellness and sports, offering guests a bespoke luxury lifestyle of their choice.
  • Amaala is anchored around three pillars: Wellness, healthy living and sports; art and culture; and sea, sun and lifestyle. Each of these elements is being developed to world-class standards to attract visitors from around the world.
  • The resort will be developed over three sites within the Prince Mohammed bin Salman Natural Reserve on the northwestern coast of Saudi Arabia. 
  • The development will cover an area of more than 3,800 sq km and will target more than 2,500, hotel keys and 700 residential villas, apartments and estate homes, plus over 200 high-end retail establishments with an eclectic mix of galleries, ateliers, artisan workshops and bespoke retail shops supported by a wide range of international and local signature dining venues.

------------------------------------​

He added: “The new projects are implemented by many ministries and agencies, and their number has reached 151 projects with a total value exceeding SR11 billion ($2.9 billion), in addition to the private and public projects of the Public Investment Fund (NEOM, the Red Sea and Amaala), which are estimated at hundreds of billions of riyals.”
The Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage owns 11 of the projects worth SR98 million; the Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs owns 69 projects worth SR757 million; the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture owns 21 projects worth SR1.5 billion; the Ministry of Energy, Industry and Mineral Resources owns two projects for the Saudi Authority for Industrial Cities worth SR46 million and three projects for the electricity department worth SR5 billion; the Ministry of Housing owns two projects worth SR408 million; the Ministry of Education owns 11 projects, six of which are educational projects and five for the University of Tabuk, worth SR1.6 billion; the Ministry of Transport owns 16 projects worth SR1.6 billion; and the General Authority of Ports owns 18 projects at a total value of SR876 million.
The king arrived in the Tabuk region on Monday night, where he was received by the crown prince, Interior Minister Prince Abdul Aziz bin Saud bin Naif, Cultural Minister Prince Badr bin Abdullah bin Mohammed bin Farhan, and Tabuk Gov. Prince Fahd bin Sultan.
The king also pardoned prisoners in the region jailed on financial charges. The order applies to those with debts of SR1 million or less, who are not involved in criminal cases. In addition, the government will pay off the debts of those who have been proven to be unable to repay them. 


National program identifies 165 native plants for afforestation efforts in Asir

Updated 29 December 2025
Follow

National program identifies 165 native plants for afforestation efforts in Asir

  • The survey is part of broader plans focused on restoring degraded land, using native vegetation 

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia’s National Afforestation Program has identified more than 165 species of native plants suitable for afforestation in the Asir region, highlighting the ecological diversity of one of the Kingdom’s most environmentally varied areas, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The findings form part of broader national efforts to expand vegetation cover, address land degradation, and support sustainability goals linked to the Saudi Green Initiative and Vision 2030.

According to the program, the identified species are distributed across a wide range of natural environments in Asir, including mountainous terrain, highlands, slopes, valleys, plains, rocky landscapes, and coastal areas stretching from the Red Sea to Tihama.

The species belong to numerous plant families, including Fabaceae, Anacardiaceae, Burseraceae, Capparaceae, Ebenaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Malvaceae, Myrtaceae, Oleaceae, and Primulaceae, among others.

Plants suitable for afforestation range from large and small trees to perennial and annual shrubs, herbs, succulents, bulbs, and climbing plants. 

Among the most notable species identified are the grey mangrove, mastic tree, mooring or ben tree, juniper, sycamore fig, wild olive, henna, wild jasmine, hawthorn, and arak.

The Saudi Arabian Botanical Society described the announcement as an important step in protecting plant diversity and strengthening the ecosystem conservation in the Kingdom. 

Munirah bin Hamad Al-Hazani, founder and president of the society, said that prioritizing native species is central to sustainable afforestation.

“Focusing on the cultivation of native plants adapted to diverse environments forms the cornerstone of sustainable afforestation projects, as it plays a pivotal role in enhancing vegetation cover, combating land degradation, and conserving natural and financial resources,” she told Arab News.

Al-Hazani added that long-term success depends on cooperation between government bodies and the nonprofit sector, alongside community involvement and environmental awareness programs.

The National Afforestation Program has increasingly emphasized community participation, working with government agencies, private companies, and nonprofit organizations to support planting initiatives and environmental education. Its approach includes promoting volunteerism and discouraging harmful environmental practices, while focusing on the use of native plants adapted to local conditions.

Parallel efforts are underway in other regions of the Kingdom to support vegetation restoration through research and infrastructure development. In Jouf, often referred to as the Kingdom’s food basket, the King Salman bin Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority has established a Central Nursery and a Wild Seeds Research and Production Station to address the growing demand for reliable sources of native seeds and seedlings.

The project was launched in 2023 under the directive of Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Naif, the minister of interior and chairman of the authority’s board of directors. 

Since then, the facilities has become a key component of vegetation restoration efforts within the reserve.

The authority has focused on building operational capacity by recruiting and training specialists to manage cultivation and research activities. The research and production station includes 14 mother-seed production fields containing over 400,000 trees and shrubs. 

Planting began in late 2024, with more than 30 native plant species represented, selected for their role in the reserve’s natural ecosystem. 

The facility also includes two seed storage units with a combined capacity of 3,000 kilograms. Seeds are collected annually from multiple sites within the reserve and used for seedling production habitat rehabilitation.

The Central Nursery spans 6,000 square meters and includes 30 greenhouses spanning 1,500 square meters, as well as two shade houses used during summer months. A plant hardening facility, designed to prepare seedlings for natural environmental conditions, covers 10,000 square meters and is divided into seven sections. The nursery’s annual production capacity reaches 1.5 million seedlings, representing more than 15 native plant species. 

Together, these initiatives underscore the growing role of native plant research and propagation in Saudi Arabia’s afforestation strategy, particularly as the Kingdom works to balance environmental restoration with long-term sustainability goals.