Dr. Hasan M. Al-Ahmadi, director general of Sultan bin Abdul Aziz Center for Science and Technology

Dr. Hasan M. Al-Ahmadi
Updated 01 October 2019
Follow

Dr. Hasan M. Al-Ahmadi, director general of Sultan bin Abdul Aziz Center for Science and Technology

Dr. Hasan M. Al-Ahmadi has been serving as the director general of Sultan bin Abdul Aziz Center for Science and Technology (Scitech) since 2012.

Al-Ahmadi is also an associate professor at the Department of Civil Engineering, King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (KFUPM) in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.

He joined KFUPM in 1982 as a graduate assistant and became a lecturer in 1985 after he graduated with a master’s degree in civil engineering.

In 1990, Al-Ahmadi completed his Ph.D. in transportation engineering from Michigan State University in East Lansing, US.

He returned to KFUPM as an assistant professor and remained in that position until 2013.

Moreover, Al-Ahmadi had been the assistant dean of Educational Services for Training Programs and director of University Diploma Programs between 2002 and 2004.

He is a member of several international and local committees, including the American Society of Civil Engineers, board member of Saudi Consultant Engineering Committee, and Saudi Society of Civil Engineering.

He received the Educational Excellence Award for his Evaluation of Airfield and Road Networks of King Khalid Airbase in Khamis Mushayt; it was chosen as the Best Research Award in 1999.

The Abdullah bin Mohammed Ababtain Heritage Museum, in cooperation with Scitech, recently launched a heritage exhibition on the Eastern Province to mark Saudi National Day.

The event was held under the patronage of Dr. Sahl Abdul Jawad, president of KFUPM, and attended by Scitech Director-General Dr. Hasan Al-Ahmadi, and other government entities officials.

The museum captures the different aspects of life in the Eastern Province, including social traditions, manuscripts, ancient devices, currencies, sea life and diving, as well as heritage weapons that were used to unify the Kingdom.


Ramadan boosts dates demand as Saudi sector sees seasonal rush

Updated 53 min 30 sec ago
Follow

Ramadan boosts dates demand as Saudi sector sees seasonal rush

RIYADH: Dates hold an important place in Saudi Arabia’s spiritual and cultural fabric, and their association with hospitality and religious tradition makes them a staple of iftar tables during Ramadan.

The holy month also reshapes one of the Kingdom’s most established agricultural sectors, with the date industry shifting gear. Faith-driven consumption and a gifting culture amplifies demand throughout supermarkets and premium packaging segments.

Economic adviser Fadhel Al-Buainain told Arab News that while demand for dates remained steady across the year, domestic consumption rose noticeably during Ramadan.

“Recently, there has also been growing global demand for Saudi dates. However, local demand increases noticeably during Ramadan due to the association of dates with the iftar meal,” he said.

Many people prefer to break their fast with fresh rutab dates or, when these are unavailable, with dried dates, as per tradition. Along with the religious aspect, dates are also valued for their nutritional benefits — valuable during long fasting hours.

Al-Buainain said Ramadan was “a driver for increased sales and exports,” reinforcing the sector’s seasonal momentum, but he stressed Ramadan did not represent the industry’s true economic peak.

“I do not believe it creates a peak season, despite its marketing importance,” he said. “The true peak season is the period following the date harvest, when markets flourish and large quantities are sold as farm output supplies the market. However, in the retail sector, Ramadan can be considered one of the important seasons in which marketing activity increases.”

The distinction highlights a key dynamic in the industry. While Ramadan accelerates retail turnover and boosts demand in supermarkets and gift markets, production cycles and wholesale auctions remain closely tied to harvest season.

“The peak of date sales occurs at the time of harvest, both in terms of sales volume and prices,” Al-Buainain said.

Date auctions, he added, are linked to the beginning of the harvest, after which large quantities are sold wholesale — the most important channel for producers — before reaching retailers and consumers. By contrast, sales during Ramadan are mostly from previously harvested stock.

“For example, the upcoming Ramadan will arrive before this year’s harvest season,” he said. “Therefore, the dates being sold are from last year’s crop. This further illustrates the point.”

Despite the seasonal rise in consumption, Al-Buainain said production volumes remained sufficient to prevent significant price volatility.

“Production volumes are large, and supply exceeds demand,” he said, adding that traditional dates marketed through conventional channels were expected to maintain stable prices. Any price increases are largely confined to processed or attractively repackaged varieties.

“Price increases are linked to dates packaged in modern, gift-like formats or processed dates that include added ingredients such as nuts and others. Traditional dates, however, still have stable prices,” he said.

Most dates available locally are domestically produced, with limited processed products manufactured abroad. Price differences are primarily determined by type, quality and packaging rather than Ramadan-related demand pressures.

“There are also some practices carried out by wholesale traders through auctions, where buyers bid against one another, artificially driving prices up, filming these scenes and broadcasting them to influence prices. This cannot be taken as a reliable benchmark,” Al-Buainain told Arab News.

At a structural level, the sector has expanded significantly in recent years. Saudi date exports reached SAR 1.695 billion in 2024, according to the National Centre for Palms & Dates, citing data from the General Authority for Statistics. Production exceeded 1.9 million tonnes, with exports reaching 133 countries — a 15.9 percent increase in value compared to 2023.

Since the launch of Vision 2030, export value has grown by 192.5 percent between 2016 and 2024.

Saudi Arabia, the world’s second-largest date producer, is home to more than 33 million palm trees — representing 27 percent of the global total — across approximately 123,000 agricultural holdings.

Dates also recorded the highest self-sufficiency ratio among fruits at 121 percent, according to the General Authority of Statistics.

Al-Buainain described dates as a strategic commodity and a core component of the Kingdom’s food security framework.

The sector holds significant potential to further support agricultural diversification, provided it is backed by clearer long-term strategy, improved pest control and stronger coordination across the value chain.

“The date sector needs a clear strategy that ensures maximum benefit from dates produced in the Kingdom. It also requires full protection from expatriate labor that focuses solely on profit and harms the date sector, its future, and its sustainability,” he said.

“The sector also needs a final solution to pests that damage palm trees, including the red palm weevil, as well as the establishment of a national date company to purchase crops, process, package, distribute, and export them, in addition to entering date-based industries to generate added value for the economy.”